Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
This was publicly proclaimed as a struggle against bureaucratism and embourgeoisement.
The result of this idea of embourgeoisement is that more people are incorporated into the middle-class.
The 1959 election defeat and the growing embourgeoisement of the working class were thought to spell future electoral ruin for Labour.
The thesis of embourgeoisement of the British working class has proved to be an attractive one.
Goldthorpe is also well known for his work on the embourgeoisement thesis which he dispelled in 1963.
Sociologist John Goldthorpe largely discredited the embourgeoisement thesis in 1963.
It has evolved towards gentrification or embourgeoisement in French, as some sociologists or newspapers noted.
Embourgeoisement immédiat ed.
By now, those portions of Brooklyn first colonized by fleeing artists have almost completed the cycle of embourgeoisement.
The patchy prosperity of the Thatcher era began to seep into a deeper embourgeoisement of Britain.
Others, such as Engels, criticised the movement as "Proudhonist," and a means of ensuring the longevity of capitalism through a process of embourgeoisement.
Goldthorpe and his colleagues conducted an empirical enquiry into working class affluence and working class politics to conclude that embourgeoisement is not a tenable thesis.
Tupac undergoes "embourgeoisement," apparently without anesthesia, and after his death his mother "would prove an implacable petitioner for Tupac's 40 acres and a mule."
The good news for Labour from a comparative survey is that such features as wider home ownership, affluence, and the embourgeoisement of the working class are not necessarily electorally adverse.
- and preferring words like "biota," "masticable," "pinguid" and "embourgeoisement," where perhaps simpler words would do.
A recent analysis of social class in Britain by Ralf Dahrendorf does much to explain why little hope can be placed in any movement towards embourgeoisement in Britain.
"The Embourgeoisement of Revolutionary Regimes: Reflections on Abdallah Laroui," Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, July-September 1998.
In the meantime, the profile of the supporters attending games at the Santiago Bernabéu had also changed: an embourgeoisement process meant that the support was no longer as vocal and passionate as in the 1980s'.
This embourgeoisement of German social life was greater than in Britain and France, which in the opinion of Eley and Blackbourn was more distinctly marked by aristocratic values than was Germany.
Unlike dogs, "whose qualities lent themselves to embourgeoisement," cats were just beginning to be accepted - partly, Ms. Kete thinks, by owners pretending that cats, while cleaner than dogs, could learn to behave like man's best friends.
An example of this might be the "embourgeoisement theory" which enjoyed widespread currency a few years ago in sociology, and which argued that the "working class", in Britain, were becoming more like the "middle class" in their aspirations, consumption patterns and political views.
Lord Joseph's family was 'minimally observant' but 'maximally acknowledging'of Judaism, and his concern for poverty is, in a way, quintessentially Jewish, underpinned by a sense of charity and a belief that prosperity can be encouraged, as can his favourite condition, embourgeoisement.
But the party has also lost out because of the salience of race (which encouraged the white south to defect to the Republicans), embourgeoisement of the working class, and the Social Issue (concern about the rise of the anti-Vietnam war protest movement in the 1970s and the assertiveness and challenges to traditional values by various minority groups).