1,772 results
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2. Socially skilling toil: New artisanship in papermaking in late Chosŏn Korea.
- Author
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Lee, Jung
- Subjects
PAPERMAKING ,CHOSON dynasty, Korea, 1392-1910 ,ARTISANS ,SOCIAL skills ,SOCIAL change ,HISTORY - Abstract
In pre-modern Korea, paper was renowned for its white glossy surface and cloth-like strength, becoming an important item in both tributary exchanges and private trade. The unique material of the tak tree and related technical innovations, including toch'im, the repeated beating of just-produced paper that provides sizing and fulling effects, were crucial to this fame. However, the scholar-officials who integrated papermaking into the state production system in order to meet administrative and tributary needs initially made toch'im corvée and then penal labor, thereby dismissing it as simple toil. They were not alone, though, in denigrating a form of manual labor. Historiographies of modern science and technology are generally silent about such work, focusing instead on how we invented the human out of drudgery. However, papermakers in late Chosŏn Korea (the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries) chose to identify their artisanship with toch'im and eventually succeeded in securing recognition for that technique as a highly paid specialty. By examining this skilling of toch'im, this paper seeks to change the historiographical silence about toil. It overcomes the archival silence that accompanies manual skills by tracing toch'im's contours through its changing locations and associations in society's changing social and material networks, revealing paper artisans' social techniques, or everyday politics that eventually dignified their laborious technique. Paper artisans' changing relationships with tak barks, tools and facilities, central and local authorities, farmers, merchants, and scholar-officials reveal how such social skilling was made in late Chosŏn Korea, where papermaking became a most successful industry. This tracing of toch'im re-situates creative toil and everyday politics of artisanal hands in the interconnected transformation of social relations, craft, and knowledge practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Iron Cage Redux: Looking Back and Forward.
- Author
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Powell, Walter W. and DiMaggio, Paul J.
- Subjects
ISOMORPHISM (Mathematics) ,INSTITUTIONAL theory (Sociology) ,SOCIAL structure ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
This seems an opportune time to reflect on our paper, The Iron Cage Revisited, some 40 years after its original publication. In this essay, we recall the influences on us at the time, speculate on factors that shaped its subsequent reception, and assess selective strands of work that it may have influenced. By today's standards, it was a relatively short paper, only 14 pages, yet it has had a long life and a generous audience (68,624 citations according to Google Scholar on Oct. 15, 2023). We divide the essay into four parts: (a) our experiences at Yale in the early 1980s and the influences on us; (b) thoughts on the reception of the paper shortly after it was published; (c) reactions to the attention it subsequently received; and (d) brief reflections on subsequent institutional lines of work that we have followed. We conclude with thoughts on theorizing in organization studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Qualitative Thematic Analysis of Transcripts in Social Change Research: Reflections on Common Misconceptions and Recommendations for Reporting Results.
- Author
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Kogen, Lauren
- Subjects
THEMATIC analysis ,COMMON misconceptions ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL problems ,SOCIAL justice ,FOCUS groups - Abstract
This paper, on qualitative thematic analysis (QTA) in social change research, falls somewhere between a reflective piece and a how-to guide. Using two examples from my own previous research, I discuss why QTA in the field of social change or social justice, which often analyzes the words of vulnerable, marginalized, or underserved populations, is so fraught, so contested, and so often dismissed. Qualitative thematic analysis of interviews or focus groups is a common research tool used in the field, but the guidelines, scope, and practices of this tool are varied and ill-defined. I have witnessed in my students' papers and in peer reviewing for journals that there are a handful of assumptions and misconceptions that appear repeatedly, for example around intercoder reliability and frequency counting, that reduce the quality of analysis. This paper focuses on how to conduct QTAs that address social change: complex social problems faced by underserved populations, such as those dealing with poverty and inequality. By discussing the methods used in two of my own social change research projects, this paper offers a balanced method for both promoting rigor and understanding the limits and strengths of this method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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5. Ethics principles for social and behavior change communication.
- Author
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Jacobson, Tom and Lemire Garlic, Nicole
- Subjects
SOCIAL ethics ,SOCIAL change ,CODES of ethics ,COMMUNICATIVE action ,CAPABILITIES approach (Social sciences) ,ETHICS - Abstract
The field of social and behavior change communication (SBCC) has a history reaching back to the period of decolonization following World War II. Since that period, much has been learned about theories and methods pertinent to this communication subfield. One topic that has received too little attention is the ethical dimension of SBCC. This paper considers the need for an SBCC code of ethics and justification for such a code. Amartya Sen's capabilities approach and Habermas's discourse ethics are reviewed as substantial contributions to such a justification. Habermas's U and D principles are selected as especially useful when the criteria for communicative action are considered, including criteria related to validity claims and general symmetry conditions. The paper argues that discourse ethics is the most suitable general ethical approach for SBCC, offering both a theoretical foundation for SBCC ethics and guidelines for practice in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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6. Feeding time(s): Patient urgency and the careful temporalities of antimicrobial resistance.
- Author
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Enticott, Gareth and O'Mahony, Kieran
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL antibiotics ,AGRICULTURE ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,CALVES ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
This paper seeks to understand how caring for new-born livestock is made possible, which practices of care are privileged and to what effect? These aims are situated in attempts to promote the prudent use of antibiotics amongst livestock farmers to prevent antimicrobial resistance. In focusing on the rearing of new-born calves on dairy and beef farms in England and Wales, the paper reveals how care is configured by different temporal orders, the tensions between different temporalities of care, the reasons for them and the strategies employed by calf rearers to manage these tensions. Drawing on the concept of the 'timescape', the paper shows how calf care temporalities are relationally enacted and configured by materials, infrastructures and technologies. Common (productivist) agricultural temporalities of care emphasise speed, urgency and efficiency. However, by analysing the practice of feeding colostrum and 'tubing' – the forced feeding of calves via a tube inserted into the oesophagus – we highlight how these rapid caring temporalities conflict with the slower, patient skills of calf rearing. At the same time, however, we show how care is rendered fluid as calf rearers find ways of accommodating seemingly discordant temporalities – what we call 'patient urgence' – allowing different temporalities to co-exist within agricultural timescapes. Nevertheless, we show how these practices of accommodation are themselves the result of a productivist temporal order that marginalises calves and calf rearers. We argue that these timescapes point to the need for broader structural and cultural changes within agriculture to reduce the use of antibiotics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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7. Call for papers – Special Paper Series of Organization: Populist responses to austerity and cultural change: Brexit, Trumpism and beyond.
- Subjects
SOCIAL change ,BREXIT Referendum, 2016 -- Social aspects - Published
- 2017
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8. SOCIOLOGICAL PAPERS FOR THE PEOPLE.
