The program was based on the analysis and evaluation of, and reflection on, new contents, trends, activities, practices and institutions belonging in the micro-sphere of everyday life. Everyday life has become a strategic goal and the strategic basis in the production and reproduction of modern developed societies. In this sense, the focus of social research has been shifting from the once predominant, grand themes to everyday life providing place for all those who used to be socially excluded (or are still excluded). The shift from grand social topics to the analysis of everyday life also entailed changes in epistemology and methodology of the approach. The primary importance of everyday life is the basis for quantitative methodology, since the world in which we live is accessible primarily through experience and co-experience. The everyday world is the world that defies the split into the subject and object of research which is characteristic of traditional scientific methodologies. Since our research concentrated on individuals in specific social situations or actions rather than institutions or systems, the fundamental categories involved were meaning, sense, knowledge, constructions of reality and the everyday world. Biographies, narratives, discourse analysis, stories and observations become tools offering new possibilities of interpretation of general social processes and history.