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  1. Cosmopolitanism and the uses of tradition: Robert Redfield and alternative visions of modernization during the cold war*: Nicole sackley.Nicole Sackley - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (3):565-595.
    The history of the rise and fall of “modernization theory” after World War II has been told as a story of Talcott Parsons, Walt Rostow, and other US social scientists who built a general theory in US universities and sought to influence US foreign policy. However, in the 1950s anthropologist Robert Redfield and his Comparative Civilizations project at the University of Chicago produced an alternative vision of modernization—one that emphasized intellectual conversation across borders, the interrelation of theory and fieldwork, and (...)
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  • Cultures do not exist: Exploding self-evidence in the investigation of Interculturality.Wim van Binsbergen - 1999 - Quest - and African Journal of Philosophy 13 (1-2):37-114.
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  • A problem of sociological praxis.Y. Michal Bodemann - 1978 - Theory and Society 5 (3):387-420.
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  • Sociopolitical implications of stability in agriculture.Brian B. Schultz - 1985 - Agriculture and Human Values 2 (2):60-62.
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