realist$67075$ - traduzione in Inglese
Diclib.com
Dizionario ChatGPT
Inserisci una parola o una frase in qualsiasi lingua 👆
Lingua:

Traduzione e analisi delle parole tramite l'intelligenza artificiale ChatGPT

In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

  • come viene usata la parola
  • frequenza di utilizzo
  • è usato più spesso nel discorso orale o scritto
  • opzioni di traduzione delle parole
  • esempi di utilizzo (varie frasi con traduzione)
  • etimologia

realist$67075$ - traduzione in Inglese

Realist criminology; Left realist; Left realist criminology

realist      
n. realist, iemand die met beide benen op de grond staat
American realism         
  • Mulberry Street]], considered the most crime-ridden, dangerous part of New York City.
  • 8}} in. (115 × 160.5 cm), [[National Gallery of Art]]
  • [[Edward Hopper]], ''New York Interior'', c. 1921, [[Whitney Museum of American Art]]
  • [[William Glackens]], ''Coney Island Fruit Stand'', 1898
  • [[George Bellows]], ''New York'' (1911)
  • [[Ashcan School]] artists and friends at [[John French Sloan]]'s Philadelphia Studio, 1898
  • [[John French Sloan]], ''McSorley's Bar'', 1912, [[Detroit Institute of Arts]]
  • [[Ashcan School]] artists, c. 1896, <br> l to r, [[Everett Shinn]], [[Robert Henri]], [[John French Sloan]]
  • [[Everett Shinn]], ''Self-portrait'', 1901
  • [[Robert Henri]], ''Snow in New York'', 1902, oil on canvas, [[National Gallery of Art]], Washington, DC
  • Edward Simmons]].
  • [[George B. Luks]], ''Hester Street'', 1905, [[Brooklyn Museum]]
STYLE IN ART, MUSIC AND LITERATURE THAT DEPICTED CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL REALITIES AND THE LIVES AND EVERYDAY ACTIVITIES OF ORDINARY PEOPLE
American Realist; American realism
het Amerikaanse realisme (gerechtelijke stroom die beweert dat het proces vastgesteld wordt door gerechtshoven en niet volgens de wet)
racial theory         
  • alt=
  • alt=
  • Nazi poster promoting eugenics
  • Carl Vogt in 1870
  • Charles Darwin in 1868
  • Charles White
  • alt=
  • [[Henry Home, Lord Kames]]
  • Uppsala]] and was closed down in 1958.
  • Ernst Haeckel
  • [[Francis Galton]] in his later years
  • alt=
  • alt=Black-and-white photograph of a man.
  • alt=
  • ''John Hunter''. Painted by John Jackson in 1813, after an original by Sir Joshua Reynolds, who exhibited his painting at the Royal Academy in 1786.
  • Joseph Deniker
  • [[Lothrop Stoddard]] (1883–1950)
  • Madison Grant, creator of the "Nordic race" term
  • Racialist differences: "a Negro head ... a Caucasian skull ... a Mongol head", [[Samuel George Morton]], 1839
  • Pieter Camper
  • left
  • The Races of Europe]]'' (1899).
  • Samuel Cartwright, M.D.
  • alt=
  • [[Robert Boyle]]
  • alt=
MISUSE OF THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD TO JUSTIFY RACISM
Racial theory; Racialism; Racialist; Racialists; Race theory; Racial realism; Race denial; Race realism; Scientific racist; Biological racism; Racial realist; Race theorist; Scientific racist theories; Racial-realist; Racial theories; Race science; Racial hygiene association; Race realist; Scientific Racism; Racial biology; Race Theory; Scientific racialism; Racial anthropology; Raciology; Racial science; Racialism (Racial categorization); Racial scientist; Racialism (racial categorization); Pseudoscientific racism; Scientific racism in the United States; Race-realist; Race-realism; Race biology; "Scientific" racism; Racist science; Pseudo-scientific racist theories; Race-science; Scientific-racism; Scientific racist theory; Biologically racist
rassentheorie (op basis van biologische kenmerken)

Definizione

social realism
¦ noun the realistic depiction in art of contemporary life, as a means of social or political comment.

Wikipedia

Left realism

Left realism emerged in criminology from critical criminology as a reaction against what was perceived to be the left's failure to take a practical interest in everyday crime, allowing right realism to monopolize the political agenda on law and order. Left realism argues that crime disproportionately affects working-class people, but that solutions that only increase repression serve to make the crime problem worse. Instead they argue that the root causes of crime lie in relative deprivation, although preventive measures and policing are necessary, but these should be democratically controlled.

Pat Carlen (1992) suggests that the main tenets of left realism are theoretical and political:

Theoretical
  1. 'The basic triangle of relations which is the proper subject-matter of criminology [is] - the offender, the state and the victim' (Young, 1986) (since altered to include society at large, see The Square of Crime)
  2. Theoretical explanations must be symmetrical - there must be the same explanation for social action and reaction.
  3. 'Man is a creator of human nature' (Young, 1987), and therefore explanations of crime should not be deterministic and people should be seen as being responsible for their actions.
Political
  1. Crime is a real problem and especially to working-class people who suffer disproportionately from personal crime, such as robbery, assault, burglary and rape.
  2. The 'left' should attempt to develop a credible (populist?) approach to crime control in order to prevent the 'right' from having a monopoly of the 'crime problem'.
  3. The purpose of theorizing should be to make practical interventions into law and order issues.
  4. In order to reduce crime there is a need to achieve a higher level of cooperation between police and public, and this will be best achieved by a democratization of local control of the police."