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	<title>Books &amp; ideas</title>
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		<title>The Ecology of Affect</title>
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		<dc:date>2023-12-21T11:33:29Z</dc:date>
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		<dc:creator>Julien Bernard</dc:creator>


		<dc:subject>Philosophy</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>phenomenology</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>Durkheim</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>emotion</dc:subject>

		<description>&lt;p&gt;Where do our emotions come from? Are they specific to our sensibility or are they a product of our environment? And how do they become collective? Louis Qu&#233;r&#233; proposes to revisit these crucial questions.&lt;/p&gt;
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		<title>Neighborhood as a social fact</title>
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		<dc:date>2012-09-26T07:27:44Z</dc:date>
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		<dc:creator> Roberta Garner</dc:creator>


		<dc:subject>Society</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>United States of America</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>city</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>Durkheim</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>social mobility</dc:subject>

		<description>&lt;p&gt;Robert Sampson's new book reiterates the importance of place-level characteristics as determinants of social conditions. While social patterns are not reducible to individual phenomena, the persistence of barriers faced by African American communities (segregation, isolation, incarceration) prevent social mobility.&lt;/p&gt;
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