Dictionary
choice theory
noun
A body of work, originating with Dr. William Glasser in 1995, an extension of his 'reality therapy' that posits and explains human behavior as living organisms' satisfying genetic needs for survival, connecting & belonging, power, freedom and fun.
Exact(60)
Public choice theory, to be sure, is a serious discipline.
Those advocating neoliberal policies often draw on rational choice theory.
Social choice theory is a field of scholarship that analyzes voting patterns in the abstract.
The Steuben County jail is holding workshops in choice theory for its inmates.
He says he saw a political class dazzled by management-speak and "public choice theory".
But applying public choice theory to federal antitrust actions defies logic at times.
The neoliberal narrative of governance overlaps somewhat with rational choice theory.
Rational choice theory extends a type of social explanation found in microeconomics.
His book The Theory of Committees and Elections (1958) became the basis of public choice theory.
It was inspired by ideas associated with neoliberalism and public choice theory.
By the early 21st century, rational choice theory was being stiffly challenged.
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