607 results
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102. Con-forming bodies: the interplay of machines and bodies and the implications of agency in medical imaging.
- Author
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Wood, Lisa A.
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ALLIED health personnel , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *ETHNOLOGY , *HUMAN constitution , *MEN'S health , *RADIOTHERAPY , *SOCIOLOGY , *TECHNOLOGY - Abstract
Attending to the material discursive constructions of the patient body within cone beam computed tomography ( CBCT) imaging in radiotherapy treatments, in this paper I describe how bodies and machines co-create images. Using an analytical framework inspired by Science and Technology Studies and Feminist Technoscience, I describe the interplay between machines and bodies and the implications of materialities and agency. I argue that patients' bodies play a part in producing scans within acceptable limits of machines as set out through organisational arrangements. In doing so I argue that bodies are fabricated into the order of work prescribed and embedded within and around the CBCT system, becoming, not only the subject of resulting images, but part of that image. The scan is not therefore a representation of a passive subject (a body) but co-produced by the work of practitioners and patients who actively control (and contort) and discipline their body according to protocols and instructions and the CBCT system. In this way I suggest they are ' con-forming' the CBCT image. A Virtual Abstract of this paper can be found at: . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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103. THE WEBER THESIS OF CALVINISM AND CAPITALISM-ITS VARIOUS VERSIONS AND THEIR 'FATE' IN SOCIAL SCIENCE.
- Author
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ZAFIROVSKI, MILAN
- Subjects
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CALVINISM , *PROTESTANTISM , *CAPITALISM , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The paper identifies and examines various multiple renditions of the so-called Weber Thesis of an historical association and convergence between ascetic Protestantism, above all Calvinism, and the emergence and development of modern capitalism as an economic spirit and system. Specifically, it detects at least four different versions and formulations or interpretations, thus casting doubt in the common view of the Weber Thesis as a single and monolithic theory or hypothesis. The paper also considers the status of the multiple versions of the Weber Thesis in post-Weberian and contemporary sociology and related disciplines like economics and history. It concludes that the weaker, relaxed renditions of the Weber Thesis have attained a greater success and more endured in contemporary social science than have its stronger, stricter versions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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104. Notes towards a 'social aesthetic': Guest Editors' introduction to the special section.
- Author
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Olcese, Cristiana and Savage, Mike
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AESTHETICS -- Social aspects , *SOCIOLOGY , *CULTURAL production - Abstract
There is an emerging 'aesthetic turn' within sociology which currently lacks clear focus. This paper reviews the different issues feeding into this interest and contributes to its development. Previous renderings of this relationship have set the aesthetic up against sociology, as an emphasis which 'troubles' conventional understandings of sociality and offers no ready way of reconciling the aesthetic with the social. Reflecting on the contributions of recent social theorists, from figures including Bourdieu, Born, Rancière, Deleuze, and Martin, we argue instead for the value of a social aesthetic which critiques instrumentalist and reductive understandings of the social itself. In explicating what form this might take, the latter parts of the paper take issue with classical modernist conceptions of the aesthetic which continue to dominate popular and sociological understandings of the aesthetic, and uses the motif of 'walking' to show how the aesthetic can be rendered in terms of 'the mundane search' and how this search spans everyday experience and cultural re-production. We offer a provisional definition of social aesthetics as the embedded and embodied process of meaning making which, by acknowledging the physical/corporeal boundaries and qualities of the inhabited world, also allows imagination to travel across other spaces and times. It is hoped that this approach can be a useful platform for further inquiry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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105. Realism and Contingency.
- Author
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Brock, Tom and Carrigan, Mark
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CRITICAL realism , *CONTINGENCY (Philosophy) , *COLLECTIVE action , *STUDENT activism , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper constitutes an extended response to Athanasia Chalari's paper The Causal Impact of Resistance, which suggests that one may derive from internal conversations a causal explanation of resistance. In the context of our engagements with critical realism and digital research into social movements, we review Chalari's main argument, before applying it to a concrete case: the student protests in London, 2010. Whilst our account is sympathetic to Chalari's focus on interiority, we critique the individualism that is implicit in her argument, arguing that it emerges because of an underlying neglect of the relational aspects of resistance. Instead, we offer a relational realist analysis that treats resistance as process within an ontologically stratified account of reality that is mindful of the contingency of political acts. Taking this route, we establish resistance as an emergent relation, generative of distinctive 'relational goods' in the context of collective action, which we locate at different levels of reality, as we move from an analysis of individual to collective reflexivity. In doing so we offer a sympathetic critique of Chalari, building on the thought provoking arguments contained within it, whilst also making a contribution to the theorisation of social movements and the 'relational turn' within realist social theory ( Archer, 2010, 2012). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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106. Certainties and Doubts: Collected Papers, 1962–1985 (Book).
- Author
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Baber, Zaheer
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SOCIOLOGY , *NONFICTION - Abstract
Reviews the book "Certainties and Doubts: Collected Papers, 1962-1985," by George Caspar Homans.
- Published
- 1990
107. Class and comparison: subjective social location and lay experiences of constraint and mobility.
- Author
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Irwin, Sarah
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SOCIAL classes , *SOCIAL mobility , *EQUALITY , *REFERENCE groups , *SOCIOLOGY , *CLASS identity , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *IDENTITY (Psychology) - Abstract
Lay perceptions and experiences of social location have been commonly framed with reference to social class. However, complex responses to, and ambivalence over, class categories have raised interesting analytic questions relating to how sociological concepts are operationalized in empirical research. For example, prior researchers have argued that processes of class dis-identification signify moral unease with the nature of classed inequalities, yet dis-identification may also in part reflect a poor fit between 'social class' as a category and the ways in which people accord meaning to, and evaluate, their related experiences of socio-economic inequality. Differently framed questions about social comparison, aligned more closely with people's own terms of reference, offer an interesting alternative avenue for exploring subjective experiences of inequality. This paper explores some of these questions through an analysis of new empirical data, generated in the context of recession. In the analysis reported here, class identification was common. Nevertheless, whether or not people self identified in class terms, class relevant issues were perceived and described in highly diverse ways, and lay views on class revealed it to be a very aggregated as well as multifaceted construct. It is argued that it enables a particular, not general, perspective on social comparison. The paper therefore goes on to examine how study participants compared themselves with familiar others, identified by themselves. The evidence illuminates social positioning in terms of constraint, agency and (for some) movement, and offers insight into very diverse experiences of inequality, through the comparisons that people made. Their comparisons are situated, and pragmatic, accounts of the material contexts in which people live their lives. Linked evaluations are circumscribed and strongly tied to these proximate material contexts.The paper draws out implications for theorizing lay perspectives on class, and subjective experiences of inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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108. Athletes confessions: The sports biography as an interaction ritual.
- Author
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Thing, L. F. and Ronglan, L. T.
