ProfessionalizationPrentice-Hall, 1966 - 365 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 83
Página 13
... client - professional relationship . The professional cannot prescribe guides for facets of the client's life where his theoretical competence does not apply . To venture such prescriptions is to invade a province wherein he himself is ...
... client - professional relationship . The professional cannot prescribe guides for facets of the client's life where his theoretical competence does not apply . To venture such prescriptions is to invade a province wherein he himself is ...
Página 143
... client or employer and the contractor when dealing with contracts . Sec . 10. He will make his status clear to his client or employer before undertaking an engagement if he may be called upon to decide on the use of inventions ...
... client or employer and the contractor when dealing with contracts . Sec . 10. He will make his status clear to his client or employer before undertaking an engagement if he may be called upon to decide on the use of inventions ...
Página 198
... client needs on his own best judgment and recom- mend actions which are unpopular with clients and / or the public . There is , then , a basic problem of balancing client and public obligations , and a necessity to keep self - interest ...
... client needs on his own best judgment and recom- mend actions which are unpopular with clients and / or the public . There is , then , a basic problem of balancing client and public obligations , and a necessity to keep self - interest ...
Contenido
The Elements of Professionalization | 9 |
The Social Context of Professionalization | 46 |
Individuals and Professionalization | 72 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
activities administration American Medical Association Angus Maude Anselm Strauss attitudes attorney authority become behavior bureaucratic career Carr-Saunders cent chiropractic client colleagues concept conflict dentistry discussion doctor Emile Durkheim employer engineers ethical codes example faculty feel fessional formal functions Glencoe highly professionalized occupations hospital ideal important individual industrial institutions interest internal Journal of Sociology kind labor lawyers less librarian marriage counseling medicine membership ment mobility Negro colleges nonprofessionals nuclear nurse occupational groups organization organizational patient patterns persons physicians political position practice practitioners Press prestige problems profes profession professional associations professional groups professional status psychiatrists psychologists question Questionnaire relations relationship responsibility role salary segments sion sional skills social scientist social workers Sociology specialty standards structure Talcott Parsons teachers technical tend tion unions University University of Chicago women York