Query Result Set
SLIM21 Home
Advanced Search
My Info
Browse
Arrivals
Expected
Reference Items
Journal List
Proposals
Media List
Rules
ActiveUsers:373
Hits:20848868
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
Help
Topics
Tutorial
Advanced search
Hide Options
Sort Order
Natural
Author / Creator, Title
Title
Item Type, Author / Creator, Title
Item Type, Title
Subject, Item Type, Author / Creator, Title
Item Type, Subject, Author / Creator, Title
Publication Date, Title
Items / Page
5
10
15
20
Modern View
DEVIANCE
(2)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
171688
Is religiosity a risk or a protective factor? the connection between religiosity and deviance among religious youths
/ Neeman-Haviv, Vered; Yael, Wilchek- Aviad; Chaim, Lahav
Neeman-Haviv, Vered
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
This article seeks to examine the connection between religiosity and deviance, focusing on the phenomenon of risk behaviour among Jewish national-religious youth at-risk. The study was conducted by using interviews with 66 participants in six focus groups among teenagers and young people at-risk, normative youth and professionals. Analysis of the research findings revealed several main themes that touch upon the issue of religion as both a protecting and a risk factor for religious youths, beginning with the question of personal identity, and continue with the influence of social control and social labelling.
Key Words
Israel
;
Religion
;
Religiosity
;
Deviance
;
People at - Risk
;
Youth at - Risk
Links
'Full Text'
In Basket
Export
2
ID:
185993
NPT as an antifragile system: how contestation improves the nonproliferation regime
/ Smetana, Michal; O'Mahoney, Joseph
O'Mahoney, Joseph
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
We introduce “antifragility” as a conceptual framework to understand the impact of occasional violations of regime norms on the health of respective regimes. Contrary to the prevailing understanding of norm violation as a strictly negative phenomenon that leaves regimes damaged, we show that normative deviance is, under certain conditions, a stressor that helps predominantly antifragile systems learn, improve, and adapt to changes in both internal and external environments. We apply this conceptual framework to the case of the NPT regime and the prominent violations of its nonproliferation norms by India in the 1970s (as a “contestation from outside”) and Iraq in the 1990s (as a “contestation from within”). Our findings question the prevailing catastrophizing narrative about the strictly negative impact of norm violations on regime stability and contribute to contemporary scholarly debates about norm dynamics within the NPT.
Key Words
Nuclear Weapons
;
Nonproliferation
;
International Regimes
;
Norms
;
Contestation
;
Deviance
Links
'Full Text'
In Basket
Export