Social sciences today are witnessing vigorous activity. Social scientists deepen our understanding of politics, anthropology, sociology, psychology, and economics through careful analysis, examined theories, and concrete empirical research. They enlighten us about the world in which we live and especially about individuals, groups, societies, organizations, systems, nations, and states.
Here at The Key Research Center, we are devoted to contributing to progressive research on social sciences. Certainly, social sciences have many departments, divisions, branches and sub-branches. Such a wide scope coupled with efficiency imperatives necessitate that we focus on four major social sciences departments: political science, psychology, sociology, and anthropology. Each of these departments comprises a distinct and autonomous direction of thought. Moreover, these departments are grouped into sets of different sub-fields and topics relevant to our research objectives. In that sense, our chosen departments allow us to navigate a wide array of branches and topics that fit our research agenda on social sciences. Therefore, focusing on theoretical and applied research on these five departments does optimum justice to our agenda in social sciences research: