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1. Dwelling in epistemic disobedience: A reply to Go.

2. Standpoint theory and middle‐range theorizing in International Sociology.

3. Just what is critical race theory, and what is it doing in British sociology? From "BritCrit" to the racialized social system approach.

4. Occupational mobility and cognitive ability: A commentary on Betthäuser, Bourne and Bukodi.

5. Belonging across the lifetime: Time and self in Mass Observation accounts.

6. Waiting like a girl? The temporal constitution of femininity as a factor in gender inequality.

7. What makes for a successful sociology? A response to "Against a descriptive turn".

8. Fetishes and factishes: Durkheim and Latour.

9. Notes towards a 'social aesthetic': Guest Editors' introduction to the special section.

10. Pathways from origins to destinations: Stability and change in the roles of cognition, private schools and educational attainment.

11. The disorganized family: institutions, practices and normativity.

12. The cosmopolitan contradictions of planetary urbanization.

13. Bureaucratic encounters "after neoliberalism": Examining the supportive turn in social housing governance.

14. Medical diagnosis of dyslexia in a Swedish elite school: A case of "consecrating medicalization".

15. The dialectics of universality: The heterodox critical social theory of Robert Fine.

16. Greening the poor: the trap of moralization.

17. Making space for 'the social': connecting sociology and professional practices in urban lighting design.

18. Groups and individuals: conformity and diversity in the performance of gendered identities.

19. Class and comparison: subjective social location and lay experiences of constraint and mobility.

21. What has become of critique? Reassembling sociology after Latour.

22. How fields vary.

23. Targeted harassment, subcultural identity and the embrace of difference: a case study.

24. Pierre Bourdieu and Jacques Rancière on art/aesthetics and politics: the origins of disagreement, 1963-1985.

25. The sociologist and the state. An assessment of Pierre Bourdieu's sociology.

26. The media of sociology: tight or loose translations?

27. Emotions, affects and the production of social life.

28. Provoking misunderstanding: a comment on Black's defence of value-free sociology.

29. Sociology after the postcolonial: Response to Julian Go's 'thinking against empire'.

30. A state of limbo: the politics of waiting in neo-liberal Latvia.

31. Age‐associations in British politics: Implications for the sociology of aging.

32. Ungrateful slaves? An examination of job quality and job satisfaction for male part‐time workers in the UK.

33. Suburban ethnicities: Home as the site of interethnic conviviality and racism.

34. Returning to sexual stigma: post‐trafficking lives.

35. A dynamic and multifunctional account of middle‐range theories.

36. Developing a critical trans gerontology.

37. For a 'sociology as a team sport'.

38. Class and status: on the misconstrual of the conceptual distinction and a neo‐Bourdieusian alternative.

39. Bureaucratic power in note‐writing: authoritative expertise within the state.

40. Becoming independent: political participation and youth transitions in the Scottish referendum.

41. Cosmopolitanism through mobility: physical-corporeal or virtual-imagined?

42. The quest to overcome irrelevance in a troubled world: can Du Boisian analyses rescue sociology?

43. Academic apartheid and the poverty of theory: the impact of scholarly segregation on the development of sociology in the United States.

44. 'Let the ears of the guilty people tingle with truth': W. E. B. Du Bois as an original sociologist.

47. W. E. B. Du Bois at the center: from science, civil rights movement, to Black Lives Matter.

48. The making of 'Boomergeddon': the construction of the Baby Boomer generation as a social problem in Britain.

49. Kindness in Australia: an empirical critique of moral decline sociology.

50. Why still marry? The role of feelings in the persistence of marriage as an institution1.