Conflict Theories: Difference between revisions
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'''= overview page''': sociological theories that focus on the role of war in social evolution. | |||
'''= overview page''' | |||
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* [[Italian Elite Theory]] | * [[Italian Elite Theory]] | ||
=Source= | =Source= | ||
'''* Article: How Pacifist Were the Founding Fathers?: War and Violence in Classical Sociology. By Sinisa Malesevic. European Journal of Social Theory, 13 (2), pp. 193-212''' | '''* Article: How Pacifist Were the Founding Fathers?: [[War and Violence in Classical Sociology]]. By Sinisa Malesevic. European Journal of Social Theory, 13 (2), pp. 193-212''' | ||
URL = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/241647433_How_Pacifist_Were_the_Founding_Fathers_War_and_Violence_in_Classical_Sociology | URL = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/241647433_How_Pacifist_Were_the_Founding_Fathers_War_and_Violence_in_Classical_Sociology | ||
Latest revision as of 05:57, 2 July 2021
= overview page: sociological theories that focus on the role of war in social evolution.
Directory of Schools of Thought
Source
* Article: How Pacifist Were the Founding Fathers?: War and Violence in Classical Sociology. By Sinisa Malesevic. European Journal of Social Theory, 13 (2), pp. 193-212
"the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were characterized by the primacy of militarist ideas in social thought. Not only was it that war and violence constituted the esprit de corps of German academia (Mann,1988, 2004), but similar ideas were widespread and highly popular within leading academic circles throughout Europe and North America."