Content
2020, Volume 8, Issue 2
- 23-35 Women in China Moving Forward: Progress, Challenges and Reflections
by Juhua Yang - 36-46 The Grandmothers’ Farewell to Childcare Provision under China’s Two-Child Policy: Evidence from Guangzhou Middle-Class Families
by Xiaohui Zhong & Minggang Peng - 47-57 Left Behind? Migration Stories of Two Women in Rural China
by C. Cindy Fan & Chen Chen - 58-67 Transitions and Conflicts: Reexamining Impacts of Migration on Young Women’s Status and Gender Practice in Rural Shanxi
by Lichao Yang & Xiaodong Ren - 68-76 Privileged Daughters? Gendered Mobility among Highly Educated Chinese Female Migrants in the UK
by Mengwei Tu & Kailing Xie - 77-85 The Making of a Modern Self: Vietnamese Women Experiencing Transnational Mobility at the China–Vietnam Border
by Pengli Huang - 86-94 Sex, Drug, and HIV/AIDS: The Drug Career of an Urban Chinese Woman
by Xiying Wang & Liu Liu - 95-103 Beyond Sex/Work: Understanding Work and Identity of Female Sex Workers in South China
by Yu Ding - 104-113 Social Media as a Disguise and an Aid: Disabled Women in the Cyber Workforce in China
by Jing Zheng & Yuxin Pei & Ya Gao - 114-122 Mothers Left without a Man: Poverty and Single Parenthood in China
by Qin Li - 123-131 Perceiving and Deflecting Everyday Poverty-Related Shame: Evidence from 35 Female Marriage Migrants in Rural China
by Guanli Zhang - 132-137 Digital Inclusion as a Core Component of Social Inclusion
by Bianca Reisdorf & Colin Rhinesmith - 138-150 Social Support for Digital Inclusion: Towards a Typology of Social Support Patterns
by Axelle Asmar & Leo van Audenhove & Ilse Mariën - 151-167 Digital Literacy Key Performance Indicators for Sustainable Development
by Danica Radovanović & Christine Holst & Sarbani Banerjee Belur & Ritu Srivastava & Georges Vivien Houngbonon & Erwan Le Quentrec & Josephine Miliza & Andrea S. Winkler & Josef Noll - 168-179 Do Mobile Phones Help Expand Social Capital? An Empirical Case Study
by Alain Shema & Martha Garcia-Murillo - 180-189 Implications of Digital Inclusion: Digitalization in Terms of Time Use from a Gender Perspective
by Lidia Arroyo - 190-200 A New Player for Tackling Inequalities? Framing the Social Value and Impact of the Maker Movement
by Elisabeth Unterfrauner & Margit Hofer & Bastian Pelka & Marthe Zirngiebl - 201-212 Fostering Digital Participation for People with Intellectual Disabilities and Their Caregivers: Towards a Guideline for Designing Education Programs
by Vanessa N. Heitplatz - 213-221 Effective Experiences: A Social Cognitive Analysis of Young Students’ Technology Self-Efficacy and STEM Attitudes
by Kuo-Ting Huang & Christopher Ball & Shelia R. Cotten & LaToya O’Neal - 222-232 Technological Socialization and Digital Inclusion: Understanding Digital Literacy Biographies among Young People in Madrid
by Daniel Calderón Gómez - 233-243 Configuring the Older Non-User: Between Research, Policy and Practice of Digital Exclusion
by Vera Gallistl & Rebekka Rohner & Alexander Seifert & Anna Wanka - 244-259 Digital Inclusion Across the Americas and Caribbean
by Laura Robinson & Jeremy Schulz & Matías Dodel & Teresa Correa & Eduardo Villanueva-Mansilla & Sayonara Leal & Claudia Magallanes-Blanco & Leandro Rodriguez-Medina & Hopeton S. Dunn & Lloyd Levine & Rob McMahon & Aneka Khilnani - 260-264 Gypsy Policy and Roma Activism: From the Interwar Period to Current Policies and Challenges
by Elena Marushiakova & Vesselin Popov - 265-276 ‘Letter to Stalin’: Roma Activism vs. Gypsy Nomadism in Central, South-Eastern and Eastern Europe before WWII
by Elena Marushiakova & Vesselin Popov - 277-285 A View of the Disaster and Victory from below: Serbian Roma Soldiers, 1912–1918
