02941 am 22003613u 450 99107658306033212018121291-7635-087-810.16993/bav(CKB)4100000007223824(OAPEN)1002526(EXLCZ)99410000000722382420181212d|||| uy enguuuuu---auuuuBorn in 1953StockholmStockholm University Press20181 online resource (284) 91-7635-084-3 "At the beginning of the 1960s, Swedish researchers started a sociological study of all children born in Stockholm in 1953, Project Metropolitan. This book describes the project’s at times dramatic history, where issues of personal integrity and the role of social sciences were heavily debated. These discussions were fueled by the rapid and far-reaching digitalization in society at large and also within social sciences. As such, Project Metropolitan came to symbolize the benefits and potential risks related to an expanding body of research based on large groups of individuals and multiple register data sources. At the outset, the project’s founders sought to answer the following question: “Why do some get on better in life than others?” One of the main aims of the project was to study the long-term impact of conditions in childhood. The book therefore also includes an updated presentation of the main findings, as they have been conveyed in over 160 publications to date. These publications cover a wide array of topics and phenomena such as social mobility and education, substance abuse and crime, health and ill-health, peer influences and family relations, and adult lives of adopted children. Today Project Metropolitan is known as the “Stockholm Birth Cohort Multigenerational Study (SBC Multigen)” and is still in full vigor. From its original group of 15,000 children, the study has become multi-generational by adding data about their parents, siblings, children, nieces and nephews. As they approach their late 60s, it will also be possible to follow these “children” into retirement and old-age. In the concluding chapter the author discusses some of the challenges contemporary social research is facing. What are the current threats to academic freedom and what opportunities do the unique data registers in countries like Sweden provide?" Society & social sciencesbicsscSociety & culture: generalbicsscSocial issues & processesbicsscEthical issues & debatesbicsscSociety & social sciencesSociety & culture: generalSocial issues & processesEthical issues & debatesStenberg Sten-Åkeaut1262135BOOK9910765830603321Born in 19532948620UNINA01702nam0 22003611i 450 UON0000711420231205101916.14639-206-4539-120020107d1986 |0itac50 bagerDD|||| 1||||Hurro-Urartian as an Eastern Caucasian languageI.M. Diakonoff, S.A. StarostinMunchenKitzinger1986x, 109 p.18 cm001UON000883892001 Münchener Studien zur Sprachwissenschaft. Neue FolgeHrsg. von Bernhard Forssman, Karl Hoffmann, Johanna Narten12LINGUE CAUCASICHEUONC004959FIDEMünchenUONL003025499.96Lingue caucasiche21AN II URANATOLIA - LINGUISTICA - URARTUAD'JAKONOVIgor MihajlovicUONV005987638480STAROSTINSergeĭ AnatolʹevichUONV000877764868KitzingerUONV246137650DIAKONOFF, I. M.D'JAKONOV, Igor MihajlovicUONV026520ITSOL20240220RICAUON00007114SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI AN II UR 001 N SI SA 73956 5 001 N SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI GLOTT B 1 III 053 SI MC 9782 7 053 LINGUA CECENALINGUE CAUCASICHEUONC006368LINGUA CIRCASSALINGUE CAUCASICHEUONC006367LINGUA GEORGIANALINGUE CAUCASICHEUONC006387Hurro-Urartian as an Eastern Caucasian language1553800UNIOR