Sociology of Non-violence and Peace: Some Behavioural and Attitudinal Dimensions: A Study of Elites, Non-elites, and Students, and Institutional Situations in India, and of Elites in Nepal and CeylonResearch Council of Cultural Studies, India International Centre; [exclusively distributed by Munshiram Manoharlal], 1969 - Nonviolence - 188 pages |
Common terms and phrases
analysed anomic perception attitude of elites behavioural Buddhist cathectic Ceylon and Nepal Ceylonese elites Chi2 Christian coercive form cognition context cultural degree of affectivity degree of optimism elites and non-elites elites and students elites Ceylon elites in India elites India evaluation existential extent factors favour groups in India Hindu Hinduism humanistic Indian elites Jain Jainism less anomic majority Muslims nations Nepal and India Nepalese elites neutral countries non-elites and students non-elites India non-violent social order non-violent social system non-violent society normative Parsee particularistic pattern peaceful solution Percentages in brackets perception of anomie perception of non-violence ponse practising non-violence realisation relationship religion response Total responses of elites Showing the responses significant Sikh social policy social structure sociological specific groups students and non-elites students in India students India system of non-violence Table tends tick mark Type of respondents value orientation value system various religious groups western block countries Zorastrianism