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SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL evolution ,SOCIOLOGY ,PERIODICALS ,JOURNALISTS - Abstract
The article discusses about the sociological papers for the people. In response to a challenge of this order from the Editors of the "Beacon," a series of popular sociological expositions, or, as they might be called, "Papers for the People" has been designed by the senior Editor of the "Sociological Review." Some idea of their scope and aims may be gathered from the following titles adopted for representative specimens of the projected papers. The series begins with a paper entitled "Rival Economies and Their Life Values." The first of these papers on current social evolution will appear in the January issue of the "Beacon." For the information of those not acquainted with this journal, written largely by and for men tried in the furnace of the war and found resistant to the temptation of disillusionment, it may be stated the "Beacon" is a monthly magazine devoted to the fashioning of a finer vision of life for the coming times. Now in its second year, it is edited by E. R. Appleton, assisted by Captain W. Wadsworth and Captain Ivor McClure.
- Published
- 1923
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9. Heuristics, Community Change Concepts, and Health Policy: Coming to Know.
- Author
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Ortiz, Mario R.
- Subjects
- *
NURSES , *COMMUNITY health nursing , *HEALTH attitudes , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *HEALTH policy , *NURSING models , *SOCIAL change , *DECISION making , *NURSING , *MATHEMATICAL models , *SOCIAL values , *THEORY - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to discuss heuristics, guided by Parse's (2021a) community model, to understand how health policies emerge from the unique values and beliefs of community constituents. Within this paper, there is a discussion about heuristics, health policy, Parse's humanbecoming paradigm, and policy implications reflected upon with the change concepts of the humanbecoming community model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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10. 'I need you inside of me': Gendered organizing of feminist pornography.
- Author
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Reiss, Lea Katharina and Dahlman, Sara
- Subjects
PORNOGRAPHY ,SEXUAL minority women ,GENDER stereotypes ,FEMINISTS ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL norms - Abstract
Pornography organizes bodies in ways that reproduce, challenge, or possibly even change norms of gender and sexuality. In this paper, we explore the gendered organization of pornography, responding to a lack of research on this issue. The study engages in rhetorical and queer listening to investigate feminist pornography, analyzing audio stories produced by an all-female sex-tech company that creates pornography for women through a female gaze. Drawing on literature on gendered organizing, the study shows how the female gaze in feminist pornography organizes bodies in sexual scripts. Furthermore, an application of the concept of happy objects illuminates the complex embodied and entangled relations between sexual subjects and objects of desire. Finally, we demonstrate how, despite a shift from a male to a female gaze, feminist pornography is still prone to the reproduction of heteronormative gender stereotypes. The paper thereby outlines potentials as well as challenges for the (re)organization of bodies in feminist pornography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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11. An Arendtian perspective on responsibilized heroes: Why marketing needs a new model of heroic action.
- Author
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Go Jefferies, Josephine
- Subjects
LOW-income consumers ,SURFACE resistance ,HEROES ,SELF-control ,SOCIAL change ,RESISTANCE to change - Abstract
This paper explains how disadvantaged consumers challenge their subjugated positioning through self-discipline, recursive reflexivity and narration. Although it is possible to interpret their agency as complicit with their responsibilization, viewing responsibilized consumers' entanglement in dynamic market formation as complicity in their disadvantage forecloses on their ability to resist. Instead, this paper argues resistance at the human level involves subjectivation processes according to different spatiotemporal logics. This means resistance paradoxically resembles conformity within a heroic path of resistance against their social disadvantage. Drawing on Arendt's (1958) categorization of human activities helps surface the politics of resistance at the human level from self-interest to collective interest and social change. The findings suggest theoretical realignment is needed to (1) delineate the limits of responsibilization to adequately explain heterogeneous types of self-discipline within subjectivation processes; and (2) expose the spatiotemporal and political nature of compliance and resistance to market and non-market forces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. Places, practices and (soft) power.
- Author
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Wise, Nicholas and Maguire, Kelly
- Subjects
SPORTS tourism ,SOCIAL impact ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
This special issue explores places, practices and (soft) power to examine issues pertinent to socio-economic inclusion and exclusion. The special issue will build on previous special issues that appeared in I Local Economy i (focusing on local community, place, policy and power) and I Bulletin of Latin American Research i (assessing sport and social transformation in Brazil) in 2017 and 2018, respectively (see [4]; [12]). This insight helps us consider the impact of tourism on vulnerable communities based on how travellers post and share their experiences. They discussed several case studies then visited Doi Chang Village in Chiang Rai to study their successful practice before exchanging views on how similar tourism management plans can be implemented (in their own communities). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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13. Resilience After Trauma in Kosovo and Southeastern Europe: A Scoping Review.
- Author
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Kelmendi, Kaltrina and Hamby, Sherry
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,ONLINE information services ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,WELL-being ,SOCIAL support ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SOCIAL change ,EMOTIONAL trauma ,HISTORICAL trauma ,MENTAL health ,VICTIM psychology ,RESEARCH funding ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,DIGNITY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,CULTURAL values ,POSTTRAUMATIC growth - Abstract
Most people who experience trauma want to thrive and often find paths to well-being and healthy functioning. This scoping review explores the existing evidence on adversity and resilience in southeastern European countries, focusing on Kosovo. There is a lack of research on trauma and resilience in cultures outside the US and Western Europe. The paper provides a brief cultural and historical overview of this region and the collectivist cultures found there. We draw from a range of interdisciplinary literatures to identify key strengths that have the potential to improve health outcomes for trauma victims in this region. Overall, 42 papers from PsycInfo and PubMed were identified, using keywords such as "resilience" or "health" and "Kosovo," "Balkans," and "Southeastern Europe." Findings from this scoping review show that different cultural values, norms, and societal ecologies impact resilience within these societies. Some strengths, such as social support and sense of purpose, echoed similar research in the US and Western Europe. There was also evidence that factors such as dignity, family solidarity, social activism, and nationwide meaning-making are strengths associated with resilience for these collectivist societies of southeastern Europe. We also consider the implications of the results for other post-conflict societies. Finally, findings from this review call for culturally sensitive strength-based perspectives in promoting health and well-being after the high dosages of trauma common in this region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. Response to Papers on Religion, Fatherhood, and Fathering.
