Din cuprins:
-
Septimiu Chelcea, Piramida fricilor sociale. Fricile sociale in Romania - o schita psihosociologica;
-
Laura Nistor, Petru Ilut, Experiente emotionale declarate. O analiza comparativa;
-
Adrian Hatos, Internalizarea traditionalismului de gen in adolescenta: covariate ale atitudinii fata de egalitatea de gen la elevii din clasele VIII-XII;
-
Nicolae Frigioiu, Fitzek Sebastian, Traditions culturelles et cultures politiques europeennes;
-
Virgil Magureanu, Cateva consideratii asupra notiunii de smart power din perspectiva teoriei politice;
-
Constantin Schifirnet, Modernitatea tendentiala;
-
Angela Banciu, Constitutia Romaniei de la 1991 intre istorie si actualitate;
-
Dragos Dragoman, Trust, reciprocity and volunteerism: Explaining low political activism in post-communist Romania;
-
Cristian Ioan Pop, Post-comunism in Europa Centrala si de Est. Imburghezire a la Cluj;
-
Radu Baltasiu, Manuela Boatca, Ovidiana Bulumac, Romania - layers of collective identity in the 19th and the 20th centuries: An outline until the interwar period;
-
Cristina Coman, Practici si ideologii profesionale in conflict: jurnalistii si specialistii in relatii publice;
-
Sorin M. Radulescu, Evaluarea gradului de credibilitate si sugestibilitate a minorilor, victime ale abuzului sexual comis de adulti;
-
Cristina Damboeanu, Forme si caracteristici ale abuzului fizic exercitat in familie asupra copiilor.
James Alfred "Alf" Wight, OBE, FRCVS (3 October 1916 – 23 February 1995), known by the pen name James Herriot, was a British veterinary surgeon and writer, who used his many years of experiences as a veterinary surgeon to write a series of books each consisting of stories about animals and their owners.[1] He is best known for these semi-autobiographical works, beginning with All Creatures Great and Small in 1972. The British television series adapted from the books is also titled All Creatures Great and Small.
.s.