9 results
Search Results
2. Reflexive practice in live sociology: lessons from researching Brexit in the lives of British citizens living in the EU-27.
- Author
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Benson, Michaela and O'Reilly, Karen
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY , *MATHEMATICAL models , *THEORY of knowledge , *PSYCHOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIAL sciences , *THEORY , *RESEARCH funding , *REFLEXIVITY , *PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants - Abstract
This paper brings reflexivity into conversation with debates about positionality and live sociology to argue for reflexivity to be reimagined as an enduring practice that is collaborative, responsible, iterative, engaged, agile and creative. We elaborate our argument with reference to examples and contemplations drawn from our experiences researching what Brexit means for Britons living in the EU-27 for the BrExpats research project, which was informed from the outset by reflexive practice. We outline three (of a number of) potential strategies for engaging in reflexive practice: reflexive positioning, reflexive navigating and reflexive interpreting or sense-making. We acknowledge that these are not separate actions in practice but are conceptually distinguishable aspects of an ongoing reflexive practice, informed by our understanding of the cognitive relationship between reflexivity and practice theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Explanatory Theories of Intimate Partner Homicide Perpetration: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Graham, Laurie M., Macy, Rebecca J., Rizo, Cynthia F., and Martin, Sandra L.
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PREVENTION of homicide , *CINAHL database , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *ONLINE information services , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *MEDICAL databases , *SOCIOLOGY , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *FEMINISM , *PSYCHOLOGY , *ECOLOGY , *INTIMATE partner violence , *CRIMINOLOGY , *SEX distribution , *RISK assessment , *THEORY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MEDLINE - Abstract
Theories play an important role in guiding intimate partner homicide (IPH) prevention research and practice. This study is the first systematic review of theories employed to explain why someone might kill their intimate partner. This review used rigorous methods to locate and synthesize literature that described explanatory theories of IPH perpetration. Using set search terms, we systematically searched 15 databases and repositories for theory-focused documents (i.e., theory papers or analyses) published in English from 2003 to 2018. Eighteen documents met these inclusion criteria and identified 22 individual theories that seek to explain why people might kill their intimate partners. These theories fell within four broader theoretical perspectives: feminist, evolutionary, sociological/criminological, and combined. Key tenets and focal populations of these 22 theories were identified and organized into a compendium of explanatory theories of IPH perpetration. Potential strengths and limitations of each of the four perspectives were described. Review findings underscored the likely importance of addressing gender as well as risk and protective factors at all levels of the social ecological model in efforts to understand IPH perpetration. The review findings highlighted the need for both integrated theories and a broader conceptual organizing framework to guide work aimed at IPH perpetration prevention to leverage the strengths of disparate theoretical perspectives. With the goal of informing future research, a preliminary iteration of such a framework is presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Aging in Context: Individual and Environmental Pathways to Aging-Friendly Communities--The 2015 Matthew A. Pollack Award Lecture.
- Author
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Scharlach, Andrew E.
- Subjects
- *
AGING , *COMMUNITIES , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *ECOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *THEORY , *WELL-being - Abstract
Reflecting the theme of the 2015 Gerontological Society of America (GSA) Annual Scientific Meeting, "Aging as a Lifelong Process," this paper examines intersections between aging processes and their environmental context, develops theory regarding constructive developmental processes and their environmental context, and considers potential implications for conceptualizing and creating aging-friendly communities. The first section examines the primary goals of aging-friendly communities, that is, promoting elder well-being. The second section explores the role of environmental pathways in fostering well-being throughout the lifecourse. The third section presents a new Process Model of Constructive Aging that identifies key developmental processes at the intersection of individual and environmental pathways. The final section considers potential implications for creating aging-friendly communities, including ways in which cities and towns can promote the ability of community members to live fully throughout their lives, and identifies some key conceptual and empirical challenges affecting the future of the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. 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