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BIOGRAPHY (Literary form) , *DOPING in sports , *EMOTIONS , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *SOCIOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *PROFESSIONAL athletes , *THEMATIC analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Commercialization of emotions is not a new phenomenon but in Denmark there is a new general trend to tell and sell personal stories in the media. Personal deprivation and crises are also major topics in sports media. This paper focuses on sports biographies as a book genre that is reviving in popularity. The paper approaches the topic through the biographies of one Danish athlete: the former professional cyclist, Jesper Skibby, who writes about his doping disclosure and shares his personal dilemmas as a former elite sportsman. The thematic text analysis orientates around social interactions, emotions, and personality constructions. Inspired by microsociology with a Durkheimian flavor of Goffman and Hochschild, themes including 'face work,' 'interaction rituals,' and 'emotions management' are discussed. The analysis claims that sharing personal information in the media is not only a means of confession and reclaiming status but is also business and management - on an intimate level. Telling the story of the corrosion of a sporting character has become a hot issue, an entertainment, and not least a commercial commitment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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109. For Geographies of Children, Young People and Popular Culture.
- Author
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Horton, John
- Subjects
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GEOGRAPHY , *POPULAR culture , *CULTURAL studies , *MEDIA studies , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper calls for more direct, careful, sustained research on geographies of children, young people and popular culture. I present three sets of empirical and conceptual resources for researchers developing work in this area. Part 1 signposts classic work from cultural/media studies, marketing and sociology, which has been centrally concerned with meanings of popular culture designed for children and young people (e.g. via critiques of the gendered content of iconic popular cultural phenomena). Part 2 foregrounds nascent conceptualisations of social-material geographies of childhood and youth. I argue that these conceptualisations can extend and unsettle classic work on popular culture, by questioning how popular cultural texts, objects and phenomena matter. Halfway through the paper is a 'commercial break'. Here, I present some personal reflections on working at the intersection between the ideas discussed in Parts 1 and 2. With reference to a specific popular cultural artefact (the Toys 'Я' Us Christmas toy catalogue), I argue that both meanings and matterings are crucial for geographers engaging with children and young people's popular cultures. In conclusion, I argue that more geographers should engage with the literature and issues outlined in Part 1, but also that the geographical concepts discussed in Part 2 demand new modes of research, thinking and writing in relation to popular cultural texts, objects and phenomena. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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110. What has become of critique? Reassembling sociology after Latour.
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Mills, Tom
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *ACTOR-network theory , *REALISM , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Abstract: This paper offers a defence of sociology through an engagement with Actor Network Theory (ANT) and particularly the critique of ‘critical’ and politically engaged social science developed by Bruno Latour. It argues that ANT identifies some weaknesses in more conventional sociology and social theory, and suggests that ‘critical’ and ‘public’ orientated sociologists can learn from the analytical precision and ethnographic sensibilities that characterize ANT as a framework of analysis and a research programme. It argues, however, that Latour et al. have too hastily dispensed with ‘critique’ in favour of a value neutral descriptive sociology, and that the symmetrical and horizontalist approach adopted in ANT is particularly ill‐suited to the development of scientific knowledge about social structures. It argues that a more straightforwardly realist sociology would share many of the strengths of ANT whilst being better able to interrogate, empirically and normatively, the centres of contemporary social power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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111. How fields vary.
- Author
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Krause, Monika
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SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *AUTONOMY (Philosophy) , *HIERARCHIES - Abstract
Abstract: Field theorists have long insisted that research needs to pay attention to the particular properties of each field studied. But while much field‐theoretical research is comparative, either explicitly or implicitly, scholars have only begun to develop the language for describing the dimensions along which fields can be similar to and different from each other. In this context, this paper articulates an agenda for the analysis of variable properties of fields. It discusses variation in the degree but also in the kind of field autonomy. It discusses different dimensions of variation in field structure: fields can be more or less contested, and more or less hierarchical. The structure of symbolic oppositions in a field may take different forms. Lastly, it analyses the dimensions of variation highlighted by research on fields on the sub‐ and transnational scale. Post‐national analysis allows us to ask how fields relate to fields of the same kind on different scales, and how fields relate to fields on the same scale in other national contexts. It allows us to ask about the role resources from other scales play in structuring symbolic oppositions within fields. A more fine‐tuned vocabulary for field variation can help us better describe particular fields and it is a precondition for generating hypotheses about the conditions under which we can expect to observe fields with specified characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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112. Advancing the Sociology of Empathy: A Proposal.
- Author
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Ruiz‐Junco, Natalia
- Subjects
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EMPATHY , *SOCIOLOGY , *INTERACTIONISM (Philosophy) , *SOCIAL constructionism , *SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
Empathy is an increasingly popular term in the public sphere and in academia. Although the common belief is that empathy is a 'psychological' topic, sociologists have made important contributions to this conversation. The goal of this article is to provide a theoretical effort in advancing the sociology of empathy. In the first part of the paper, I review classical and contemporary statements on empathy. I identify Charles H. Cooley as an important precursor of the sociology of empathy, and discuss how contemporary interactionists have further developed this notion. Based on these previous insights, I next propose a preliminary framework for the study of the social construction of empathy. This framework is presented in two steps. First, I introduce a vocabulary based on interpretivist concepts: empathy frames, empathy rules, and empathy performances. Next, I coin the idea of empathy paths. I theorize three ideal-typical empathy paths: self-transcendent, therapeutic, and instrumental. Throughout this presentation, I use empirical cases to illustrate the applicability of this framework. In the conclusion, I show how sociologists can inform public understandings of the meaning of empathy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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113. Committing Canadian Sociology: Developing a Canadian Sociology and a Sociology of Canada.
- Author
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Matthews, Ralph
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *NEOLIBERALISM , *GLOBALIZATION , *ABORIGINAL Canadians -- Legal status, laws, etc. , *ENVIRONMENTALISM , *MANNERS & customs ,SOCIAL conditions in Canada - Abstract
This paper is a slightly revised version of the author's 'Outstanding Career Award Lecture' presented at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Sociological Association in Victoria, British Columbia on June 6, 2013. The paper distinguishes between Canadian Sociology and the Sociology of Canada. The former involves the explanatory stance that one takes to understanding Canada. The latter addresses the significant social dimensions that underlie Canadian social organization, culture, and behavior. I make a case for a Canadian Sociology that focuses on the unique features of Canadian society rather than adopting a comparative perspective. I also argue that there is a continuing need within the Sociology of Canada to address the issues of staples development. However, I argue that 'new' staples analysis must have a directional change from that of the past, in that social processes now largely determine the pattern of staples development. Moreover, new staples analysis must include issues that were never part of earlier staples analysis, such as issues of environmental impacts and of staples depletion under conditions, such as climate change. The paper concludes by analyzing four factors that provide the dominant social contexts for analyzing modern staples development: (1) the rise of neoliberal government, (2) the implementation of globalization and its social consequences, (3) the assumption of aboriginal rights and entitlement, and (4) the rise of environmentalism. These factors were generally not considered in earlier staples approaches. They are critical to understanding the role of staples development and its impact on Canada in the present time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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114. American Sociology: History and Racially Gendered Classed Knowledge Reproduction.
