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"sociocultural" Definitions
  1. relating to society and culture

113 Sentences With "sociocultural"

How to use sociocultural in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "sociocultural" and check conjugation/comparative form for "sociocultural". Mastering all the usages of "sociocultural" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It's hard to overstate the sociocultural importance of culinary traditions.
It's a powerful weapon that you can wield to instantly dissolve sociocultural barriers.
We need voices from the arts and sociocultural disciplines to provoke important debates.
Infectious diseases disproportionally affected girls and young women for both sociocultural and biological reasons.
Although the cause is unknown, experts have identified several potential biological, psychological and sociocultural factors.
Then there's the tense sociocultural context in which this new live-action film is appearing.
He argues sociocultural transformations are probably making men less virile, and Mr. Peterson nods along.
The current sociocultural moment is rife with uncertainty, ideological polarization, and large-scale tools of deceit.
Its subject matter is rape, in the environmental, sociocultural and harrowingly personal senses of the word.
It's cool now, she maintained, expressive of a sociocultural shift that's been years in the making.
Mental health experts say that sociocultural perceptions of attractiveness—and therefore, power—play a major role.
Due to the poor archaeological record, scientists know very little about the sociocultural aspects of these people.
This is the sociocultural landscape of the relationship between masculinities and guns today in the United States.
They advised followers to protect coastal areas from waste and to encourage economic and sociocultural exchanges between countries.
It should go without saying that this pace of change and scale of upheaval invariably results in sociocultural tension.
Between the lines: "The first step has been to really understand the sociocultural factors of the disease," Muyembe says.
They upset people when they self-identify as "crip" and view disability as a sociocultural identity, not a failing.
Mr. Jacobs's particular skill has always been sensing which way the sociocultural wind is blowing and translating that into clothes.
"Sexual dysfunction depends on the complex interaction of multiple biological, sociocultural and psychological factors," she told Reuters Health by email.
And because we're sociocultural creatures, we have a tendency to accept the rules and try to play by the rules.
Another strategy some African artists utilize is to carve out a more suitable sociocultural reality through the invention of parafictions.
For an individual parent, it might very well be a question of helping a child cope with an overwhelming sociocultural environment.
We cannot, and will not, become the kind of xenophobic, isolationist, exclusionary America we believed was receding in our sociocultural rearview mirror.
There are biological and sociocultural explanations for what people find attractive, says David Frederick, assistant professor of health psychology at Chapman University.
If conservative Catholics are forced to choose between their sociocultural tribes and a new pope, it seems they will choose the former.
The activity and the lifestyle that come with it serve as a counterweight to the country's relatively conservative sociocultural and political backdrop.
That sociocultural formation was liquidated instead by the automobile, Ryan reports, and by the automobile's champion in New York City, Robert Moses.
Acemoglu, Autor and their colleagues provide a synthesis between the economic and the sociocultural explanations of the rise of the populist right.
Some kind of sociocultural mainstream will always exist and constitute itself as an opponent of outsider groups' demands for change and inclusion.
This was a practice meant to "breed out the color" — an act of "biological and sociocultural genocide," according to scholar Jessica Schimmel.
Why signal that taking climate seriously, taking it as a war, requires signing on to the agenda of a fairly specific sociocultural cohort?
A sociocultural examination of the renewed interest in the granny panty begins in 2014, when granny panties make a grab for the throne.
But in its highest gear, the show peerlessly vanishes the line between sociocultural satire and mental instability, between send up and crack up.
Según el país y el contexto sociocultural puede ser un día de celebración, una efeméride conmemorativa o una jornada de resistencia y protesta.
"What we are witnessing in Xinjiang is different, not quantitatively but qualitatively: a massive, concerted campaign of coerced sociocultural re-engineering," he said.
Those women expressed higher levels of post-abortion sadness, suggesting that sociocultural context plays a role in how women feel about their abortions.
Cristina Santos: I've always worked on women's identity and the sociocultural factors that influence how women construct their sense of self and how they see themselves—not only as part of the community that they live in, but [also] how they see themselves as a being, and how what happens when that sense of self-definition is in opposition to the sociocultural norm.
The media narratives we consume and populate in times of sociocultural tension often tend to reflect our fears as a result of that tension.
It's very difficult to imagine that the changes in the American sociocultural environment have not led to more of the population suffering from depression.
As long as there's something there to glom on to—almost any sociocultural raw material will do—the takes will begin to fly immediately.
"It's easy sociocultural currency for Koreans to transmit outside of their borders," said Katharine H. S. Moon, a professor of political science at Wellesley College.
Occupying various sociocultural levels of the New York landscape (Staten Island, TriBeCa, Williamsburg), they act as a makeshift if cranky support network for one another.