by Danilo Šarenac - 286-295 “Improving Our Way of Life Is Largely in Our Own Hands”: Inclusion according to the Romani Newspaper of Interwar Yugoslavia
by Sofiya Zahova - 296-304 Images of Roma through the Language of Bulgarian State Archives
by Aleksandar G. Marinov - 305-315 Between Nationalism and Pragmatism: The Roma Movement in Interwar Romania
by Petre Matei - 316-326 Faith Church: Roma Baptists Challenging Religious Barriers in Interwar Romania
by Iemima Ploscariu - 327-335 Hungarian Gypsy Musician’s National Association: Battles Faced by Gypsy Musicians in Hungary during the Interwar Years
by Tamás Hajnáczky - 336-345 Political Activity of Kwiek ‘Dynasty’ in the Second Polish Republic in the Years 1935–1939
by Alicja Gontarek - 346-357 ‘The Books to the Illiterate?’: Romani Publishing Activities in the Soviet Union, 1927–1938
by Viktor Shapoval - 358-366 The Kalderash Gypsies of Russia in Industrial Cooperation of the 1920s–1930s
by Aleksandr V. Chernykh - 367-376 From Christian Mission to Transnational Connections: Religious and Social Mobilisation among Roma in Finland
by Raluca Bianca Roman
2020, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 1-7 New Research on Housing and Territorial Stigma: Introduction to the Thematic Issue
by Peer Smets & Margarethe Kusenbach - 8-19 Housing Stigmatization: A General Theory
by Mervyn Horgan - 20-33 Territorial Stigmatisation and Poor Housing at a London ‘Sink Estate’
by Paul Watt - 34-43 Historical and Spatial Layers of Cultural Intimacy: Urban Transformation of a Stigmatised Suburban Estate on the Periphery of Helsinki
by Pekka Tuominen - 44-54 Place Narratives and the Experience of Class: Comparing Collective Destigmatization Strategies in Two Social Housing Neighborhoods
by Lotta Junnilainen - 55-65 “A Good Place for the Poor!” Counternarratives to Territorial Stigmatisation from Two Informal Settlements in Dhaka
by Kazi Nazrul Fattah & Peter Walters - 66-75 “Trailer Trash” Stigma and Belonging in Florida Mobile Home Parks
by Margarethe Kusenbach - 76-85 Exploring the ‘Spoiled’ and ‘Celebrated’ Identities of Young and Homeless Drug Users
by Jennifer Hoolachan - 86-89 Universalism in Social Policies: A Multidimensional Concept, Policy Idea or Process
by Monica Budowski & Daniel Künzler - 90-102 The Calls for Universal Social Protection by International Organizations: Constructing a New Global Consensus
by Lutz Leisering - 103-113 The Welfare State as Universal Social Security: A Global Analysis
by Kerem Gabriel Öktem - 114-123 Universalism in Welfare Policy: The Swedish Case beyond 1990
by Paula Blomqvist & Joakim Palme - 124-132 Understanding Universality within a Liberal Welfare Regime: The Case of Universal Social Programs in Canada
by Daniel Béland & Gregory P. Marchildon & Michael J. Prince - 133-144 Seeking the Ideal of Universalism within Norway’s Social Reality
by Lydia Mehrara - 145-154 Is There Room for Targeting within Universalism? Finnish Social Assistance Recipients as Social Citizens
by Paula Saikkonen & Minna Ylikännö - 155-167 Competing Institutional Logics and Paradoxical Universalism: School-to-Work Transitions of Disabled Youth in Switzerland and the United States
by Christoph Tschanz & Justin J. W. Powell - 168-177 Paradoxes of Universalism: The Case of the Swiss Disability Insurance
by Emilie Rosenstein & Jean-Michel Bonvin - 178-183 Institutions of Inclusion and Exclusion
by J. Cok Vrooman & SCP, The Netherlands & Marcel Coenders & SCP, The Netherlands - 184-193 Enforcing Your Own Human Rights? The Role of Social Norms in Compliance with Human Rights Treaties
by Violet Benneker & Klarita Gërxhani & Stephanie Steinmetz - 194-202 How the Architecture of Housing Blocks Amplifies or Dampens Interethnic Tensions in Ethnically Diverse Neighbourhoods
