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  1. Mar 14, 2019 · Recognition in sociology. Working in the tradition of critical theory, both Honneth and Fraser conceptualize recognition as a process crucial to, as well as an outcome of, social justice.

    • Melissa Sebrechts, Evelien Tonkens, Barbara Da Roit
    • 2019
  2. Feb 7, 2012 · In recent years, the idea of the politics of recognition has become an increasingly popular way of thinking about a wide range of political phenomena, from the logic of social struggles to the nature of social justice.

    • Wendy Martineau, Nasar Meer, Simon Thompson
    • 2012
  3. As the term is commonly used, to be recognized means to be seen or regarded—whether directly or through the mediation of social and political institutions—under some practically significant description; that is, under a description that makes a difference in the way its bearer is treated, perhaps even shaping the terms in which she understands h...

  4. However, Bourdieus concept of misrecognition is different, and it arises from ’ his central concern with social practices in social spaces or elds. In Bourdieu fi ’s view, social elds produce knowledge, and knowledge is a form of capital, associ-fi ated with prestige or power.

  5. the term ‘recognition’. It has several distinct meanings: (1) an act of intel-lectual apprehension, such as when we recognise that we have made a mistake or we recognise the influence of religion on American politics; (2) a form of identification, such as when we recognise a friend in the street; and (3) the act of acknowledging or respecting an...

    • Paddy McQueen
    • 2015
  6. recognition have become institutionalized as a normative societal infrastructure: intimate relationships with 'love' as a guiding idea, legal relations with 'equality' as a guiding principle, and loose-knit social relations with 'achievement' as a normative standard (pp. 138 ff.).

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  8. Jun 4, 2021 · The identification of authoritarianism as a form of pathologic recognition has been able to reveal this relation to others in the form of mutual recognition and self-relation.

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