Sociogram representing social links and relationships Social science is the branch of science devoted to the study of societies and the relationships among individuals within those societies. The term was formerly used to refer to the field of sociology, the original "science of society", established in the 19th century. In addition to sociology, it now encompasses a wide array of academic disciplines, including anthropology, archaeology, economics, human geography, linguistics, management science, media studies, political science, psychology, and social history.[1] ## Contents * 1 Resources * 2 Social Sciences Categories * 3 See Also * 4 References ## Resources[edit | edit source] ## Social Sciences Categories[edit | edit source] Social sciences‎ (32 cats, 19 pgs) Anthropology‎ (9 cats, 30 pgs) Business‎ (33 cats, 113 pgs) Communication‎ (14 cats, 20 pgs) Conservation sciences‎ (1 cat) Corporate social responsibility‎ (45 pgs) Criminal justice‎ (8 pgs) Cultural studies‎ (5 cats, 7 pgs) Domestic violence‎ (empty) Economics‎ (15 cats, 151 pgs) Education‎ (39 cats, 282 pgs) Environmental social science‎ (2 pgs) Ethnology‎ (8 cats, 10 pgs) Facilitating Online‎ (27 pgs) Geography‎ (11 cats, 41 pgs) History‎ (16 cats, 157 pgs) Home economics‎ (6 pgs) Information sciences‎ (6 cats, 4 pgs) Language studies‎ (3 cats, 1 pg) Law‎ (9 cats, 23 pgs) Mortuary science and thanatology‎ (1 pg) Political science‎ (22 cats, 86 pgs) Psychology‎ (80 cats, 64 pgs, 1 file) Recreation‎ (6 cats, 2 pgs) School of Life‎ (1 cat, 2 pgs) Social research‎ (8 pgs) Social Science courses‎ (12 cats, 7 pgs) Social Sciences stubs‎ (7 cats, 1 pg) Social theory‎ (1 cat, 2 pgs) Social work‎ (1 pg) Socialism‎ (3 pgs) Sociology‎ (16 cats, 45 pgs) Women's studies‎ (7 pgs) ## See Also[edit | edit source] * Portal:Social Sciences * Wikipedia: Social science ## References[edit | edit source] 1. ↑ Wikipedia: Social science