- Author
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Femiano, Sam
- Subjects
- *
FATHERS , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *RELIGIOUSNESS , *SOCIAL norms , *GENDER role , *SOCIAL change - Abstract
This article provides reaction to the symposium papers presented about fathering organized for the Annual Conference of the National Council on Family Relations on November 1997. Fathering today is more complex than it has ever been. The social constructs that govern men's lives are disintegrating, leaving men somewhat adrift in knowing what it means to be male. Consequently, they are also less sure what it means to be a father. The traditional roles of provider and disciplinarian no longer feel satisfying, but no new roles have been advanced to replace them. On the other hand, precisely because of changing gender norms, men are freer to cross gender-role barriers and parent theft children directly. They are free to be more emotionally involved in their children's lives in ways rewarding to them and more beneficial for their children. The papers in this symposium look at these issues in a context of church and religion and attempt to help fathers understand their role in a changing society by asking several questions.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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15. Social Entrepreneurship, Employment, and Financial Performance: A Latent Growth Modeling Approach.
- Author
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Cheol Young Kim
- Subjects
SOCIAL entrepreneurship ,FINANCIAL performance ,EMPLOYMENT ,SOCIAL change ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The social value created by organizations has been in the spotlight during periods of rapid social change, such as COVID-19. However, the existing literature has been limited by the inability to demonstrate the cumulative effects of social value over time, which has led to academic and practical limitations. Drawing on stakeholder theory, socially responsible customer behavior, and institutional theory, the author collected data from 208 social enterprises in South Korea over 3 years, from 2017 to 2019, and tested hypotheses using latent growth modeling. This analytical technique, which uses structural equation modeling, estimates the latent growth rate of each data measure by year and analyzes the causal relationship between the growth rate of each variable. The results show that higher levels of social entrepreneurship are associated with higher growth rates of total employment and vulnerable worker employment, followed by higher growth rates of financial performance. The implications of this paper are as follows. First, this study reports that social entrepreneurship can help social enterprises develop sustainably by increasing financial performance. Second, this study overcomes the methodological limitations of the existing literature by reporting the relationship between growth rates. Third, this study reports that social enterprises can help solve employment problems for vulnerable populations, who are often the first to be affected by the economic crisis. Fourth, this study contributes to resolving the conflicting and contradictory perspectives of practitioners and academics on the relationship between social and economic value. Fifth, it offers suggestions for the future direction of the academic field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Counter-Frames Against Anti-Asian Racism During the Corona Pandemic in Berlin – Coping With Exclusion, Creating Belonging and Organising Resistance.
- Author
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Suda, Kimiko and Köhler, Jonas
- Subjects
ANTI-Asian racism ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CONVENIENCE sampling (Statistics) ,RACIALIZATION ,SOCIAL change ,POSTRACIALISM ,ISOMETRIC exercise - Abstract
In 2020, anti-Asian racism re-emerged during the coronavirus pandemic in Germany and elsewhere, manifesting in media narratives, and evoking different forms of violence and exclusion, especially in public space. Racialisation as an everyday process creates "counter-frames" by racialised groups. They are constructed in relation to institutionalised interpellation as "the other." Building on Feagin's concept of "white framing" and "counter-framing" and Löw's concept of space, this paper discusses the effects of racialisation, coping and anti-racist resistance strategies as developed by the Asian diaspora. Social change regarding racism will be analysed through Foroutan's concept of "postmigrant society." We based this study on a convenience sample of people with Asian heritage which we conducted in 2020 in Germany. In addition, we included a diary study for which a subset has been sampled. We argue that the pandemic influenced the formation of counter-frames against anti-Asian racism in the specific context of Berlin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The cultural underpinnings of platformization: How social movement organizations helped form the category of the sharing economy.
- Author
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Bajde, Domen, Golf-Papez, Maja, and Culiberg, Barbara
- Subjects
SHARING economy ,SOCIAL movements ,SOCIAL structure ,SOCIAL clubs ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
This paper explores the cultural dynamics underpinning platformization by unpacking the emergence of the sharing economy—a vital terrain of platformization—as a culturally significant category. Drawing on online archival data, our study reveals the important role of social movement organizations (SMOs) in establishing the sharing economy as a prominent cultural category and infusing it with powerful social meanings. We outline the discursive strategies used by SMOs to articulate this macro-market category, and to frame platform technology as a benevolent enabler of social change. Our study contributes to platformization research by turning attention to how cultural dynamics (i.e., the discursive strategies giving rise to the emergence of sharing economy) shape platformization. In addition, we contribute to market system dynamic research by expanding the focus of investigation from singular industries to the macro economy level, shedding light on new discursive dynamics (e.g., discursive strategies for articulating and technologizing the emergent economy), and by the extending previous work on the role of SMOs and social movements in market shaping. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Organizing for Social and Institutional Change in Response to Disruption, Division, and Displacement: Introduction to the Special Issue.
- Author
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Creed, W. E. Douglas, Gray, Barbara, Höllerer, Markus A., Karam, Charlotte M., and Reay, Trish
- Subjects
SOCIAL change - Abstract
In this editorial for our Special Issue, we focus on ways to better understand the role of organizations, organizing, and the organized during social and institutional change in response to disruption, division, and displacement. The papers in this Special Issue provide important insights into the hardships and heartache arising from social disruption, division, and displacement; in addition, they provide glimpses into potential ways of moving forward. To set the stage, we develop a framework building on extant literature that highlights several analytic approaches to understanding the consequences of eroding, or inadequate, institutions, the challenges of building anew when the status quo is destroyed, and what such novel and complex realities entail for organizational analysis. We offer a temporal view of responses to disruption, division, and displacement that draws on the papers in this Special Issue to identify and explain potential risks and challenges that arise at different points in time. To conclude, we provide a short summary of each paper, and call for a reinvigorated research agenda that goes beyond the excellent work featured here by broadening and deepening our focus on approaches to organizing that expressly address disruption, division, and displacement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Dealing with Technological Change: Social Policy Preferences and Institutional Context.
- Author
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Busemeyer, Marius R. and Tober, Tobias
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,SOCIAL policy ,SOCIAL change ,UNEMPLOYMENT insurance ,LAYOFFS ,FOOD preferences - Abstract
How does technological change affect social policy preferences across different institutional contexts? In this paper, we argue that individuals who perceive high levels of technology-related employment risks prefer passive policies like unemployment benefits over active measures like retraining in order to satisfy the need for immediate compensation in the case of job loss. At the same time, general support for passive (active) policy solutions to technological change should be significantly lower (higher) in countries where generous compensation schemes already exist. As the perception of technology-related employment risks increases, however, we expect that social policy preferences among high-risk individuals should converge across different welfare state contexts. We use novel data from a diverse set of 24 OECD countries that specifically measure preferred social policy solutions to technological change in a constrained choice scenario. Applying statistical methods that explicitly model the trade-off faced by individuals, we find evidence in line with our theoretical expectations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Memory and trauma in the Kurdistan genocide.
