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EN
In this paper an investigation of social media marketing techniques of Coworking spaces’ type of business is performed, using datasets acquired using social media monitoring tools. Mediatoolkit has been used to scrap data deriving from the activity of the WeWork Instagram and Twitter accounts which were collected on a 24/7 basis from varying locations and in multiple languages in a fifteen-day time window. Indices related to sentiment, reach, influence, number of followers, retweets, likes, comments, and view scores formed the datasets that were examined by applying multiple correspondence analysis as well as the hierarchical clustering method. The aim of this paper was to explore the inherent properties of the multiple indices describing the general realm of social media marketing tools, and more specifically aspires to provide digital marketers with an alternative perspective of social media marketing strategies related to the emerging coworking spaces type of business. The authors identified three classes/segments of posts, whereas post polarity tends to relate to geographic location, regardless of the social media channel used for posting.
EN
This paper addresses the relation between public urban safety and crime. It is assumed that crime prevention is a crucial tool to promote urban safety and that crime prevention programmes or measures must be designed and implemented based on knowledge about what tends to inhibit people from committing a certain crime. It is also assumed that inhibiting factors are, quite frequently, socially constructed and imposed, meaning that an individual hypothetical decision of offending, or not offending, is influenced by socially constructed ethical values, moral values and perceived social cost. In other words, it is assumed that an individual decision is not unique, in that it is felt, fought and implemented to cope with a particular situation. Results of an exploratory empirical study support these assumptions. A sample of 200 inhabitants of Lisbon was used in an inquiry into what kind of factors would inhibit each respondent from committing several hypothetical offences, namely shoplifting. Data was analysed using three methods of multivariate analysis: Multiple Correspondence Analysis, Cluster Analysis and Categorical Regression. Results show that decisions are influenced by a complex set of factors. First, each decision is influenced by ethical and moral values and by perceived social cost which are mainly socially configured. Secondly, clear and significant differences are found between groups configured by inhibiting factors. Ethical and moral values and perceived social cost did not appear as unique in that each individual constructs them from a given situation. This means that socially configured ethical and moral values, not a unique situational morality, as well as perceived social cost can inhibit shoplifting. Implications for crime prevention design and implementation are analysed and discussed.
PL
Celem artykułu jest analiza aktywności turystycznej emerytów i rencistów zamieszkujących województwo zachodniopomorskie a w szczególności wykrycie powiązań pomiędzy zmiennymi charakteryzującymi ich wyjazdy turystyczne. Jako narzędzie badawcze wykorzystano wielowymiarową analizę korespondencji. Ze względu na dość dużą liczbę wariantów analizowanych zmiennych zastosowano metodę Warda, która umożliwiła wyznaczenie powiązań pomiędzy wariantami zmiennych.
EN
The purpose of the article is an analysis of tourism activity and pensioners living in West County in particular, to detect relationships between variables characterizing their vacations. The study used a multidimensional analysis of the correspondence. Due to the relatively large number of variants of the analyzed variables using Ward method, which allowed setting the links between the variants of variables.
EN
The aim of this article is to demonstrate the process of the legitimization of the Polish Constitutional Tribunal. In contrast to the dominant legal perspective, we consider the Tribunal relationally, as a kind of social space, located at the intersection of several social worlds that influence it (law, science, politics, and administration). The study concerns the biographies of all the judges elected from 1985 to 2018. Judges are treated as holders of various types of resources-capital (academic title, legal profession, government function, parliamentary mandate, etc.). The study, conducted by means of multiple correspondence analysis, allowed us to reconstruct the Constitutional Tribunal’s space. As a consequence, we have revealed not only the complexity and multidimensionality of the legitimacy of the Polish Constitutional Tribunal, but also captured its dynamic.
PL
Celem artykułu jest ukazanie procesu legitymizacji Trybunału Konstytucyjnego. Perspektywa relacyjna, którą proponujemy, jest odmienna od prawniczej, dominującej w rozważaniach na ten temat. Traktujemy Trybunał jako rodzaj przestrzeni, usytuowany na przecięciu kilku światów społecznych (prawo, nauka, polityka, administracja), które na niego oddziałują. Badanie przeprowadziliśmy, analizując biografie wszystkich sędziów wybranych w latach 1985–2018. Sędziowie zostali potraktowani jako posiadacze znaczących społecznie zasobów – kapitałów (tytuł naukowy, zawód prawniczy, funkcja w administracji rządowej, mandat poselski itp.). Wykorzystując wieloraką analizę korespondencji, odtworzyliśmy przestrzeń Trybunału. Tym samym uchwyciliśmy nie tylko złożoność i wielowymiarowość legitymizacji polskiego sądu konstytucyjnego, lecz także zmiany tego procesu w czasie.
EN
Cultural capital is an important part of the conceptual apparatus of research on inequalities and social reproduction. The putative transformation of cultural hierarchies in contemporary society, however, opens up the question of whether it still makes any sense to speak of ‘legitimate taste’ and eventually of what the nature this legitimate taste might be. This article examines what constitutes legitimate culture in the context of university-level study. It focuses on the differentiation of taste and the way in which the space of cultural consumption is structured by academic disciplines and university faculties. The article draws on data from a questionnaire survey of first- and second-year students at Charles University in 2017 (n = 5127) and conducts a multiple correspondence analysis. It shows that the first dimension of the cultural space of students can be interpreted as the axis of overall cultural capital without any specific differentiation. The third dimension of cultural space, by contrast, convincingly captures a cleavage between traditional cultural capital and a new form of cultural capital. The amount of cultural capital accumulated depends on the kind of academic disciplines studied, but another significant structuring element of cultural capital is the environment of individual university faculties itself.
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