- Author
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Padilla Wyse, Jennifer
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *HISTORY & sociology , *POWER (Social sciences) , *GENDER & society , *RACE & society , *HUMANITY , *HISTORY ,HISTORY of the theory of knowledge - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to explore how racially gendered classed power-relations structure history, knowledge and American Sociology's historical memory and disciplinary knowledge production. In order to do so, this paper will 1) utilize Cabral's (1970) theory of history to center humanity as historically developed into a racially gendered classed capitalist world-system, 2) employ intersectionality as a heuristic device to see how knowledge is manipulated to normalize dehumanization as well as to perpetuate exploitation and privilege by denying ' Othered' ' knowledges, and lastly 3) sociologically imagine this racially gendered classed process in the 'institutional-structure' of American Sociology by exploring the ancestry of the concept of 'intersectionality.' In all this paper argues 1) American Sociology under theorizes history, a central aspect of the sociological imagination and production of new sociological knowledge, 2) American Sociology reproduces a dehumanized theory of history per Marx's 'historical materialism' and 3) the structure of American Sociology's knowledge is racially gendered classed, as illustrated in the collective memory of the concept of 'intersectionality.' [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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115. Making their own futures? Research change and diversity amongst contemporary British human geographers.
- Author
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Hall, Tim
- Subjects
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HUMAN geography , *GEOGRAPHERS , *EXPERTISE , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY , *CRITICAL theory , *CULTURAL geography , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
The paper discusses a survey of British academic human geographers enquiring about change and diversification within personal research activities, their nature, motivations and impacts. It argues that this is widespread and a significant aspect of the production of contemporary geographical knowledge. The findings highlight the range of motivations underpinning research change, its impacts and mediation through the institutional context of British human geography. It concludes that despite a more prescriptive institutional context geographers have a degree of autonomy, albeit somewhat fettered, to shape their own research trajectories to some extent. This provides some important capacity with which to engage with imminent challenges facing the discipline in the UK). The paper complements recent critical histories of geography and sociological accounts of the discipline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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116. Nations, National Cultures, and Natural Languages: A Contribution to the Sociology of Nations.
- Author
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Pickel, Andreas
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CULTURE , *LANGUAGE & languages , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL impact , *SOCIAL sciences , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
This paper seeks to contribute to the sociology of nations, a literature that is only starting to carve out its place in the social sciences. The paper offers a reconceptualization of 'nations' as 'national cultures', employing an evolutionary perspective and a systemic framework in which 'nations' are understood as cultural systems of a special kind. National cultures are intimately tied to natural languages, and the acquisition of a national culture occurs as part and parcel of the acquisition of a natural language. Acquiring a natural language is a prerequisite for learning other cultural systems (artefactual languages as well as other natural languages). National cultures function as metacultures. They are also the reference cultures for modern states and their citizens, a political dimension of nations that is of paramount importance, though it will only be touched on in this paper. National cultures should be considered as the most fundamental type of cultural system today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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117. Reconceptualizing resistance: sociology and the affective dimension of resistance.
- Author
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Hynes, Maria
- Subjects
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RESISTANCE (Philosophy) , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *RESISTANCE to government , *EMOTIONS , *POLITICAL opposition , *POSTSTRUCTURALISM , *POWER (Social sciences) , *IDEOLOGY - Abstract
This paper re-examines the sociological study of resistance in light of growing interest in the concept of affect. Recent claims that we are witness to an 'affective turn' and calls for a 'new sociological empiricism' sensitive to affect indicate an emerging paradigm shift in sociology. Yet, mainstream sociological study of resistance tends to have been largely unaffected by this shift. To this end, this paper presents a case for the significance of affect as a lens by which to approach the study of resistance. My claim is not simply that the forms of actions we would normally recognize as resistance have an affective dimension. Rather, it is that the theory of affect broadens 'resistance' beyond the purview of the two dominant modes of analysis in sociology; namely, the study of macropolitical forms, on the one hand, and the micropolitics of everyday resistance on the other. This broadened perspective challenges the persistent assumption that ideological forms of power and resistance are the most pertinent to the contemporary world, suggesting that much power and resistance today is of a more affective nature. In making this argument, it is a Deleuzian reading of affect that is pursued, which opens up to a level of analysis beyond the common understanding of affect as emotion. I argue that an affective approach to resistance would pay attention to those barely perceptible transitions in power and mobilizations of bodily potential that operate below the conscious perceptions and subjective emotions of social actors. These affective transitions constitute a new site at which both power and resistance operate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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118. Understanding looked-after childhoods.
- Author
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Goodyer, Annabel
- Subjects
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CHILD development , *CHILD welfare , *FOSTER children , *HUMAN rights , *PROFESSIONAL ethics , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIAL case work , *SOCIOLOGY , *THEORY , *LABELING theory - Abstract
ABSTRACT The absence of a sociological discourse about children in the past meant that child and family social work has largely relied on psychological interpretations of children and their behaviour. However, since the 1990s, the sociology of childhood has been developed in the UK. The aim of this paper is to explore the relevance of the sociology of childhood in understanding looked-after childhoods and in informing contemporary social work practice with looked-after children and young people. The central argument of this paper is that, in order to fulfil professional responsibilities and to implement current and forthcoming UK social policies for looked-after children, social work needs to employ broad understandings of children, young people and looked-after childhoods. The paper goes on to discuss the ways in which a social work approach drawing on the sociology of childhood can offer such a conceptualization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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119. Why do nations matter? The struggle for belonging and security in an uncertain world.
- Author
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Skey, Michael
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM -- Social aspects , *SOCIOLOGY , *IDENTIFICATION (Psychology) , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *SAFETY , *EVERYDAY life , *ETHNICITY & society ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This paper explores the reasons why national forms of identification and organization (might) matter in the contemporary era. In contrast to the majority of macro-sociological work dealing with this topic, I develop an analytical framework that draws together recent research on everyday nationalism with micro-sociological and psychological studies pointing to the importance of routine practices, institutional arrangements and symbolic systems in contributing to a relatively settled sense of identity, place and community. The second part of the paper focuses on the hierarchies of belonging that operate within a given national setting. Of particular interest is the largely taken-for-granted status of the ethnic majority and the degree to which it underpins claims to belonging and entitlement that are used to secure key allocative and authoritative resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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120. Getting the message: intuition and reflexivity in professional interpretations of non-verbal behaviours in people with profound learning disabilities.