- Author
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Muhammad, Kurdistan Omar, Hama, Hawre Hasan, and Hama Karim, Hersh Abdallah
- Subjects
EPISODIC memory ,YOUNG adults ,COLLECTIVE memory ,GENOCIDE ,SOCIAL facts ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
Memory and trauma are often considered to be interconnected social phenomena. Collective memory exists in every society, but when a particularly catastrophic event occurs, it leaves an impact on behavior, and enduring memories of a cultural trauma. This paper considers the changing social meanings of the Anfal, an act of genocide which occurred in Iraqi Kurdistan in 1988, and inquires whether the legacy of the Anfal can be most accurately characterized as a social memory or a cultural trauma. The paper uses a mixed methodology of historical research and a recent survey carried out among young people in Iraqi Kurdistan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Building tolerance through human rights education: The missing link.
- Author
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Salmon-Letelier, Marlana and Russell, S. Garnett
- Subjects
RIGHT to education ,HUMAN rights ,CLASSROOMS ,OBSERVATION (Educational method) ,INFORMAL sector ,TOLERATION ,LITERARY theory - Abstract
Human rights education (HRE) is an emerging practice across formal and informal educational sectors worldwide. However, most literature and theory on HRE emphasize the importance of imparting knowledge about human rights. In this paper, we argue that increasing tolerance among students is a vital but understudied aspect of HRE. This paper is based on the results of a mixed methods longitudinal study conducted in three classrooms across two New York City public high schools. Our methods include a pre-/post- survey, classroom observations, and semi-structured individual and group interviews. The findings indicate that merely teaching about human rights issues is necessary but not sufficient to shift deeply embedded attitudes that contribute to the transformative nature of the human rights framework. We present tolerance as a necessary precursor to positive social change and sustainable human rights implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Concept of Hybridity in Journalism Studies.
- Author
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Hallin, Daniel C., Mellado, Claudia, and Mancini, Paolo
- Subjects
JOURNALISM ,CRITICAL thinking ,SOCIAL processes ,SOCIAL change ,OCCUPATIONAL roles - Abstract
This paper considers the use of the concept of hybridity in journalism studies, arguing that the concept of hybridity has served an important role in reorienting the field in the face of important processes of social change, but that as a "sensitizing concept" in the sense that Herbert Blumer used the term, it requires critical reflection and more careful specification of its various uses. In the first sections, we map three principal contexts in which the concept has been invoked: one focusing on new media and the blurring of professional boundaries it produces; one focusing on global flows of journalism culture, and a third which treats hybridity not as a novel but as quotidian and rooted in the structural context of the practice of journalism in general. The second part of the paper focuses on issues and challenges in the use of the concept of hybridity. We consider the tendency for hybridity to become a catch-all phrase that substitutes for more specific analysis, and the problem of treating novel phenomena as derivative forms of familiar ones. We then move to critique "presentism" in the discussion of hybridity and the distortions that result from drawing dichotomies between hybrid and "pure" forms, making the argument for taking seriously the idea that hybridity is universal. In the final section, we propose the idea of the hybridity cycle as a way of thinking about stability and change in journalism studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction for Our Time: A Curriculum that is up to the Task.
- Author
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Crane, Rebecca S., Callen-Davies, Robert, Francis, Aesha, Francis, Dean, Gibbs, Pauline, Mulligan, Beth, O'Neill, Bridgette, Williams, Nana Korantemah Pierce, Waupoose, Michael, and Vallejo, Zayda
- Subjects
EDUCATION of minorities ,RACISM ,MINDFULNESS ,DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,TEACHING methods ,SOCIAL change ,CURRICULUM ,SOCIAL justice ,BEHAVIOR ,RACIAL inequality ,MINORITY stress ,STRESS management ,CULTURAL awareness - Abstract
There is current heightened public consciousness of the intersecting challenges of social and racial injustice, other forms of inequity, and the climate and biodiversity crisis. We examine how these current realities influence how we engage as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and Mindfulness-Based Program (MBP) teachers and researchers. Although Kabat-Zinn developed MBSR as a vehicle to enable engagement with both the individual and the collective drivers of distress and flourishing, predominant research and practice trends within the MBP field have prioritised individual wellbeing, and have not been accessible to the full societal demographic. Furthermore, there is increasing recognition that the systemic social inequities that influence access to public services have not been addressed in the MBP field. In response, there is now an increasing trend exploring how MBP participation can influence 'bigger than self' concerns,with research, practice and theory suggesting that the inner personal transformation that mindfulness practice enables, supports individuals to compassionately reconnect to self, other and the natural world in ways that foster prosocial behaviour change, and enables awareness building of personal bias and conditioning. In this paper we present perspectives on ways of both retaining fidelity to the existing MBSR program, and simultaneously embracing anti-oppression teaching methods and content, and an inclusive recognition of the micro, meso and macro causes and conditions that drive distress and flourishing. Weare a group of racially diverse MBP teachers and trainers from both sides of the Atlantic, who are engaged in training initiatives with people from Black, Latinex, Indigenous, Asian, and People of Color communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Urban violence in the United States -- implications for health and for Britain in the future: discussion paper.
- Author
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Ford, Amasa B. and Rushforth, Norman B.
- Subjects
URBAN violence ,HEALTH ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,SOCIAL change ,MORTALITY - Abstract
The article discusses the implications of urban violence in the U.S. for health and for Great Britain in the future. Recent experience with violent death in an American city is presented and compared with historical trends, with the experience in Great Britain and with concurrent environmental and social changes. A comparison of British and American mortality rates shows that over the years suicide rates have not been greatly different.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Crisis, liminality and the decolonization of the social imaginary.
- Subjects
DECOLONIZATION ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL movements ,FINANCIAL crises ,WORLD War II - Abstract
The decolonization of the social imaginary has been proposed as an important dimension of the transition towards a degrowth society. However, although omnipresent in the degrowth literature, the terms "social imaginary" and "social imaginary significations" have not been adequately explained. This creates a level of mystification that limits the analytical value of the degrowth framework. In addition, there is very little theoretical work on how actual social imaginaries can be decolonized and transformed. This paper first tries to clarify those concepts. Subsequently, it develops a theoretical framework for explaining such transitions of the imaginary. In developing this framework, the paper focuses on moments of crisis, since crises have been historically associated with change and transition. It argues that crises are important because they destabilize social imaginaries and open up a stage of suspension—a liminal stage—in which the rise of new social practices can facilitate the emergence of new social imaginary significations and institutions that can contribute to the alteration of the social imaginary at large. The paper draws on case studies related to the Greek crisis, the biggest ever faced by a country of the Global North after the Second World War. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Unscripted Practices for Uncertain Events: Organizational Problems in Cybersecurity Incident Management.
