(See New Additions to Cybersociology, Society and Technology, Sociology, Deviance, and Drugs!)
This page is a mixture of a variety of WWW links which should be of use to sociologists. Many of the links are ones that I have recorded over the past three years of "surfing the web." Credit for this page is also due the WWW Virtual Library: Sociology, which is compiled and maintained by Dr. Samuel Brown, from which I have taken many links. This page was last updated on Wednesday, October 25, 2006 3:56 PM . This is a CyberStudies Resources site.
This CyberStudies Resources site is owned by Robert Keel. Want to join the CyberStudies Resources WebRing? |
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Social Capital Gateway (maintained by Fabio Sabatini) (useful resources for all researchers interested in the topic, and to promote discussion and ideas exchange on social capital).
Sociosite at the Universityof Amsterdam: www.sociosite.net
My Sociology 2180 Drug Links Page
Illicit Drug Trade Resources: http://www.princeton.edu/~ina/drugs/sources.html
Info Graphics http://www.princeton.edu/~ina/infographics/index.html (cool graphical displays)
The Arts of Impression Management: http://wizard.ucr.edu/~bkaplan/soc/lib/goffimpr.html
Review of The Presentation of Self in EDL: http://www.cfmc.com/adamb/writings/goffman.htm
"The Presentation of Self in Electronic Life: Goffman on the Internet," Hugh Miller, Department of Social Sciences, The Nottingham Trent University Paper presented at Embodied Knowledge and Virtual Space Conference Goldsmiths' College, University of London, June 1995 http://ess.ntu.ac.uk/miller/cyberpsych/goffman.htm
About Goffman: http://people.brandeis.edu/~teuber/goffmanbio.html
National Priorities Project Database (http://database.nationalpriorities.org/)
"The NPP Database offers state data on socio-economic needs and federal expenditures, and allows you to create customized tables, graphs and reports. The database is free of charge, although after your first visit you will be asked to register. Registration is free and we will not share or sell any of the information you provide on the registration form. Registration gives the additional advantage of allowing you to save searches beyond one session and generate printer-friendly views."
Efficacy.org (http://www.efficacy-online.org/) A focus on the problems with the "war on drugs."
Drugsense Drug War Clock: http://www.drugsense.org/wodclock.htm
ADD Resources (www.addresources.org) (a medicalized perspective)
"Shedding a Tier," St. Louis Post-Dispatch (4/28/05): a look at changes to the alcohol control policies of Prohibition.
Study: Schools Are Resegregating:
http://www.msnbc.com/news/792013.asp
and
http://www.censusscope.org/FreyWPFinal.pdf
Drug Screening and Toxicology: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/003578.htm
Legalisation: The First Hundred Years:
What happened when drugs were legal and why they were prohibited
by Mike Jay
Today, as the notion of legalising drugs is making its way into the mainstream
political agenda for the first time in living memory, one of the most common
objections to it is that it represents a high-risk experiment whose outcome
cannot be accurately modelled or predicted. Yet within the context of history,
the opposite is true: it is the prohibition of drugs which is the bold experiment
without precedent. A hundred years ago, any of us could have walked into our
high street chemist and bought cannabis or cocaine, morphine or heroin over
the counter. At this point, mind-altering drugs had been freely available throughout
history and across almost every culture, and their prohibition, pressed forward
largely by the goal of eliminating alcohol from modern societies, was a radical
break with the traditional wisdom of public policy.
http://www.cedro-uva.org/lib/jay.legalisation.html
Basic Psychopharmacology of Antidepressants
Marijuana Information Factsheet: http://www.marijuana-info.org/
Belgian Beer: http://belgianstyle.com/mmguide/index.html
Home Distilling Information: http://www.homedistiller.org/
Medical Marijuana Science: http://www.medmjscience.org/
GHB Factsheet: http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/concern/ghb.html
A look at GHB: http://www.health.org/newsroom/rep/189.htm
www.safety1st.org. The new, expanded site was developed for parents and other adult role models concerned about teenage drug use. The new Web site features include:
1. Fact sheets about commonly used drugs.
ALCOHOL - http://www.safety1st.org/edu-alcohol.html
MARIJUANA - http://www.safety1st.org/edu-marijuana.html
ECSTASY - http://www.safety1st.org/edu-ecstasy.html
2. An opportunity to ask experts questions about teens and drug use.
LET’S TALK - http://www.safety1st.org/edu-letstalk.html
3. Practical tips for reaching out to teens.
AT HOME - http://www.safety1st.org/strategiesathome.html
AT SCHOOL - http://www.safety1st.org/strategiesatschool.html
"The NPP Database offers state data on socio-economic needs and federal expenditures, and allows you to create customized tables, graphs and reports. The database is free of charge, although after your first visit you will be asked to register. Registration is free and we will not share or sell any of the information you provide on the registration form. Registration gives the additional advantage of allowing you to save searches beyond one session and generate printer-friendly views."
New for SS 2000
These are some older links
New for 1999
New for 1998
New for SS2000
New for 1999
New for 1998
New for 2000
New for 1999
New for 1998
Pre Summer 1998
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Owner: Robert O. Keel rok@umsl.edu
Last Updated:
Wednesday, October 25, 2006 3:56 PM