" In a 6–303 ruling, the judges decided that the answer was yes, despite considering the "complexities of the sociocultural phenomenon of sexting by minors.
The study's authors hypothesize that this apparent decline in female body dissatisfaction may be a result of sociocultural changes and increased awareness about body acceptance.
And her irreverence in the face of persistent expectations of feminine decorum — reanimated like a sociocultural zombie during this administration — can cause a sigh of relief.
"Stories encode many types of sociocultural knowledge: commonly shared knowledge, social protocols, [and] examples of proper and improper behavior," they write in a recently-published paper.
Paying close attention to cause and effect, he explains the way racist ideas arose and evolved out of economic, geographic, political, sociocultural, and/or moral convenience.
Ultimately, I'm inspired by my tropical roots and culture, as I aim to produce work that represents my personal narrative within a political and sociocultural context.
And the thing about Montrose, the bit that could really sink you, wasn't something that you needed a comprehensive sociocultural foundation to articulate: The place was simply fun.
If you have always had the privilege to say whatever you want without pushback, the changing tide of sociocultural repercussions may feel like a threat to your rights.
A host of other sociocultural changes, from less stigma about divorce to more women in the work force, could also play out as boomers and their children age.
This false antithesis also neglects reasons why people gathered in cities millennia ago, and the consequences of that move for the interplay of natural selection and sociocultural development.
But it wasn't much use on the sociocultural front — the majority of the movie is set outside the United States — and if anything, it reinforced some ugly stereotypes.
"Many pundits make the mistake of assuming that scientific evidence favoring sociocultural causes for the dearth of women in tech invalidates biological causes, or vice versa," Eagly wrote.
For the people who viewed my work or heard my lectures, I believe I helped shape a different narrative about Iran, providing a broader historic and sociocultural perspective.
In response to Lima's suggestion, it's challenging to view a work without any timely sociocultural framework — but it's harder still to understand the installation without including its own problems.
Yet, as he suggests, A.D.H.D. may simply be a configuration of behaviors that are out of sync with conventional sociocultural norms and expectations, particularly those associated with traditional schooling.
To address this necessitates shifting our attention away from the individual characteristics of the shooters themselves to investigate the sociocultural contexts in which violent masculinities are produced and valorized.
While Ebola virus disease does not discriminate, the risks borne by women are increased by sociocultural factors, including serving as primary caregivers to those who are sick or dying.
While soccer is played throughout the region, long-standing sociocultural beliefs prevent the rest of Asia's nations from making history at FIFA's quadrennial competition, according to one former player.
It's less in the individual level and more in providing these sociocultural models for what a proper feminine woman is like or what a proper masculine male is like.
In 2017, she wrote a chapter titled, "'There's a relationship': Negotiating cell phone use in the high school classroom" in Researching New Literacies: Design, Theory, and Data in Sociocultural Investigation.
Also, you might want to consider getting help processing deaths that occurred in a particularly violent way, or touch on issues involving race, gender, or another sociocultural vulnerability, Kazez says.
Even if "Jump In" had been executed more skillfully, it was always going to close with a Pepsi logo, a gesture that immediately undermines any attempt at serious sociocultural point.
"Sociocultural barriers like women not being allowed to use the internet were a key barrier when we started," Neha Barjatya, who heads the program for Google in India, told BuzzFeed News.
And just as we project a variety of sociocultural meanings onto the public personas of celebrities, we ascribe a similar kind of cultural meaning and value to the relationships they engage in.
The world needs to know about the sociocultural factors that influence the spread of HIV and that there are new tools available, such as pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, to fight the disease.
" The canon of Land Art, often devoid of the sociocultural or spiritual narratives that make up the land itself, is its own kind of colonialist territory, and Sondra Perry's single-channel video, "imakelandartnow.
In her studies, Professor Mahmood, a scholar of modern Egypt who specialized in sociocultural anthropology at the University of California at Berkeley, also challenged entrenched notions about secularism and religion, particularly in Muslim societies.
It's natural to assess what sociocultural lessons we've learned from the previous decade, now that we've entered a new one — and whether they're the kinds that might help us make the 2020s a better era.
Long hours are typical of campaign work (you have a limited span of time in which to win the thing, after all), but these particular positions fall into a kind of legal and sociocultural black hole.
As far as tabloids are concerned, it mostly comes with the feeling of a witch hunt; shifting blame onto entire subcultures and negatively stereotyping them instead of critiquing the wider sociocultural context in which they exist.
Those nine prints, plus a table of contents, are the centerpiece of this show, which also includes works by Käthe Kollwitz, Max Beckmann and Otto Dix that reflect on Germany's sociocultural milieu after the Great War.
