Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 1 de 1
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Quad. psicol. (Bellaterra, Internet) ; 24(2): e1666, 2022. tab
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-208039

ABSTRACT

Profundizo en una observación participante en una comunidad libertaria que emerge como mi-noría activa en las metrópolis de República Dominicana, mediante veinte entrevistas en pro-fundidad a diez personas a principios y a finales del 2013. Reconstruyo un modelo teórico dis-tinguiendo entre el compromiso de autogestión activo del pasivo. En este adelanto, presento una explicación mejorada del resultado de interés (laautogestión activa), gracias a un diálogo entre teorías y evidencias, junto a una revisión metodológica mejorada. Para la explicación de la autogestión activa, opto por la conjugación de dos condiciones principales: 1) las multiplici-dades discursivas, el solapamiento de herramientas comunitarias del discurso autogestionario como optimizadores de la autogestión; y 2) las actitudes personales que facilitan asumir un rol protagónico en el compromiso autogestionario como sujeto. Distingo esta explicación cuando hay un compromiso autogestionario libertario más general en comparación con el compromiso específicamente anarquista. (AU)


Drawing from exploratory participant observation with libertarian socialist groups and indi-viduals emerging as active minorities in the metropolitan areas of the Dominican Republic, twenty in-depth interviews were conducted with ten participants in the beginning and the end of 2013. An advanced theoretical model was reconstructed, which distinguished itself between the persons as the commitment of active self-management, and the passive self-management commitment. This improvement is done thanks to a more profound dialogue between theories and evidence and an enhanced methodological framework. From the explanation of the active self-management we can see the combination of: 1) discursive multiplicities, the overlap of communitarian tools of discourse self-management of the cases studied as optimizers; and 2) personal attitudes that facilitate one taking a protagonist role in self-management commit-ment as a subject. These conditions are differentiated when explaining the most general lib-ertarian socialist self-management commitment separated from the specifically anarchist commitment. (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Psychology, Social/methods , Interviews as Topic , 25783/methods , Self-Management/methods , Utopias , Dominican Republic
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...