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Tannenbaum, Frank, 1893-1969 (Personal Name)

Preferred form: Tannenbaum, Frank, 1893-1969

Leverhulme, W. H. L. The six-hour shift ... 1920.

Literature resource center WWW site, Mar. 22, 2011 (Frank Tannenbaum; b. Mar. 4, 1893, Austria, d. June 1, 1969; historian)

Wikipedia, viewed November 29, 2016 (Frank Tannenbaum (4 March 1893--1 June 1969); Austrian-American historian, sociologist and criminologist; born in Austria on 4 March 1893. He migrated to the United States in 1905. During the economic crisis of 1913-1915, he became a leader of the Industrial Workers of the World; attended Columbia University; received his Ph.D. in economics from the Brookings Institution; moved to Mexico, where he conducted research on rural education and served as an adviser to President Lázaro Cárdenas; In 1932, he returned to the United States to teach criminology at Cornell University; died in New York City in 1969. His conception of the "Dramatization Of Evil" led to the further development of the symbolic interactionist labeling theory, widely used in both sociology and social psychology.) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Tannenbaum

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