- Author
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Phelvin, Andrew
- Subjects
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COMMUNICATION methodology , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *INTELLECT , *INTUITION , *PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities , *NONVERBAL communication , *NURSES , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *JOB performance , *PATIENT-centered care - Abstract
Accessible summary People with profound and multiple learning disabilities are often unable to talk to the staff who help to care for them. They rely on non-verbal communication behaviours to communicate, for example Facial expressions., Gestures., Eye contact., This raises particular challenges for those staff, who include nurses with learning disability nurses. This paper outlines those challenges. They include challenges raised by Person centred planning., The mental capacity act., The need to provide evidence for practice., This paper goes on to suggest ways in which staff can meet these challenges, including the use of skills based on intuition and the use of reflective practice. This paper will help professional staff move towards understanding the NVC of people who have profound and multiple learning disabilities. Summary This paper describes the current challenges facing nurses and other professionals who care for people with profound and multiple intellectual disabilities. This particularly vulnerable group of service users often rely on a repertoire of non-verbal behaviours to communicate their needs and wishes. These challenges include the requirements of Person Centred Planning, the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and the evidence-based practice movement. Drawing on nursing and some other relevant professional literature, this paper explores the latter in particular and how it relates to the intuitive knowledge base that professionals use to interpret NVC behaviours in this field. It concludes with a discussion of the dangers and limitations of this knowledge and skill base and posits a professional need to discipline its deployment by reflective practice (reflexivity) within well-established therapeutic relationships. A theoretical example of reflective practice is included. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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121. Contemporary adoptive kinship: a contribution to new kinship studies.
- Author
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Logan, Janette
- Subjects
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LEGAL procedure , *ADOPTION , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *BIOLOGY , *CONCEPTS , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *GROUP identity , *HOMOSEXUALITY , *PARENTHOOD , *SOCIAL theory , *FAMILY relations , *SOCIAL attitudes , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper was concerned with the changing nature of adoptive kinship. The analysis was located in the context of current sociological and anthropological theory and parallels were drawn with other alternative family forms i.e. gay and lesbian families, and families formed by new reproductive technologies. Adoption as a family form has largely been neglected in sociological and anthropological literature, yet the changing nature of adoption, particularly in relation to open adoption and gay and lesbian adoption, means that it has an important contribution to make to new discourses of kinship. Adoption is far more likely to feature in psychological and child welfare literature than that on the family and kinship, yet it is a unique addition to the heterogeneous family landscape with a profound impact on cultural definitions of family and kinship. By considering contemporary adoption practice through a social construction and kinship theory lens, the paper argues that new kinship studies are helpful in conceptualizing adoptive kinship. Adoption also has a valuable and significant contribution to make to contemporary kinship theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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122. The concept of medicalisation reassessed.
- Author
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Busfield, Joan
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICINE , *PHARMACEUTICAL industry , *SOCIOLOGY , *PROFESSIONALISM - Abstract
Medicalisation has been an important concept in sociological discussions of medicine since its adoption by medical sociologists in the early 1970s. Yet it has been criticised by some sociologists, in part because it seems too negative about medicine, and modified or replaced by others with concepts deemed more relevant like biomedicalisation and pharmaceuticalisation. My aim in this paper is to reassess the concept and consider whether it still has value in exploring significant aspects of the role of medicine in present-day society. I start with an archaeology of the concept's development and the different ways it has been used. This covers some familiar ground but is essential to the main task: examining criticisms of the concept and assessing its value. I conclude that the concept continues to have a crucial and productive place in sociological analyses of medicine and that the process of medicalisation is still a key feature of late-modern social life and culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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123. 'Rocking the nation': the popular culture of neo-nationalism.
- Author
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Feischmidt, Margit and Pulay, Gergő
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM , *DISCOURSE , *IDEOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *TWENTY-first century , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to understand contemporary forms of nationalism in a socio-political context in which neo-nationalism has obtained a dominant role not just in politics but in public discourse and in the cultural field as well. It investigates the emergence of a particular music scene in the beginning of the 21st century, shaped by rock bands and performers and supported by far-right political actors, which has made the 'national' imagination emotionally and ideologically appealing to a considerable part of Hungarian society and first of all to young people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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124. Citizen science and community-based rain monitoring initiatives: an interdisciplinary approach across sociology and water science.
- Author
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Tipaldo, Giuseppe and Allamano, Paola
- Subjects
- *
CITIZEN science , *RAINFALL measurement , *SOCIOLOGY , *CITIZENSHIP , *CROWDSOURCING - Abstract
Why do people engage in citizen science projects? The aim of this contribution is to explore the social mechanisms that push nonexperts (i.e., citizens) to invest energy, time, and (sometimes) money in collaborative initiatives on the ground of scientific research. Some relevant examples from the domain of community-based rain measuring are scrutinized, merging the views of a water scientist and a social scientist. After briefly discussing the limits of outdated approaches to science-technology-society issues, social identity theory and new media mechanisms are analyzed as key variables to understand what is new in today's science coming across citizenship. A discussion on the importance of accounting for the uncertainty inherent with the observations coming from crowdsourcing initiatives, possibly the most challenging side effect of what we call Citizen Science 2.0, closes the paper. WIREs Water 2017, 4:e1200. doi: 10.1002/wat2.1200 For further resources related to this article, please visit the . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
125. Shifting dementia discourses from deficit to active citizenship.
- Author
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Birt, Linda, Poland, Fiona, Csipke, Emese, and Charlesworth, Georgina
- Subjects
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COGNITION , *CULTURE , *DEATH , *DEMENTIA , *EMOTIONS , *LIFE , *SOCIAL participation , *SOCIAL skills , *SOCIOLOGY , *UNCERTAINTY , *SOCIAL capital , *SOCIAL context - Abstract
Within western cultures, portrayals of dementia as 'a living death' are being challenged by people living with the diagnosis. Yet dementia remains one of the most feared conditions. The sociological lens of citizenship provides a conceptual framework for reviewing the role of society and culture in repositioning dementia away from deficit to a discourse of agency and interdependence. Awareness of cognitive change, and engaging with the diagnostic process, moves people into a transitional, or 'liminal' state of uncertainty. They are no longer able to return to their previous status, but may resist the unwanted status of 'person with dementia'. Drawing on qualitative studies on social participation by people with dementia, we suggest that whether people are able to move beyond the liminal phase depends on acceptance of the diagnosis, social capital, personal and cultural beliefs, the responses of others and comorbidities. Some people publicly embrace a new identity whereas others withdraw, or are withdrawn, from society to live in the shadow of the fourth age. We suggest narratives of deficit fail to reflect the agency people with dementia can enact to shape their social worlds in ways which enable them to establish post-liminal citizen roles. (A Virtual Abstract of this paper can be viewed at: ) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
126. The politics of concepts: family and its (putative) replacements.
- Author
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Edwards, Rosalind, McCarthy, Jane Ribbens, and Gillies, Val
- Subjects
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FAMILIES , *SOCIAL institutions , *TRENDS , *SOCIOLOGICAL terminology , *SOCIOLOGY , *INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
The central concern of this paper is that there has been a move within British sociology to subsume (or sometimes, even replace) the concept of 'family' within ideas about personal life, intimacy and kinship. It calls attention to what will be lost sight of by this conceptual move: an understanding of the collective whole beyond the aggregation of individuals; the creation of lacunae that will be (partially) filled by other disciplines; and engagement with policy developments and professional practices that focus on 'family' as a core, institutionalized, idea. While repudiating the necessity (and indeed, pointing out the dangers) of providing any definitive answer to definitions of 'family', the paper calls for critical reflection on the implications of these conceptual moves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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127. Reviewing studies with diverse designs: the development and evaluation of a new tool.