- View/download PDF
6. Constructing the placebo effect in the placebo wars: What is the way ahead?
- Author
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Foot, Doug and Ridge, Damien
- Subjects
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EXPERIMENTAL design , *ALTERNATIVE medicine , *CONCEPTS , *IMAGINATION , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *PLACEBOS , *PSYCHOLOGY , *RITES & ceremonies , *SOCIAL stigma , *THEORY , *LABELING theory , *CLIENT relations , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
The concept of placebo has had a long history in medicine, and has evolved over time with the introduction of randomised controlled trials for testing health treatment, the increasing research done around the psychotherapies, the development of complementary and alternative medicine approaches to health, as well as the conceptual contributions from academic disciplines like psychology and anthropology. In recent years, discourses about placebo have pursued a number of key directions, and the current review paper explores these developments. For example, psychology has looked at placebo in terms of classical conditioning and the role of anxiety. Anthropology on the other hand has focused on the role of meaning and ritual in the placebo effect and psychotherapy research has encouraged an examination of the effects of the therapeutic relationship. Our review paper concludes by outlining directions ahead for future scholarship and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Weberian closure theory: a contribution to the ongoing assessment.
- Author
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Murphy, Raymond
- Subjects
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SOCIAL psychology , *THEORY , *AMBIGUITY , *MONOPOLIES , *SOCIOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Neo-Weberian closure theory developed principally by Parkin appears at first glance to suffer from two opposing weaknesses — that its central concept of exclusion is either too broad or too narrow. This paper demonstrates that these objections are spurious. It then uncovers several real problems which have not yet been examined by the critics of closure theory. These problems have to do with Parkin's conceptions of usurpation, of the withdrawal of services, and of property, as well as with the ambiguity in the politics of Parkin's closure theory. The paper corrects these weaknesses and clarifies this ambiguity and concludes that closure theory so-corrected provides a promising framework for going beyond analyses focused narrowly on one particular means of domination and one particular set of monopolization and exclusion rules to a focus on monopolization and exclusion per se. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
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8. Why network? Theoretical perspectives on networking.
- Author
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Muijs, Daniel, West, Mel, and Ainscow, Mel
- Subjects
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SOCIAL network theory , *EDUCATION , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL capital , *CONSTRUCTIVISM (Education) , *SOCIAL movements , *PSYCHOLOGY , *NEW social movements theory , *COLLECTIVE action - Abstract
In recent years, networking and collaboration have become increasingly popular in education. However, there is at present a lack of attention to the theoretical basis of networking, which could illuminate when and when not to network and under what conditions networks are likely to be successful. In this paper, we will attempt to sketch the theoretical background to networking drawing on work in sociology, psychology, and business studies and looking at 4 main theoretical frameworks: constructivism, social capital theory, Durkheimian network theory, and the concept of New Social Movements. We will also explore differences between networks on a number of factors such as goals, activities, density, spread, and power relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The ABC of demographic behaviour: How the interplays of alleles, brains, and contexts over the life course should shape research aimed at understanding population processes.
- Author
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Hobcraft, John
- Subjects
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DIVORCE , *MARRIAGE , *CHILDBIRTH , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *SOCIOLOGY , *LIFE (Biology) , *PHILOSOPHY of biology - Abstract
This paper proposes core innovations in the strategy of research on demographic behaviour. One aim is a shift of attention away from events and towards a focus on dynamic processes and their interplay: away from a preoccupation with marriage and divorce, births, deaths, migrations, and household structure towards a broader perspective that takes account of partnership and intimacy, parenthood, potential and well-being, position in society and space, and personal ties. Another aim is a much closer engagement with genetics, neuroscience, psychology, and behavioural economics. A third aim is a strategy that pays more attention to pathways within the individual, to the processes entailed when the individual interacts with various contexts, and to progressions that involve the interplay of the pathways and processes through the life course. These shifts of emphasis, which have already begun to occur, require a systematic reassessment of priorities for research on demographic behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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