Nicholas Blincoe takes on this mission with verve in his new book, "Bethlehem," unveiling the history of "the most famous little town in the world," a place whose associations have long existed in the sociocultural zeitgeist.
A movie or story can never be just a movie or story; it's also an opportunity to talk about what that movie or story "gets wrong" or how it messes up some political or sociocultural story point.
The results "suggest that unmeasured variables — lifestyle or sociocultural factors — might account for the observed associations that were seen in other studies," said the lead author, Sheryl L. Rifas-Shiman, a research analyst at Harvard Medical School.
But critics of the theory say that suicide from low oxygen is too simple of an explanation, and ignores the overwhelming sociocultural attributes of these areas—access to guns, poverty, social isolation, a dearth of mental health services.
According to McGuire, some sex educators try to explain consent in black-and-white terms when it actually lends itself to a more nuanced conversation involving an understanding of the sociocultural contexts of sex, consent, and rape culture.
In the new film, the mummy mostly just wants Tom Cruise, and as Vox's own Todd VanDerWerff points out, Tom Cruise is just too Tom Cruise-y to imbue that connection with any of the usual sociocultural overtones.
Too comfortable in the way I'd settled into London, a city built and sustained every day by immigrants, I had lapsed into the mistaken belief that sociocultural progress was like the tech industry that I cover: always moving forward.
The exhibition, O mais profundo é a pele ("The most profound is the skin"), explores the sociocultural context surrounding these tattoos, from the people who wore them to the physicians who recorded them with such a stern sociological gaze.
Further, a collapse by FNC brass would surrender the sociocultural struggle FNC was created to engage at its founding — to push back against mainstream media that is viewed as unbalanced by right-leaning and even many centrist news consumers.
The interest in this content from young women speaks to what scholars of girls' studies and youth behavior have dubbed a "bedroom culture" — that is, a recognition of the private spaces and networks in which girls create their own sociocultural norms.
A brightness about Brazilian football dimmed, along with a certainty that flair and improvisation could always overcome an opponent's technical and tactical resistance, said Flavio de Campos, a professor of the sociocultural history of soccer at the University of São Paulo.
In Cain's view, the lack of focus on the economic needs of the heartland is of a piece with the sociocultural remoteness of Democratic elites: The cultural problem is Democrats looking down their noses at blue collar work and flyover country.
But this is not a political series, or even one all that interested in sociocultural readings on the whole, despite being essentially one of the only shows on TV made by and featuring women at almost every level of its cast.
While the collective benefits from the phonological and symbolic profusion different languages offer, objects and sociocultural gestures, both being symbols of power and heritage, provide vast possibilities in which function and familiarity slowly haze, evolving into new visuals specific to Slavs and Tatars.
While Wilders is fundamentally a different politician than Fortuyn, who shared a flair for the dramatic and a disinterest for "normal politics" with Trump, the PVV profits from the continued dominance of sociocultural issues, most notably the three Is: immigration, integration, and Islam.
While sociocultural factors may still underlie these cases, Choma says, such extreme behavior suggests there might be more at play, like the difference between disordered eating--regularly engaging in abnormal eating behaviors, such as scrupulous calorie-counting—versus a full-fledged eating disorder.
The show is based on the real experience of Piper Kerman, a middle-class white woman, which, on a larger sociocultural scale, is telling of whose stories we choose to tell when it comes to things that predominantly affect Black and brown communities.
As an academic and tech outsider, she was not writing from personal experience or even commenting on the tech itself, but found that she had to essentially invent a new area of research from scratch spanning tech, global labor and sociocultural norms.
And they happened, crucially, in 1980s New York — a time and place that allowed for an eccentric and productive sociocultural cross-pollination that seems, with every passing year, as the city becomes more expensive and more staid, less and less likely to recur.
The overwhelming focus on immigration among Le Pen voters speaks to a broader point about the far right: The core reason people are attracted to it, not just in France but around Europe, is a sense of sociocultural threat stemming from increased diversity.
In this comedic "sociocultural history," the Bronx native pays a visit to the neighborhood where he grew up in the 1940s and makes sense of the fact that the majority-white Bronx of his youth is now mostly populated by black and brown people.
But where old-school MST23K covered a vast pantheon of sociocultural knowledge — one of the series' greatest delights was the sheer randomness and breadth of the cultural references floating around the Satellite of Love — you won't find nearly as much esoterica in the new series.
The decision was widely criticised as a punitive reaction to the complex sociocultural issue of drug abuse and three months later, the venue managed to reach an agreement with Islington Council on a set of conditions that would permit its management to reopen the club.
This traumatic backstory is important, because what makes It so threatening isn't limited to the supernatural; Pennywise is able to exploit the Losers' vulnerabilities and fears because they're the kind that don't dissipate with age, the kind that are often sociocultural: racism, homophobia, misogyny, and domestic abuse.