- Author
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Sirriyeh, Reema, Lawton, Rebecca, Gardner, Peter, and Armitage, Gerry
- Subjects
- *
QUALITY assurance , *RESEARCH , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care research , *NURSING research , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *QUANTITATIVE research , *INTER-observer reliability , *RESEARCH personnel , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *STANDARDS ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Rationale, aims & objective Tools for the assessment of the quality of research studies tend to be specific to a particular research design (e.g. randomized controlled trials, or qualitative interviews). This makes it difficult to assess the quality of a body of research that addresses the same or a similar research question but using different approaches. The aim of this paper is to describe the development and preliminary evaluation of a quality assessment tool that can be applied to a methodologically diverse set of research articles. Methods The 16-item quality assessment tool (QATSDD) was assessed to determine its reliability and validity when used by health services researchers in the disciplines of psychology, sociology and nursing. Qualitative feedback was also gathered from mixed-methods health researchers regarding the comprehension, content, perceived value and usability of the tool. Results Reference to existing widely used quality assessment tools and experts in systematic review confirmed that the components of the tool represented the construct of 'good research technique' being assessed. Face validity was subsequently established through feedback from a sample of nine health researchers. Inter-rater reliability was established through substantial agreement between three reviewers when applying the tool to a set of three research papers (κ = 71.5%), and good to substantial agreement between their scores at time 1 and after a 6-week interval at time 2 confirmed test-retest reliability. Conclusions The QATSDD shows good reliability and validity for use in the quality assessment of a diversity of studies, and may be an extremely useful tool for reviewers to standardize and increase the rigour of their assessments in reviews of the published papers which include qualitative and quantitative work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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128. INCOME DISPARITIES IN THE ENLARGED EU: SOCIO-ECONOMIC, SPECIALISATION AND GEOGRAPHICAL CLUSTERS.
- Author
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CHAPMAN, SHEILA A. and MELICIANI, VALENTINA
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOECONOMICS , *PER capita , *AGGLOMERATION (Materials) , *SOCIOLOGY , *ECONOMIC sectors , *ECONOMIC structure - Abstract
ABSTRACT The paper contains a non-parametric analysis of regional convergence in the enlarged EU over the period 1998-2005. It finds overall convergence but growing within country disparities, especially due to the behaviour of newcomer regions. It also finds strong (but falling) spatial correlation of per-capita income. Starting from this evidence, the paper considers the role of socio-economic features, specialisation patterns and geographical factors in explaining within countries disparities. Overall we find that partly specialisation but more evidently socio-economic clusters have a good explanatory power while simple geographical factors do not explain within countries divergence. This does not mean that spatial factors are not important: rather it means that agglomeration alone cannot explain a complex and variegated pattern of growth where structural and socio-economic factors appear to be playing an important and increasing role. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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129. "It's the Way That You Do It": Developing an Ethical Framework for Community Psychology Research and Action.
- Author
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Campbell, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *SOCIOLOGY , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *ETHICS , *STANDARDS - Abstract
In the 50 years since the 1965 Swampscott conference, the field of community psychology has not yet developed a well-articulated ethical framework to guide research and practice. This paper reviews what constitutes an "ethical framework"; considers where the field of community psychology is at in its development of a comprehensive ethical framework; examines sources for ethical guidance (i.e., ethical principles and standards) across multiple disciplines, including psychology, evaluation, sociology, and anthropology; and recommends strategies for developing a rich written discourse on how community psychology researchers and practitioners can address ethical conflicts in our work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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130. ON THE PRAGMATICS OF SOCIAL THEORY: THE CASE OF ELIAS'S 'ON THE PROCESS OF CIVILIZATION'.
- Author
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DA SILVA, FILIPE CARREIRA and BUCHOLC, MARTA
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL theory , *PRAGMATICS , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper proposes a new approach to the study of sociological classics. This approach is pragmatic in character. It draws upon the social pragmatism of G. H. Mead and the sociology of texts of D. F. McKenzie. Our object of study is Norbert Elias's On the Process of Civilization. The pragmatic genealogy of this book reveals the importance of taking materiality seriously. By documenting the successive entanglements between human agency and nonhuman factors, we discuss the origins of the book in the 1930s, how it was forgotten for 30 years, and how in the mid-1970s it became a sociological classic. We explain canonization as a matter of fusion between book's material form and its content, in the context of the paperback revolution of the 1960s, the events of May 1968, and the demise of Parsons' structural functionalism, and how this provided Elias with an opportunity to advance his model of sociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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131. Targeted harassment, subcultural identity and the embrace of difference: a case study.
- Author
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Hodkinson, Paul and Garland, Jon
- Subjects
- *
HARASSMENT , *OFFENSES against the person , *SUBCULTURES , *YOUTH , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper examines the significance of experiences and understandings of targeted harassment to the identities of youth subcultural participants, through case study research on goths. It does so against a context of considerable recent public discussion about the victimization of alternative subcultures and a surprising scarcity of academic research on the subject. The analysis presented indicates that, although individual direct experiences are diverse, the spectre of harassment can form an ever-present accompaniment to subcultural life, even for those who have never been seriously targeted. As such, it forms part of what it is to be a subcultural participant and comprises significant common ground with other members. Drawing upon classic and more recent understandings of how subcultural groups respond to broader forms of outside hostility, we show how the shared experience of feeling targeted for harassment tied in with a broader subcultural discourse of being stigmatized by a perceived 'normal' society. The role of harassment as part of this, we argue, contributed to the strength with which subcultural identities were felt and to a positive embrace of otherness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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132. Sociology's misfortune: disciplines, interdisciplinarity and the impact of audit culture.
