Search

Showing total 17 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Search Limiters Academic (Peer-Reviewed) Journals Remove constraint Search Limiters: Academic (Peer-Reviewed) Journals Topic experience Remove constraint Topic: experience Journal critical social policy Remove constraint Journal: critical social policy
17 results

Search Results

1. Pregnant racialised migrants and the ubiquitous border: The hostile environment as a technology of stratified reproduction.

2. Encountering the hostile environment: Recently arrived Afghan migrants in London.

3. A critical overview of how English health and social care publications represent autistic adults' intimate lives.

4. Bouncing back? Recession, resilience and everyday lives.

5. Editorial introduction: Racialised migrants navigating the UK's hostile environment policies.

6. Sharing 'hostile' stories: Exploring the UK's 'hostile environment' through participatory arts-based methods.

7. Rights, responsibilities and refusals: Homelessness policy and the exclusion of single homeless people with complex needs.

8. An analysis of minoritisation in domestic homicide reviews in England and Wales.

9. Shattered glass piling at the bottom: The 'problem' with gender equality policy for higher education.

10. 'Do they ever think about people like us?': The experiences of people with learning disabilities in England and Scotland during the COVID-19 pandemic.

11. The micro-politics of energy efficiency: An investigation of 'eco-social interventions' in western Switzerland.

12. The UK government LGBT Action Plan: Discourses of progress, enduring stasis, and LGBTQI+ lives 'getting better'.

13. Birmingham Black Sisters: Struggles to end injustice.

15. Vulnerability and child sexual exploitation: Towards an approach grounded in life experiences.

16. A critical insight into practitioners’ lived experience of payment by results in the alcohol and drug treatment sector.

17. Technologies of evidence: An institutional ethnography from the standpoints of ‘youth-at-risk’.