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  • The relationship between scientific philosophical theories and value research
    131-147
    Views:
    89

    The purpose of this study is to examine, in what extent the mainstream approaches of scientific
    theories can be applied on the field of the value-research. Therefore, I will examine these models
    through the lense of scientific philosophical approaches of 20th century. Of the three most
    significant philosophical theory (Popper’s falsification theory, Kuhn’s paradigm theory, and Imre
    Lakatos’s theory of scientific research programs), I apply Lakatos’s theory, since it fits the best
    to explain, how parallel research streams emerged on the field of value research. In this study I
    strive for conciliate Lakatos’s program and the three significant value models. In the scientific
    research program theory Lakatos found that many research programs coexist simultaneously.
    Each has a hard core or negative heuristic (as Lakatos calls it) of theories immune to any revision
    surrounded by a protective belt or positive heuristic of malleable theories. Every research
    program vies against others to be most progressive. In my opinion the core of the program is
    the value definition itself, which is used by the different researchers in the field of value studies.
    This value definition barely changed during the past few decades. On the other hand, there are
    numerous value models aimed to assess people’s value system. These models can be considered
    as the protective belt revolving around the hardcore definition. The aim of this paper is not to
    emphasize Lakatos’ theory from the philosophical approaches of science, but to examine value
    research through a philosophical eye. This approach also can ease the communication between
    the value research by exploring the common core of them.

  • On the margin of child protection: Negative life events impact on the adolescents and youth health behavior
    80-108
    Views:
    110

    The paper studies how negative life events affect risk behaviour of children and young people. Calculations on the database of the ‘Hungarian youth 2012’ research suggest that negative life events are strong predictors of different types of risk behaviour like alcohol, drug abuse and suicide. According to the data people who have experienced several and more serious negative life events, more likely refuse and turn away from the norms of the adult society than those whose life proves to be less stressful. To place these results into child protection context, the study calls attention to the fact that the Hungarian child protection system does not treat each group in the fragmented society equally, although, on the basis of the incidence of threat it should. Another important message of this paper is to highlight that in addition to scientific values large-scale sociological research studies have professional and practical values as well. To support it, from the questions of the well-known Holmes-Rahe scale the authors re-developed an exploration scale (Reduced Life Events Scale). The application of the Reduced Life Event Scale (or the original Holmes-Rahe scale) allows experts to focus more on the studied issues in the process of planning services, prevention and case work. The tool might propose solutions to use the insufficient resources in a more targeted way.

  • Szeklerland – social science approaches
    3-16
    Views:
    30

    The study reviews the situation of social science research in Szeklerland after 1989, describes the
    institutional framework for the organization of research. Presents the most important features
    of the Szekler society with a view to providing an interpretative context for the Cross-Sections
    Social Science Journal. It also indicates the areas of analysis in which regional researches were
    conducted, but could not be included in this study compilation.

  • New ways in exporting Society: The potential of donation.based digital data collection
    6-26.
    Views:
    41

    More and more digital data is being generated every day, and more and more social science
    analyses are using Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook data. Many international and national studies
    have already explored the social science opportunities and dilemmas raised by the phenomenon
    of ‚big data’ - but the issue of ‚access to data’ has only been touched upon tangentially. And
    access to data is becoming increasingly difficult. What can we do if market players close the
    access to their data, and, if we find data available, the Research Ethics Board tells us to stop? The
    answer is simple: go to the users and ask them for the data. This approach is what the literature
    calls data donation. This paper will describe the data donation approach in detail, focusing on
    how researchers can access data through users on the current major Western platforms. The
    practical feasibility of data donation access will be illustrated based on a domestic pilot study.

  • Utopia and Social Science – Interpretation of the book Fahrenheit 451
    98-108
    Views:
    54

    Utopian and dystopian works have traditions hundreds of years, but their golden era did not begin until the 20th century. The genre is very often depicted as a literary genre, but in reality it is much more than simple fiction. These novels are as much social science and social theory writings as they are works of phantasmagoria. In my writing, I strive to explain this line of thought based on Ray Bradbury’s 1953 novel Fahrenheit 451. In the course of my work, following the fictional story of Guy Montag, I intend to present the peculiarities of the genre, its social science relations and its relationship with our contemporary society, in parallel with other dystopian works of the 20th century.