- Author
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Holmwood, John
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY , *TRENDS , *AUDITING , *SCHOLARLY method , *INTERDISCIPLINARY research , *HIGHER education , *UNIVERSITY & college administration , *INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
This paper is about tendencies to the subversion of sociology as a discipline. It connects external factors of the wider socio-political environment of higher education in the UK, especially those associated with the audit culture and new systems of governance, with the internal organization of the discipline. While the environment is similar for all social science subjects, the paper argues that there are specific consequences for sociology because of characteristics peculiar to the discipline. The paper discusses these consequences in terms of the changing relationship between sociology and the growing interdisciplinary area of applied social studies as a form of 'mode 2 knowledge'. It argues that while sociology 'exports' concepts, methodologies and personnel it lacks the internal disciplinary integrity of other 'exporter' disciplines, such as economics, political science and anthropology. The consequence is an increasingly blurred distinction between sociology as a discipline and the interdisciplinary area of applied social studies with a potential loss of disciplinary identity. The paper concludes with a discussion of how this loss of identity is associated with a reduced ability to reproduce a critical sensibility within sociology and absorption to the constraints of audit culture with its preferred form of mode 2 knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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133. THERAPEUTIC COMMUNITIES: A PROBLEM OR A SOLUTION FOR PSYCHIATRY? A SOCIOLOGICAL VIEW.
- Author
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Manning, Nick
- Subjects
- *
THERAPEUTICS , *MENTAL health services , *SOCIOLOGY , *PSYCHIATRY , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
abstract This paper reviews the place of the therapeutic community in the mental health field, using a sociological framework to understand some key factors that have shaped the field and its response to this approach to therapy. The therapeutic community treatment method in mental health has been contested over the years. It has challenged conventional professional frameworks, it has dealt with a difficult client group, and it has been hostile to or at least awkward about establishing its evidence base. In this paper I reflect on the 'politics of evidence' in contested fields. I draw on the analysis of 'fields' from the work of French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu, and the analysis of scientific knowledge from an area of the social study of science, 'actor-network theory'. I argue that evidence is not neutral in contested fields, and that the technology of trials is not balanced with a theoretically informed understanding of the phenomena under scrutiny (causality versus meaning). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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134. Not Thinking Ethnicity: A Critique of the Ethnicity Paradigm in an Over-Ethnicised Sociology.
- Author
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CARTER, BOB and FENTON, STEVE
- Subjects
- *
ETHNICITY , *SOCIOLOGY , *MULTICULTURALISM , *GROUP identity , *GENEALOGY , *SOCIAL structure , *SOCIAL action - Abstract
The many critical approaches to an ‘ethnicity framework’ have fallen short of a very possible conclusion—that the language of ethnicity provides, for the most part, a poor paradigm with which to work. In the present paper we seek not only to re-state some key weaknesses of this paradigm but also to suggest that these weaknesses are more general in an over-ethnicised sociology. There are numerous critiques of particular models or elements of ethnicity thinking, including critiques of primordialist approaches (Fenton 2003), of multiculturalism ( Barry 2000 ), and of the over-objectification of groups (Brubaker 2004; see also Jenkins 2008). The major critiques constitute a strong case against ‘thinking with ethnicity’; the broader weaknesses are more general in contemporary ‘identitarian’ sociology. From this position we turn to the question of offering an alternative approach in a sociology which emphasizes agency, and is grounded in an analysis of actors in material situations. This is allied to the concept of ideational resources, social categories and identities upon which actors draw, and a middle-range view of causality and tendency in social change. Ideas of ancestral belonging are among those ideational resources, and these ideas and assumptions are played out in a context of material and political change. The subject of study is not ethnicity, but power, resources, social relations and institutions (which may and may not be) informed by cultural identities and ideas of ancestry. The strategy of the paper will be first to re-state the deficiencies of ‘ethnicity thinking’ and second to offer an alternative framework for thinking about social action and social structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
135. Looking beyond learning: notes towards the critical study of educational technology.
- Author
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Selwyn, N.
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION research , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *DEMOCRACY , *SOCIAL justice , *EDUCATION & society , *EQUALITY - Abstract
This paper makes a case for academic research and writing that looks beyond the learning potential of technology and, instead, seeks to develop social scientific accounts of the often compromised and constrained realities of education technology use ‘on the ground’. The paper discusses how this ‘critical’ approach differs from the ways that educational technology scholarship has tended to be pursued to date. These differences include viewing technology as being socially constructed and negotiated rather than imbued with pre-determined characteristics; developing objective and realistic accounts of technology use in situ; and producing ‘context rich’ analyses of the social conflicts and politics that underpin the use of technology in educational settings. The paper concludes by encouraging academic researchers and writers to show greater interest in the issues of democracy and social justice that surround educational technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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136. What's in a name? Language ideology and social differentiation in a Swedish print-mediated debate.
- Author
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Milani, Tommaso M.
- Subjects
- *
LANGUAGE awareness , *LINGUISTICS , *ETHNICITY , *AGE , *YOUNG adults , *GROUP identity , *SOCIOLOGY , *LECTURERS - Abstract
This paper investigates a recent print-mediated discussion about linguistic phenomena that are perceived by many commentators to be ‘deviant’ from ‘standard Swedish.’ The aim of the paper is to illustrate how this language debate is built on two closely entwined discursive processes: a struggle to define the name, meaning, and value of a specific linguistic phenomenon; and the indexical processes through which such a phenomenon is bound up with a multifaceted image of its purported speakers, in which gender is imbricated in age and ethnicity. Essentially, the argument is that the metalinguistic pronouncements in this debate are ultimately the outer manifestation of deeper social concerns about what it means to be a ‘non-Swedish’ young man. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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137. Questioning Research with Children: Discrepancy between Theory and Practice?
- Author
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Uprichard, Emma
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY , *RESEARCH , *THEORY (Philosophy) , *SELF-discrepancy , *SELF-perception , *CHILD rearing , *CHILD psychology , *MORAL education , *PARENTING - Abstract
This paper argues that current child and childhood research is problematical in as much as there is a discrepancy between theory and research practice. Although in theory, children are conceptualised as active agents in the social world, the type of research that children are typically involved in implies that children are competent, knowledgeable and affective only in terms of their own lives, their own spaces, their own childhoods. The implications of this discrepancy are discussed. The paper concludes that although research that contributes to a greater understanding of childhood experiences is important, it is equally important to involve children in research that goes beyond ‘childhood’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
138. Windows of reflection: conceptualizing dyslexia using the social model of disability.
- Author
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Macdonald, Stephen. J.