Among the additional words and terms the dictionary was updating for the year ahead: "code-switching," or modifying of one's behavior to adapt to different sociocultural norms; "sapiosexual," for a person who finds intelligence the most sexually attractive feature; and "gender expression," or an expression of one's gender identity.
"Travellers should be treated, with respect for their dignity, human rights and fundamental freedoms and minimize any discomfort or distress associated with such measures, including by treating all travellers with courtesy and respect; taking into consideration the gender, sociocultural, ethnic or religious concerns of traveller," the guidelines state.
Initially, the headliner was to be Maya Arulpragasam, the forty-one-year-old pop star known as M.I.A. The pairing seemed natural, if not inevitable: M.I.A., a Londoner of Sri Lankan descent, has long been guided by the notion that her music is inextricably linked to sociocultural concerns.
This dichotomy between economic status and the sociocultural aspects of "class" has become a hallmark of the Trump years, in which political disagreements between white Americans have come to be deeply polarized between the more and less educated even while the policy orientation of the GOP remains overwhelmingly focused on the wealthy.
They, along with scores of others, were hitting clubs in this era, and Mr. Lawrence makes a tight-knit case for the sociocultural value of clubs as meeting places for artists of different disciplines, particularly in New York, where property values were still low after the city's near-bankruptcy in the mid-70s.
I used to write a lot of essays about sociocultural aspects of K-Pop, and one of the things we used to talk about a lot was how K-Pop male bands probably couldn't make it in the US because of the fact that they have this stigma of being too girly or too feminine.
At its core, this election is about the all-important battle over the presidential appointment of Supreme Court judges, who wield the power to reprogram the very moral and sociocultural trajectory of the United States of America, doctoring the Constitution in accordance with their own personal spiritual genome and moral convictions — or absence thereof.
Items on the list are ranked based on the potential amount of greenhouse gases they can avoid or remove, and though some are directly tied to emissions — moderating use of air-conditioners and refrigerators, for instance, is number one — sociocultural shifts like adopting a plant-rich diet or family planning are also ranked highly.
History has taught us the many ways that studies of human genetic variation can be misunderstood and misinterpreted: if sampling practices and historical contexts are not considered; if little attention is given to how genes, environments, and social conditions interact; and if we ignore the ways that sociocultural categories and practices shape the genetic patterns themselves.
The movement — one face of a broader Mideast effort to revive Muslim ethical practices — was unique in that these women "came to understand that the rebuilding of a pious Islamic community could not be left to men alone," said Professor Hirschkind, a fellow scholar of sociocultural anthropology at Berkeley who had sometimes collaborated with his wife.
Beyoncé is many things: a powerhouse vocalist who's created era-defying music that's an indictment to sociocultural inequities and encourages getting faded x-rated; a glass ceiling-shattering CEO of her own athleisure brand; an (okay) actress (but we don't hold that against her); a sometimes vegan; an artist; a wife; a mother; and a cultural icon.
As the associate producer and "taco scout" for Netflix Latin America's latest food-centric documentary series Taco Chronicles , available to stream now in the U.S. and Latin America, the food journo and former MUNCHIES staff writer spent months traveling through Mexico to find the most delectable, mouth-watering tacos to highlight on the series, which depicts not only their savory goodness but also their sociocultural significance.
Her fiction and her life struggle with the fact, she has said in one of her rare interviews, that "class origins cannot be erased, regardless of whether we climb up or down the sociocultural ladder"; Ferrante therefore sets herself against the most entrenched of contemporary myths, the idea that it is possible to remake oneself endlessly, and at little cost to oneself or the world.
The Magnus Effect, as it were, describes the various sociocultural phenomena accompanying his rise: the way Carlsen, a menschy young man from Tonsberg, became one of the country's most famous people; the way television producers here turned a notoriously dawdling activity into a rollicking spectator sport; the way millions of Norwegians, most of them casual or new fans of the game, have integrated it into their lives.
The American filmmaker saddles up Mr. Presley's 1963 Rolls-Royce Phantom V for a great American road-trip that parallels the icon's career with the sociocultural evolution of the US. As celebrities, hitchhikers, and musicians alike join the journey inside and outside of the car, what emerges is a complex and patriotic film that looks to Elvis's biography to gain a sense of where this country might be going.
But in the way that the internet can rapidly make and remake something, morphing meaning in real time, Lil Nas X's track became something different almost every few days on its path from SoundCloud obscurity to pop ubiquity: a savvy troll, a manipulator of streaming algorithms, a meme theme, a battering ram to genre barriers, a trigger of music-biz discord, a David suffering at the hands of Goliath, a sociocultural rallying point, and eventually, a site of cross-cultural kumbaya.

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