  • Similarities and Differences of Students’ Labour Market Paths Graduated in the Field of Social Science
    109-140
    Views:
    47

    We study graduate trainees’ (short) paths of four „social courses” and their transition from higher education to the labour market. We have thought in cases of the chosen social courses, that differences can become perceivable besides similarities. It has also been assumed that sociologists of the four chosen professions can be characterized by a diverse labour market behaviour from the other ones. It can be partially explained by the objectives, the content of their courses and the flexibility of the prospective institutional system. Compared to the above in cases of other social courses a diverse picture has been experienced by us based on the socio-demographic background and experience in labour market, expectations and satisfaction. Social workers and socio-politicians’ socio-demographic indicators are quite similar just like the socio-politicians and sociologists’ indicators are. This may be due to the effect of the level of master/academic education. We analyse the results of Graduate Tracking System (GTS) 2015 data collection in our presentation. The research was carried out by the Educational Office in co-operation with higher education institutions in the form of an online questionnaire. We sorted the respondents of the four chosen courses (828) out of all graduated (20 579).

  • Does the corruption affect to the voters? – a Bayesian econometric analysis
    25-66
    Views:
    28

    The study examines the agenda-setting aspirations of Hungarian political life between 2010
    and 2016 from a corruption research perspective. Using the available data, we estimate, based
    on the monthly data series of a six-year period, using different statistical methods, whether the
    allocation of European Union funds used as a proxy for corruption had an impact on the support
    of the ruling party. The results of the applied Bayesian vector autoregression do not provide
    evidence for the hypothesis that the increase in corruption associated with the increase in EU
    subsidies reduces the popularity of the ruling party among the entire voting population.

  • Preferred leadership style, leadership and entrepreneurial inclination among university students
    3-26
    Views:
    39

    Although many researches have been conducted on leadership styles and university students
    are participants in exploratory social science research quite frequently, fewer examples can be
    found on the application of the Full Range Leadership model among the youth. In this article,
    the authors examine preferred leadership styles among Hungarian students, and map their
    connections with managerial and entrepreneurial inclination. The online questionnaire used inthe research was completed by university students studying economics, technology and social
    studies in the capital and beyond. The questionnaire was completed by 335 university students.
    The results are exploratory, and they seem to modify the existing typologies. Four distinct
    leadership styles could be observed within the target group, embodying the transformative,
    supportive, defensive, and laissez-faire leadership types. Based on multivariate analysis one may
    suppose that among students leadership willingness is positively connected to transformative
    leadership, while entrepreneurial inclination to the transformative and supportive styles.

  • The challenges of supervised machine learning in sociological applications
    27-42.
    Views:
    24

    The sociological applications of supervised machine learning, already well proven in industrial/
    business applications, raise specific questions. The reason for this specificity is that in these applications, the algorithm is tasked with learning complex concepts (e.g. whether a tweet contains hate speech). Supervised learning consists of learning to classify previously annotated (hate
    speech/non-hate speech) texts by the algorithm, looking for characteristic text patterns. The
    questions that arise are: how to prepare annotation? How can a hermeneutic challenge such as
    hate speech recognition be performed by annotators? Are routinely applied, detailed annotation
    guidelines helpful? The article also discusses how large companies perform coding on crowdsourcing platforms, and describes AI bias, which in this case means that annotators themselves
    introduce bias into the data. I illustrate these issues with our own research experiences.

  • The social representation of radicalism among young people
    64-78.
    Views:
    31

    In the study, using data from an international research (Myplace), relying on the theory of
    social representations, we examined the understanding of radicalism of young people aged 15
    to 26 and living in two towns in Hungary (Ózd and Sopron) which differ significantly regarding
    their political socialization. In accordance with an empirical method based on the theory,
    we analyzed the relationship between young people’s attitudes towards nationalism and the
    democratic principles and the representation of radicalism, following the structural and content
    characterization of the representation of radicalism through the quantification of associational
    responses received in the questionnaire survey conducted in 2012.

  • Communities – in another way
    161-168
    Views:
    21

    This paper summarizes the main characteristics of the formation, the internal dynamics and the transformation of the communities. I have used the worthes and communutuies researches and analyzes of Hankiss Elemér. His main qoestion was the individaul estrangement and the restraint of the action.