- Subjects
- *
DYSLEXIA , *SOCIAL skills , *READING disability , *PEOPLE with dyslexia , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
The aim of this study is to develop perceptual knowledge of dyslexia from adults diagnosed with this condition. Historically, the dominant conceptual frameworks used to study dyslexia stem from psychological or educational practice. These disciplines predominantly draw on professional neuro-biological or educational knowledge that can be broadly summarized within a medical or educational model approach. Both the medical and educational models view dyslexia as resulting from a neurological and learning dysfunction. As such, only a small amount of research has attempted to locate dyslexia within a sociological context. This paper analyses the life narratives of adults diagnosed with dyslexia using the social model of disability. The author investigates the impact that disabling barriers have in education and employment for people with dyslexia. The implications of this are discussed, particularly how issues of disabling barriers and social-class structures affect the lives of people with dyslexia. The paper argues that social-class positioning and institutional discrimination (in the form of disabling barriers) shape the experiences of people living with this condition. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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139. Sociology and nursing: Role performance in a psychiatric setting.
- Author
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Handsley, Stephen and Stocks, Susan
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *PSYCHIATRIC nursing , *SOCIAL theory , *NURSING practice , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
The role of sociology in nursing continues to cast new light on many aspects of health and illness. Over the last 20 years, nursing practice has seen sociological theory become a valuable clinical tool, both in the diagnosis and prognosis of a wide range of illnesses and long-term conditions. Nevertheless, of these, the sociological examination of mental health problems and its impact upon nursing practitioners has received little coverage, simply because, as a discipline, mental health nursing has historically been wedded to a biomedical model, one which continues to embrace psychiatry/psychology as the driving force in the diagnosis and treatment of psychopathology. Adopting a sociological approach, this paper brings to light previously unexplored insights into the way nurses interact with patients experiencing mental health problems. Drawing on social interactionist methodology, this paper considers depression and other mental health problems in relation to current psychiatric nursing practice. Specifically, the paper focuses on aspects of role performance and interpersonal care in a psychiatric setting, and the impact the individual role may have on the wider aspects of institutional and official practices. The paper concludes by making a number of recommendations/observations for nursing practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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140. Has the Youth Labor Market in Japan Changed? An Event History Analysis Approach.
- Author
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NAKAZAWA, WATARU
- Subjects
- *
LABOR market , *LABOR supply , *ECONOMIC forecasting , *SOCIAL science methodology , *WOMEN employees , *SOCIAL processes , *SOCIOLOGY ,ECONOMIC conditions in Japan - Abstract
This paper examines whether the Japanese youth labor market has become more unstable, particularly since the 1990s. To address this problem, I suggest that we consider the transition rate of job exit to be the benchmark of instability in the labor market and focus on workers’ career histories until they reach the age of 34 years. This paper presents six hypotheses that explain the instability of the youth labor market as follows: the total increase in the job-exit transition rate, the higher risk of job exit for provisional workers, the increase in the number of provisional workers, the increasing transition rate for provisional workers and stable regular workers, the impact of firm size, and the impact of the collapse of the bubble economy. I present the summary statistics of job exit rates and the results of the Cox partial likelihood estimation models. A conspicuous phenomenon of the 1990s entailed an increasing number of provisional workers who ran a higher risk of job exits compared to regular workers. However, the job exit transition rates are generally stable. Moreover, the transition rates for regular female workers have decreased since the 1980s due to the increasing realization of gender equality in society. Although partial likelihood estimation states that firm size and the type of officer concerned (public/private) had significant effects on the transition rates, their effect did not intensify after the collapse of the bubble economy. In sum, the evidence that the Japanese youth labor market changed in the 1990s is limited. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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141. Components of abstracts: Logical structure of scholarly abstracts in pharmacology, sociology, and linguistics and literature.
- Author
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Šauperl, Alenka, Klasinc, Janko, and Lužar, Simona
- Subjects
- *
SCIENTIFIC literature , *PHARMACOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *SLOVENIAN periodicals , *ABSTRACTING ,ABSTRACTS - Abstract
The international standard ISO 214:1976 defines an abstract as “an abbreviated, accurate representation of the contents of a document” (p. 1) that should “enable readers to identify the basic content of a document quickly and accurately to determine relevance” (p. 1). It also should be useful in computerized searching. The ISO standard suggests including the following elements: purpose, methods, results, and conclusions. Researchers have often challenged this structure and found that different disciplines and cultures prefer different information content. These claims are partially supported by the findings of our research into the structure of pharmacology, sociology, and Slovenian language and literature abstracts of papers published in international and Slovenian scientific periodicals. The three disciplines have different information content. Slovenian pharmacology abstracts differ in content from those in international periodicals while the differences between international and Slovenian abstracts are small in sociology. In the field of Slovenian language and literature, only domestic abstracts were studied. The identified differences can in part be attributed to the disciplines, but also to the different role of journals and papers in the professional society and to differences in perception of the role of abstracts. The findings raise questions about the structure of abstracts required by some publishers of international journals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
142. Geographically touring the eastern bloc: British geography, travel cultures and the Cold War.
- Author
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Matless, David, Oldfield, Jonathan, and Swain, Adam
- Subjects
- *
GEOGRAPHY , *INTERNATIONAL relations, 1945-1989 , *WAR & society , *EARTH scientists , *ORAL history , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper considers the role of travel in the generation of geographical knowledge of the eastern bloc by British geographers. Based on oral history and surveys of published work, the paper examines the roles of three kinds of travel experience: individual private travels, tours via state tourist agencies, and tours by academic delegations. Examples are drawn from across the eastern bloc, including the USSR, Poland, Romania, East Germany and Albania. The relationship between travel and publication is addressed, notably within textbooks, and in the Geographical Magazine. The study argues for the extension of accounts of cultures of geographical travel, and seeks to supplement the existing historiography of Cold War geography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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143. How clinical communication has become a core part of medical education in the UK.
- Author
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Brown, Jo
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL education , *CURRICULUM , *TEACHING , *MEDICAL schools - Abstract
Context This paper sets out to analyse and interpret the complex events of the last 20 years in order to understand how the teaching and learning of clinical communication has emerged as a core part of the modern undergraduate medical curriculum in most medical schools in the UK. Methods The paper analyses the effects of key political, sociological, historical and policy influences on clinical communication development. Results Political influences include: the effects of neo-liberalism on society and on the professions in general; the challenging of traditional notions of professionalism in medicine; the creation of an internal market within the National Health Service, and the disempowerment of the medical lobby. Sociological influences include: the effects of a ‘marketised’ society on medicine and subtle shifts in the doctor−patient relationship because of this; the emergence of globalised information through the Internet, and the influence of increased litigation against doctors. Historical influences include: the effects of a change in emphasis for medical education away from an inflated factual curriculum towards a curriculum that recognises the importance of student attitudes and the teaching and learning of clinical communication skills. Policy influences include the important effects of Tomorrow's Doctors and the Dearing Report on the modern medical curriculum. Conclusions The paper concludes with a developmental map that charts the complex influences on clinical communication teaching and learning and a brief commentary on the growing body of teachers who deliver and develop the subject today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
144. Demythologizing the machine: Patrick geddes, lewis mumford, and classical sociological theory.
- Author
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Renwick, Chris and Gunn, Richard C.