- Author
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Mathew, Ashwin Jacob
- Subjects
- *
CYBERTERRORISM , *COMPUTER systems , *SOCIAL networks , *INTERNET security , *SOCIAL change - Abstract
Scripts can help us understand the designer–user relationship, by offering analysis of designers' intent in technological objects and examination of users' behaviors through willingness (and unwillingness) to take on scripts. But how are we to understand these relationships in the context of cybersecurity, in the face of adversaries determined to gain unauthorized access to computer systems by actively subverting scripts? In effect, cybersecurity attacks involve re-scripting of computing systems to gain unauthorized access through unscripted features of these systems. Cybersecurity attacks are always uncertain events: attackers can never be certain when re-scripting will be successful, and defenders can never be certain when or where to expect an attack, as unscripted features are difficult to know until they are exploited. In this paper, I study practices of cybersecurity incident response to examine how cybersecurity engineers respond to the novel attacks they encounter daily. I show how these are fundamentally unscripted practices emerging in response to unstable scripts, structured through the uncertainties inherent in cybersecurity engineering practice. The improvised practices and changing networks of social relations which I trace demonstrate the limits of stable scripts and provide new tools for analyzing unstable scripts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Social Work Doctoral Education in Transition.
- Author
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Cnaan, Ram A.
- Subjects
MINORITY students ,CULTURAL pluralism ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL work research ,SOCIAL work education ,DOCTORAL programs - Abstract
This introductory article to the symposium on doctoral education in social work aims to provide a framework for the symposium. Doctoral education in social work is continuously in flux. As society and the profession are constantly changing and as academia is also in a state of transition, doctoral education in social work needs to be reassessed. The five papers in this symposium start with understanding the changing environment and then they deal with issues such as policy research, the scientific inquiry, and transdisciplinary research. Finally, it discusses issues of racial and ethnic diversity in doctoral education. The hope is that this set of papers will help shape the discourse regarding social work doctoral education and will help doctoral directors and their peers better plan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Global citizenship and the global citizen/consumer: Perspectives from practitioners in development NGOs in Portugal.
- Author
-
Coelho, Dalila P, Caramelo, João, and Menezes, Isabel
- Subjects
WORLD citizenship ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,CITIZENSHIP education ,ORGANIZATIONAL citizenship behavior ,DISCOURSE analysis ,SOCIAL change ,CRITICAL thinking - Abstract
This paper makes an empirical contribution to the debate about the pluralism of global citizenship. This is considered a crucial aspect for research, not only because charity and social justice standpoints coexist, but also in the light of growing examples of neoliberal understandings about global citizenship education and the global citizen. Informed by critical and postcolonial thinking and with a special focus on Andreotti's discursive orientations, this paper analyses discourses of practitioners of global citizenship education who work in development NGOs in Portugal. Findings suggest that humanist views are predominant, although intertwined with neoliberal and postcolonial perspectives. They also point to an archetypical vision of the global citizen and a prevalence of the responsible citizen-consumer as an agent of social change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. What drives changes in expressive social media use for generational cohorts?
- Author
-
Pang, Natalie and Woo, Yue Ting
- Subjects
MASS media use ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL media ,POLITICAL knowledge ,POLITICAL communication ,ORGANIZATIONAL citizenship behavior - Abstract
Extant literature has often focused on digital citizenship amongst youths in particular instances and contexts, but is limited in addressing how such citizenship compare to other generational cohorts. Examining political expression as a particular form of actualising citizenship, the paper utilises a longitudinal approach to explore the effects of changes in political efficacy, media use, political knowledge, media trust and political talk on political expression – and the differences between generational cohorts over two general elections in Singapore. Findings indicate that while changes in mass media use, social media use, trust in instant messaging and personal communications and political talk were positively associated with changes in political expression as a whole, changes in political knowledge and trust in mass media negatively predicted political expression. With different effects observed for different generational cohorts of citizens, findings from the study contribute to deeper understandings of practices of actualising citizenship over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Jives, jeans and Jewishness? Moral geographies, atmospheres and the politics of mixing at the Jewish Lads’ Brigade & Club 1954–1969.
- Author
-
Mills, Sarah
- Subjects
JEWISH identity ,LEGAL status of Jews ,GROUP identity ,BABY boom generation ,SOCIAL change ,INTERMARRIAGE ,INTERFAITH relations - Abstract
This paper examines a series of anxieties about mixing at the Jewish Lads’ Brigade and Club (JLB & C) in Manchester, UK during the 1950s and 1960s, primarily focused on inter-faith activities, relationships and marriages. This paper explores how a powerful moral geography of gender and religion came to be shaped, regulated and negotiated at this youth work space. The concerns expressed by some adults over teenage encounters in the post-war city were articulated and understood through the notion of ‘atmospheres’, and this paper suggests how this idea and language captured some of the anxieties and emotions surrounding cultures of leisure at this time. This paper contributes an in-depth and sustained focus on the moral geographies of the post-war city in relation to young people, as well as addressing an important gap in scholarship on Jewish youthful religiosities. Furthermore, it pushes at ideas about meaningful encounters through the consideration of the JLB & C as a meeting space and arena for visitors. Overall, the paper examines how the JLB & C acted as both a mirror to the wider social changes of the post-war era, while also being an active contributor in shaping those same processes of social change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Integrating 50 Years of Theory and Research: Suggestions for Directions on Women's Career Development.
- Author
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Betz, Nancy E.
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,COUNSELING ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,SOCIAL change ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,LGBTQ+ people ,JOB performance ,WOMEN employees - Abstract
This article reviews the methods, major findings, and conclusions of the Fouad et al. review of research on women's work and career development over the last 25 years. Following that, the paper addresses the question posed by Fouad et al. "Why arent we there yet"?, providing several examples of approaches to the development of separate theories of women's career development. The article concludes with counseling, training and societal implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Enhancing social inclusion in sport: Dynamics of action research in super-diverse contexts.
- Author
-
Spaaij, Ramon, Luguetti, Carla, McDonald, Brent, and McLachlan, Fiona
- Subjects
ACTION research ,SOCIAL integration ,SPORTS participation ,PUBLIC sociology ,COMMUNITIES ,ATHLETIC clubs ,SOCIALIZATION ,CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
There are systemic and longstanding inequalities in sport participation for culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) migrants. Drawing on theoretical foundations of critical pedagogy and social justice education, as well as a public sociology perspective, this paper examines the development of an action research (AR) project to support the co-creation of inclusive climates in sports clubs in CALD communities in Melbourne, Australia. We use artefacts from collaborative sessions, interviews, and surveys to analyse the AR's impact on participating community sport leaders' awareness and practice. The findings indicate how the collaborative process of assessing clubs' diversity and inclusion climates affected participants' awareness of inequities and exclusionary practices, and how the co-creation of strategies for change brought together diverse perspectives. We reflect on the implications and limitations of the AR for research practice aimed at promoting equitable social inclusion for CALD migrants in community sport. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. From affordances to cultural affordances: An analytic framework for tracing the dynamic interaction among technology, people and culture.
