STF 2004 Proceedings: Backmatter: Abstracts

$0.00

This includes the abstracts of contributions to the following STF 2004 conference proceedings  on Paulo Freire.

PDF4 for simple products

This publication can be read online by logged-in members of OKCIR Library with a valid access. In that case just click on the large PDF icon at the bottom of this page to access the publication. Alternatively, you can purchase this publication as offered below.

Description

Abstract

This includes the abstracts of contributions to the following STF 2004 conference proceedings  on Paulo Freire.

2004. “Abstracts.” Pp. 217-222 in Liberating Social Theory: Inspirations from Paulo Freire for Learning, Teaching, and Advancing Social Theory in Applied Settings: Proceedings of the First Annual Social Theory Forum, April 7, 2004, UMass Boston (Discourse of Sociological Practice, Vol. 6, Issues 2, Fall 2004). Issue Guest Editor: Mohammad H. Tamdgidi. Sociology Department, UMass Boston.

Section url: https://www.okcir.com/product/stf-2004-proceedings-backmatter-abstracts


Read the Above Publication Online

To read the above publication online, you need to be logged in as an OKCIR Library member with a valid access. In that case just click on the large PDF icon below to access the publication. Make sure you refresh your browser page after logging in.



NEW IN OKCIR'S MONOGRAPH SERIES
Front and Back COVER: Khayyam’s Tent: A Secretive Autobiography: 1000 Bittersweet Robaiyat Sips from His Tavern of Happiness - OMAR KHAYYAM - Logically Re-Sewn and Translated in Verse by Mohammad H. Tamdgidi
Front and Back Cover - Tamdgidi, Mohammad H. - Omar Khayyam’s Secret: Hermeneutics of the Robaiyat in Quantum Sociological Imagination: Book 12: Khayyami Legacy: The Collected Works of Omar Khayyam (AD 1021-1123) Culminating in His Secretive 1000 Robaiyat Autobiography. With Forewords by Winston E. Langley and Jafar Aghayani Chavoshi
Omar Khayyam's Secret Series Books 1-12 Cover, Tamdgidi, Mohammad H. Omar Khayyam’s Secret: Hermeneutics of the Robaiyat in Quantum Sociological Imagination