- Subjects
- *
DEMYTHOLOGIZATION (Religion) , *SOCIOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper reconsiders the work of the Scottish biologist, sociologist, and town planner Patrick Geddes and his most famous intellectual disciple: the American independent scholar Lewis Mumford. It is argued that existing interpretations of their work, ranging from a dismissal of the two men as eccentric polymaths to the speculative emphasis on the importance of psychological theories in Mumford's oeuvre, are fundamentally flawed. Examining their writings and the letters they exchanged during their 17-year correspondence, this paper shows that the only way we can appreciate the scholarly conventions underpinning Geddes's and Mumford's work, as well as the context in which it was produced, is by looking to the principles of classical sociological theory. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
145. Social Structure and Social Relations.
- Author
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Elder-Vass, Dave
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL structure , *SOCIOLOGY , *CRITICAL realism , *SOCIAL sciences , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *CRITICAL thinking - Abstract
This paper replies to Porpora, King, and Varela's responses to my earlier paper “For Emergence”, focussing on the relationship between the concepts of social structure and social relations. It recognises the importance of identifying the mechanisms responsible whenever we make claims for the emergence of causal powers, and discusses the mechanism underlying one case of social structure: normative institutions. It also shows how critical realism reconciles the claims that both social structures and human individuals have emergent causal powers that combine to produce actual social events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
146. Sport and globalization: transnational dimensions.
- Author
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GIULIANOTTI, RICHARD and ROBERTSON, ROLAND
- Subjects
- *
SPORTS , *GLOBALIZATION , *SOCIOLOGY , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *POLITICAL science , *CRICKET (Sport) , *BASEBALL - Abstract
The aims of this special issue are to both raise the social scientific status of sport and to advance understanding of transnational processes through the role of sport in global change. The Introduction argues that sport, like globalization, can be understood in transdisciplinary terms, and the papers included contributions informed by sociology, anthropology, political sciences and history. As well as placing the issue in the context of recent studies of sport and globalization, the Introduction outlines the seven papers. Placed together they move from analyses of broader globalizing and multi-sport issues towards consideration of how transnational processes impact upon individual sports – with examples from cricket, baseball and association football – ending with regional and national dimensions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
147. Community as practice: social representations of community and their implications for health promotion.
- Author
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Stephens, Christine
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC health research , *COMMUNITIES , *HEALTH promotion , *CLINICAL health psychology , *COLLECTIVE representation , *SOCIAL constructionism , *CONSTRUCTIVISM (Psychology) , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL interaction , *QUALITY of life - Abstract
Health promotion researchers and practitioners have increasingly turned to community-based approaches. Although there has been much work around the diverse understandings of the term in areas such as community psychology and sociology, I am concerned with how such understandings relate directly to community health research and practice. From a discursive perspective ‘community’ is seen as a socially constructed representation that is used variously and pragmatically. However, from a wider view, community can be seen as a matter of embodied practice. This paper draws on social representations theory to examine the shifting constructions of ‘community’, the functional use of those understandings in social life, and the practices that suggest that it is important to attend to their use in particular contexts. Accordingly, the paper argues that meanings of community in the health promotion or public health context must be seen as representations used for specific purposes in particular situations. Furthermore, the broader notion of embodied practice in social life has implications for community participation in health promotion. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
148. A social representation is not a quiet thing: Exploring the critical potential of social representations theory.
- Author
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Howarth, Caroline
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL psychology , *COLLECTIVE representation , *CRITICAL theory , *SOCIAL order , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL structure - Abstract
Following Moscovici (1972), this paper addresses the questions: What is the aim of research within a social representations perspective? Is it to support or to criticize the social order? Is it to consolidate or transform it? After a brief overview of social representations theory, I argue that while the theory appears to have the conceptual tools to begin this critical task, there are serious criticisms and points of underdevelopment that need addressing. In order for social representations theory to develop into a rigorously critical theory there are three controversial issues that require clarification. These are (a) the relationship between psychological processes and social practices, (b) the reification and legitimization of different knowledge systems, and (c) agency and resistance in the co-construction of self-identity. After discussing each issue in turn, with illustrations from research on racializing representations, I conclude the paper with a discussion of the role of representations in the ideological construction and contestation of reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
149. Turning Point? The Volatile Geographies of Taxation.
- Author
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Cameron, Angus
- Subjects
- *
TAXATION , *GEOGRAPHY , *SOCIAL institutions , *GLOBALIZATION , *PUBLIC finance , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This article argues that the geographies of taxation offer an important but neglected insight into changes taking place in the nature of the contemporary state in the context of globalisation. Following Schumpeter's analysis of the “tax state”, the paper argues that, historically, the theory and practice of fiscal space are fundamental both to state form and to the possibility of political and social institutions. Despite this, the complexity and fluidity inherent in fiscal space has been obscured by the dominant normative conception of “the” fiscal state. As the concept of “fiscal sovereignty” becomes less and less salient in practice in the context of economic globalisation, it remains a powerful ideological concept for state governance. This paper reviews the primary contemporary accounts of fiscal space across a range of disciplinary contexts and scales of governance. Despite the expectation and or desire for some form of “fiscal globalisation” on the part of commentators, in practice what we see is an increased centralisation of state fiscal control coupled with a creeping individuation and privatisation of fiscal responsibility. This radical respatialisation of fiscal space has profound implications both for the state itself and for any prospect of the creation of a global “public domain” founded on a global fisc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
150. Critical realism as emancipatory action: the case for realistic evaluation in practice development.
- Author
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Wilson, Valerie and McCormack, Brendan
- Subjects
- *
METHODOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *CONDUCT of life , *SOCIOLOGY , *CRITICAL realism , *VIRTUE , *RESEARCH , *SCIENTIFIC method , *THEORY-practice relationship - Abstract
To provide rigour when preparing a research design, the researcher needs to carefully consider not only the methodology but also the philosophical intent of the study. This, however, is often absent from reported research and provides the reader with little evidence by which to judge the merits of the chosen methodology and its influence on the study. The purpose of this paper is to set out the case for critical realism as a framework to guide appropriate action in practice development and realistic evaluation for understanding the consequences of those actions. It is evident that critical realism and critical social science share common ground. Emancipatory practice development (ePD) is based on the philosophy of critical social science and therefore by virtue is linked to the tenets of critical realism. Until now, the evaluation of ePD programme has been well served by 4th-generation evaluation. However, this paper outlines the need for a different approach to evaluation, one that is based on critical realism, that is concerned with emancipation, and that can be used in the ever-changing environment of clinical practice. Realistic evaluation not only links strongly to ePD programmes, but also serves as the basis for effective research questions that will test the outcomes of the research and inform the transferability of ePD mechanisms into differing contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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