- Author
-
Sun, Yinan and Suthers, Daniel D
- Subjects
SOCIAL change ,CULTURE - Abstract
This paper proposes a novel framework called 'cultural affordances' to examine the dynamic interplay among technology, users and culture, as multilevel and multidirectional interactive networks. The framework includes three dimensions. 1) Cultural affordances of technology describe what technology can offer users and culture in terms of behavioural or cultural changes. 2) Cultural affordances of users describe what users can offer other users, technology and culture in terms of behavioural, technological or cultural changes. 3) Affordances of the cultural describe what culture can offer users and technology in terms of the design and use of technology as well as related changes. To establish the need for a culturally oriented extension to affordance theory, we first revisit Gibson's original definition of affordances of the environment and discuss its significance and limitations, including the need to understand the interplay between technology and users in the digital era. We contend that culture, as an assemblage of all relations and practices, should be included as an indispensable part of affordance theory, and we provide a detailed explanation of the novel, three-dimensional framework of cultural affordances. We then apply the framework to three prior empirical studies and one ongoing study to demonstrate how the framework can be used as an analytic tool to deepen our understanding of the multilevel and multidirectional interplay among technology, users and culture, and we identify related changes, focusing on WeChat. We also discuss how the framework can provide directions for designing new technologies to improve collaborations among users, between users and designers, and between an online platform and the offline world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The Mentor's Role From the Perspective of Marginalized Young Women Becoming Mentors: Photovoice-Based Research.
- Author
-
Malka, Menny, Komem, Michal, Eyal-Lubling, Roni, and Lerner-Ganor, Ella
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL roles ,PROFESSIONS ,TEACHING methods ,COUNSELING ,FEMINISM ,SOCIAL change ,MENTORING ,SOCIAL justice ,EXPERIENCE ,LEARNING strategies ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,ACTION research ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SOUND recordings ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CORPORATE culture ,ADULT education workshops ,GROUP process ,ADULTS - Abstract
This paper examines the perspective of marginalized young women, training to become mentors for marginalized girls, with respect to the role of the mentor. Taking a critical feminist perspective, this article gives expression to the research participants' unique knowledge, based on life experience as marginalized girls and their lived experiences. Based on a photovoice research project with 13 participants, all marginalized young women, the findings of this paper identify three main narratives regarding the mentoring role: (1) Mentoring as a relationship; (2) Mentoring as an action for the future; and (3) Organizational belongness—the organization hosting the participants serving as an ideological, value-based, and professional home, enabling the growth of the mentor in her role. The conclusions of the article argue that marginalized young women experience mentoring as a practice that expands beyond its rational aspects, embodying within it a corrective experience of relationships and an opportunity for social change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Superdiversity and social policies in a complex society: Social challenges in the 21st century.
- Author
-
López Peláez, Antonio, Aguilar-Tablada, María Victoria, Erro-Garcés, Amaya, and Pérez-García, Raquel María
- Subjects
SOCIAL policy ,CULTURAL pluralism ,TWENTY-first century ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL processes - Abstract
Copyright of Current Sociology is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Accommodation and resistance in Hokkaido hip hop practitioners: An ethnographic analysis of Generation Resignation in post-growth Japan.
- Author
-
Klien, Susanne
- Subjects
HIP-hop culture ,ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis ,PARTICIPANT observation ,RAP music - Abstract
Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted between October 2013 and October 2017 in Hokkaido, northern Japan, this paper explores the trajectories of individuals engaging in hip hop music. Participant observation and narratives indicate that the majority of individuals work as regular members of society (shakaijin) and only pursue hip hop in their free time. The paper highlights the intricate entanglement of individuals in subordination to mainstream values despite their references to elements of resistance. I contend that in contrast to previous generations of hip hoppers who chose to lead lives of open resistance to mainstream values, contemporary youth who largely belong to the "Generation Resignation" (satori sedai) prefer to engage in practices of resistance that may not be evident rather than overt contestation of societal conventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Call for Papers: "Studying Change Dynamics Using Qualitative Methods" Special Issue.
- Author
-
Gray, Barbara, Stensaker, Inger, and Jansen, Karen
- Subjects
QUALITATIVE research ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,SOCIAL change ,CAREER changes ,CHANGE agents ,PUBLISHING - Abstract
The article encourages researchers to submit qualitative research on the impact of change in organizations, individuals or fields which will be published in the "Journal of Applied Behavioral Science." It cites that the work should examine the human reactions to the transformation, the pace and rhythm of change and its agents. It mentions that the data may come from various sources including diaries, archives or interviews.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The nowtopia of the riverbank: Elder environmental activism.
- Author
-
Ravenscroft, Neil, Demaria, Federico, Kallis, Giorgos, Bakker, Karen, and Gearey, Mary
- Subjects
SOCIAL change ,ENVIRONMENTAL activism ,WORKING class ,OLDER people ,QUALITY of life ,RIPARIAN areas - Abstract
Degrowth imaginaries offer alternative ways of envisioning future societies. Those, predominantly working age and working class people, seeking to purposefully enact degrowth in the here and now are termed 'nowtopians'. Based on empirical work undertaken along the River Adur valley in West Sussex, UK, this paper argues that dynamic examples of nowtopian initiatives can develop from alternative and overlooked demographics, such as rural community elders. Explored through a series of interlinking activist narratives, orientated around collective responses to changing riverbank environments, this paper argues that the genesis of this elder activism is a desire to re-assert agency in older age that can be linked to degrowth sensibilities. Contending with the new realities of living under 'austerity localism', many of these elders have undergone a personal, if not political, epiphany and have turned to forms of environmental activism to articulate their agency and demonstrate solidarity with fellow humans across generations. This paper argues that these elder nowtopians champion direct action, conviviality and living well. Ageing and place connectivity are the motivators which underpin one of the key nowtopian concepts: 'redefining life's purpose'. Reflecting back, projecting forward, but operating in the 'now', these elders help us to consider a 'politics' of degrowth through grassroots activism along a rural river catchment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Diagramming social practice theory: An interdisciplinary experiment exploring practices as networks.
- Author
-
Higginson, Sarah, McKenna, Eoghan, Hargreaves, Tom, Chilvers, Jason, and Thomson, Murray
- Subjects
ENERGY consumption ,SOCIAL change ,ENERGY economics ,ENERGY conservation ,CARBON dioxide mitigation ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
Achieving a transition to a low-carbon energy system is now widely recognised as a key challenge facing humanity. To date, the vast majority of research addressing this challenge has been conducted within the disciplines of science, engineering and economics utilising quantitative and modelling techniques. However, there is growing awareness that meeting energy challenges requires fundamentally sociotechnical solutions and that the social sciences have an important role to play. This is an interdisciplinary challenge but, to date, there remain very few explorations of, or reflections on, interdisciplinary energy research in practice. This paper seeks to change that by reporting on an interdisciplinary experiment to build new models of energy demand on the basis of cutting-edge social science understandings. The process encouraged the social scientists to communicate their ideas more simply, whilst allowing engineers to think critically about the embedded assumptions in their models in relation to society and social change. To do this, the paper uses a particular set of theoretical approaches to energy use behaviour known collectively as social practice theory – and explores the potential of more quantitative forms of network analysis to provide a formal framework by means of which to diagram and visualise practices. The aim of this is to gain insight into the relationships between the elements of a practice, so increasing the ultimate understanding of how practices operate. Graphs of practice networks are populated based on new empirical data drawn from a survey of different types (or variants) of laundry practice. The resulting practice networks are analysed to reveal characteristics of elements and variants of practice, such as which elements could be considered core to the practice, or how elements between variants overlap, or can be shared. This promises insights into energy intensity, flexibility and the rootedness of practices (i.e. how entrenched/established they are) and so opens up new questions and possibilities for intervention. The novelty of this approach is that it allows practice data to be represented graphically using a quantitative format without being overly reductive. Its usefulness is that it is readily applied to large datasets, provides the capacity to interpret social practices in new ways and serves to open up potential links with energy modelling. More broadly, a significant dimension of novelty has been the interdisciplinary approach, radically different to that normally seen in energy research. This paper is relevant to a broad audience of social scientists and engineers interested in integrating social practices with energy engineering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Feminist Theories and Activist Practices in Organization Studies.
- Author
-
Fotaki, Marianna and Pullen, Alison
- Subjects
FEMINIST theory ,FEMINISM ,FEMINIST ethics ,SOCIAL change ,CONSCIOUSNESS raising ,FEMINISTS - Abstract
This piece reflects on the untapped potential of feminist theories and activist practices to address vital organizational issues and societal challenges such as inequality, sustainability and care for the environment. While we recognize and briefly review the progress on gender issues in organization studies achieved over the last decades, our focus is on identifying the critical and underutilized strands of feminist thinking offering fresh responses to these problems, including decolonial feminism, feminist ethics of care, posthuman feminism and ecofeminism. By way of illustrating our theoretical arguments, we discuss how five different papers recently published in Organization Studies address some of these issues, including the uncovering of hidden entanglements of power and performativity in a global bank and in the beauty industry by paying attention to body and affect, the underrepresented struggles of women in the Global South as they disrupt gendered practices through consciousness raising, contesting gender regimes at organizational social events and, finally, how the social media operate at the intersection of gender and occupation. We conclude by outlining future directions for research as we discuss the contributions of anti-racist feminist theory and decolonial feminist practice to completing the unfinished project of social change while making our scholarship more reflexive and inclusive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The viability and appropriateness of using visual methods in end of life research to foreground the experiences of people affected by financial hardship and deprivation.
- Author
-
Richards, Naomi, Quinn, Sam, Mitchell, Margaret, Carduff, Emma, and Gott, Merryn
- Subjects
DEATH & psychology ,WELL-being ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PATIENT participation ,SOCIAL change ,ACQUISITION of data ,SOCIAL isolation ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,FINANCIAL stress ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,QUALITY of life ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH equity ,ATTITUDES toward death ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Background: Visual methods have been used extensively in social research to explore people's experiences of structural disadvantage. This indicates that they may provide a useful research approach to understanding equity-related concerns within palliative care. However, little has been published regarding the use of visual methods with people at the end of life. Purpose of the paper: In this article we draw on our experiences of using visual methods to illuminate the end of life experiences of people experiencing financial hardship and deprivation in Scotland's largest city. Evidence used to support the information presented: We present evidence from the published literature, as well as our own experiences of using visual methods to explore dying at home for people experiencing financial hardship and deprivation. Our analysis draws on two specific visual methods: photovoice and professional photography. Photovoice is a participatory visual method which involves enabling participants to take and discuss their own images and present them to different audiences to try to enact social change. We report our experiences as researchers, as well as those of our participants and recruitment partners. Key learning points: To successfully use visual methods, researchers need to invest significant time and resource in building a strong rapport with participants. There are also key ethical, practical and representational challenges to consider. A participatory framework should be adopted which ensures agency for participants in terms of image creation and public dissemination. Participants reported value in using visual methods in terms of legacy building and self-representation. Using photovoice (insider's view) and professional photography (outsider's view) together offered complementary perspectives, enabling a rich layering of stories and meaning. Our findings indicate visual methods can illuminate aspects of the end of life experience not captured by other research methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Mapping participation in ICT4D: A meta-analytic review of development communication research.
- Author
-
Kim, Michael Dokyum and Lee, Kyung Sun
- Subjects
SELF-efficacy ,INFORMATION & communication technologies for development ,COMMUNICATIONS research ,PARTICIPATION ,SKEPTICISM - Abstract
We conducted a meta-analytic study of recent (2009 to 2020) information and communication technologies for development (ICT4D) research in the field of development communication. Our aim was to explore the conceptualization of participation in the context of ICTs and globalization in contemporary scholarly discourse. We found that most studies published during this period evinced a technological deterministic discourse regarding the process of social change, privileging modernization and neoliberal modes of development. In such contexts, participation has often been conceptualized in terms of invitations to 'access' (first-level of participation) and 'empowerment' (second-level of participation) at the local level. Despite increasing concern regarding global digital inequalities, research that approaches participation in terms of claims to 'social justice' (third-level of participation) associated with global forces has been limited. We found, however, that research emerging from the communication and media disciplines have shown skepticism regarding the dominant trends. The paper concludes with a discussion of future directions in ICT4D for scholars across disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The essential state: Pandemic, norms and values, and the new authoritarianism.
- Author
-
Wray, Ian
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PANDEMICS ,SMALL states ,SOCIAL change ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) - Abstract
America's long post war boom was underpinned by the state, by Roosevelt's New Deal, by its wartime economy, and by Roosevelt's plans for investment in post war science and infrastructure. In the 1970s America abandoned its developmental model, as critics from left and right attacked plans and planners: yet in the fast rising states of Asia it was embraced. Is it too late for a wakeup call in America and Britain, the champions of anti-planning and the small state? This paper looks for explanations, examines consequences and suggests that the Covid pandemic may trigger a sea change in norms, values and attitudes towards planning and governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. INTRODUCTION TO THREE PAPERS ON TEACHING DEMOGRAPHY.
- Author
-
Weeks, John R.
- Subjects
DEMOGRAPHY ,SOCIOLOGY education ,POPULATION ,SOCIAL change ,CURRICULUM ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This article presents an introduction to the three papers, published in the April 1986 issue of the periodical "Teaching Demography." The first paper discusses a new approach to teaching the standard demography course. Many, if not most, sociology departments have an undergraduate introductory course in demography, usually packaged as a population problems course. The problems approach is consistent with the curricula of many departments in which the list of specialty courses may look like the table of contents from a social problems textbook. An alternative emphasizes the development of demographic literacy by emphasizing essential demographic concepts, without necessarily making special reference to the interconnections between population growth and social change. The final paper may be the most controversial of the three because it proposes a course, indeed a whole program, in applied demography. Many sociologists wince when they hear the term applied because for them it may conjure up images of trade school.
- Published
- 1986
45. SECTION ON CONTRIBUTED PAPERS.
- Subjects
MEETINGS ,SOCIOLOGICAL research ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
President of the American Sociological Society Louis Wirth is planning for a Section on Contributed Papers for the next annual meeting that is to be held in New York from December 28 to 30, December, 1947. Although this Section is particularly de- signed for those younger members of the Society, including graduate students, who have not yet had an opportunity to appear on the pro- gram in other sections, contributions from other members of the Society will be welcome. Since this Committee is working closely with the Committee on Research, it is being urged that members who have completed research papers suitable for oral presentation and which do not fall within the scope of other Sections be offered for consideration in the Section on Contributed Papers.
- Published
- 1947
46. Thumbs up and down: The cultural technique of thumb-typing.
- Author
-
Ramati, Ido
- Subjects
THUMB ,SOCIAL change ,FINGERS ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
This paper explores thumb-typing as a cultural technique stemming from the mutual development of typing interfaces and practices. Focusing on the work of the typing fingers, it examines how the assignment of thumbs to be the primary writing digits is an innovation that correlates—and in some respects causes—textual and social changes that are central to digital culture. It argues that thumb-typing embodies recursive relations between behavioral patterns, technological infrastructure, and textual creation. The analysis shows how the invention of the typewriter keyboard introduced the fingers to typing, and how developments of digital media refined the finger-work in interacting with the device, resulting in thumb-typing. The new functionality of the thumb as an executing rather than supporting finger, promotes a novel equivalency and interchangeability in finger employment to typing. This, I propose, problematizes traditional concepts of textuality, its performance, and authorship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The civil norm building role of news journalism in post-civil war settings.
- Author
-
Harrison, Jackie and Pukallus, Stefanie
- Subjects
NEWS audiences ,JOURNALISTS ,JOURNALISM ,CIVIL war ,CIVIL society - Abstract
This paper seeks to provide an answer to the question of the role that news journalism can play in the building of civil peace as peaceful cooperation in post-civil war settings. Alternatively expressed, how it can utilise its communicative capacity to facilitate and contribute to contextually and culturally appropriate versions of sustainable peace within civil society. Peacebuilding tool kits are wide and varied and often narrowly focus on news journalism as a political actor and its role in political life. We would like to shift the focus away from the 'political' to the role that news journalism can play in the (re-)building of an associative and cooperative civil society. Specifically, we believe that news journalism should and can develop for itself an ethos of civil norm building that aims to stimulate a civil consciousness in its audiences which is indispensable for the practical application of the categories of civil norms of peaceful cooperation in everyday life. To understand how such an ethos can be developed we need to recognise three features that are necessary for news journalism to achieve its potential as a civil norm builder: (1) its transformative communicative capacity, (2) its institutional and organisational commitment toward news reporting that exemplifies peaceful cooperation in everyday life and (3) the way it can concretely undertake the application of editorial guidelines in post-civil war settings which exemplify the three basic categories of civil norms of peaceful cooperation: (a) assent to civil peace, (b) substantive civility and (c) building civil capacity and civil competencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Post-COVID-19 Consumers' Cautious and Virtuous Mindsets: New Marketing Opportunities for Positive Social Change.
- Author
-
Mittal, Banwari and Woodside, Arch G.
- Subjects
SOCIAL marketing ,TERROR management theory ,CONSUMERS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIAL change ,GOAL (Psychology) ,EMERGENT literacy - Abstract
Amidst the 2019/22 COVID-19 miseries, a silver lining appears: the pandemic is causing many of us rethink our lives. Using terror management theory (TMT), this conceptual essay identifies the simultaneous emergence of two mindsets, a cautious mindset, stemming from the preservation motive, and a "virtuous" mindset, stemming from an enrichment motive—an intentionality to live a more fulfilling life. These two mindsets in turn produce five life perspectives —life themes for everyday living and achieving long-term life goals. This study reviews evidence of these five life perspectives in published reports of consumers' thoughts during the pandemic. In turn, these emergent life perspectives and consumer motives present new opportunities for marketers to advance consumer well-being and positive social change as developed in this paper. Weaving a nexus of consumers' emergent life perspectives, consumption motives, and marketer opportunities, our conceptual framework suggests seven research questions for marketing scholars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A few Weeks in Dirt City: Sport-Related Gentrification, Mobilizing Resistance, and the Art of Failure in Edmonton, Alberta.
- Author
-
Scherer, Jay, Kafara, Rylan, and Davidson, Judy
- Subjects
GENTRIFICATION ,SOCIOLOGICAL research ,SOCIAL movements ,POLITICAL development ,COMMUNITIES ,COLONIES ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
There is no shortage of sociological research that explores the successes and failures of various sport-related social movements. However, a more capacious approach to understanding the significance of sport-related social movements, their imaginative actions and collective labor, and their impacts on social change, is one that shifts its focus away from binary categories of "success" and "failure". In this paper, we explore the formation of the short-lived Edmonton Community Benefits Coalition, which emerged in 2016 to oppose the lack of a legally binding Community Benefits Agreement associated with a new publicly financed National Hockey League arena in Edmonton's gentrifying city center, an area of spatially concentrated racialized poverty. Drawing from our ethnographic research, we examine how coalition members engaged in the collective labor of building solidarity, including the collaborative development of political strategies, while recognizing that the odds of successfully penetrating neoliberal capital and municipal governance were virtually impossible. Finally, given that the coalition ultimately "failed" to secure more significant institutional impacts, we offer an analysis of how this failure engendered several effects, including the cultivation of new relationships and political strategies in the ongoing struggle against gentrification and its related displacements in Edmonton, Alberta. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Back in Youth: Social Unbecoming in the Study of West African Masculinities.
- Author
-
Bjarnesen, Jesper
- Subjects
AFRICANA studies ,MASCULINITY ,SOCIAL change ,SCHOLARLY method ,PRECARITY - Abstract
Copyright of Africa Spectrum is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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