by Maurice Crul & Carl H. D. Steinmetz & Frans Lelie - 203-213 Factors Influencing the Ability to Achieve Valued Outcomes among Older Long-Term Unemployed People
by Nienke Velterop & Jac van der Klink & Sandra Brouwer & Hilbrand Oldenhuis & Louis Polstra - 214-224 Meeting Boundaries: Exploring the Faces of Social Inclusion beyond Mental Health Systems
by Carole Heather Walker & Sophie Thunus - 225-237 Mutuals on the Move: Exclusion Processes in the Welfare State and the Rediscovery of Mutualism
by Eva Vriens & Tine De Moor - 238-240 Boundary Spanning and Reconstitution in Migration
by Anya Ahmed - 241-251 Beyond Legal Status: Exploring Dimensions of Belonging among Forced Migrants in Istanbul and Vienna
by Susan Beth Rottmann & Ivan Josipovic & Ursula Reeger - 252-263 Split Households, Family Migration and Urban Settlement: Findings from China’s 2015 National Floating Population Survey
by C. Cindy Fan & Tianjiao Li - 264-274 Socio-Economic Participation of Somali Refugees in the Netherlands, Transnational Networks and Boundary Spanning
by Ilse van Liempt & Gery Nijenhuis - 275-284 “Home Is Where I Spend My Money”: Testing the Remittance Decay Hypothesis with Ethnographic Data from an Austrian-Turkish Community
by Silke Meyer - 285-299 The Great Secession: Ethno-National Rebirth and the Politics of Turkish–German Belonging
by Özgür Özvatan - 300-313 Transnationalism and Belonging: The Case of Moroccan Entrepreneurs in Amsterdam and Milan
by Giacomo Solano & Raffaele Vacca & Matteo Gagliolo & Dirk Jacobs - 314-323 Managing Multiplicity: Adult Children of Post-Independence Nigerians and Belonging in Britain
by Julie Botticello
2019, Volume 7, Issue 4
- 1-6 The Lived Experiences of Migration: An Introduction
by Neli Demireva & Fabio Quassoli - 7-17 Between ‘Labour Migration’ and ‘New European Mobilities’: Motivations for Migration of Southern and Eastern Europeans in the EU
by Maricia Fischer-Souan - 18-27 Receiving Country Investments and Acquisitions: How Migrants Negotiate the Adaptation to Their Destination
by Neli Demireva - 28-38 Patterns of Social Integration Strategies: Mobilising ‘Strong’ and ‘Weak’ Ties of the New European Migrants
by Boris Popivanov & Siyka Kovacheva - 39-48 Before Landing: How Do New European Emigrants Prepare Their Departure and Imagine Their Destinations?
by Diego Coletto & Giovanna Fullin - 49-59 (Self-)Reflecting on International Recruitment: Views on the Role of Recruiting Agencies in Bulgaria and Romania
by Siyka Kovacheva & Boris Popivanov & Marin Burcea - 60-70 "Here, There, in between, beyond...": Identity Negotiation and Sense of Belonging among Southern Europeans in the UK and Germany
by Fabio Quassoli & Iraklis Dimitriadis - 71-78 Enacting Citizenship and the Right to the City: Towards Inclusion through Deepening Democracy?
by Helen Hintjens & Rachel Kurian - 79-89 Improvising “Nonexistent Rights”: Immigrants, Ethnic Restaurants, and Corporeal Citizenship in Suburban California
by Charles T. Lee - 90-99 ‘From Sanctuary to Welcoming Cities’: Negotiating the Social Inclusion of Undocumented Migrants in Liège, Belgium
by Sébastien Lambert & Thomas Swerts - 100-107 Contested Health Care System in Berlin: Are Illegalized Migrants Becoming Urban Citizens?
by Holger Wilcke & Rosa Manoim - 108-118 Enabling Social Inclusion and Urban Citizenship of Older Adults through eHealth: The iZi Project in the Hague
by Rachel Kurian & Nicole Menke & Surrendra Santokhi & Erwin Tak - 119-130 Acts for Refugees’ Right to the City and Commoning Practices of Care-tizenship in Athens, Mytilene and Thessaloniki
by Charalampos Tsavdaroglou & Chrisa Giannopoulou & Chryssanthi Petropoulou & Ilias Pistikos - 131-140 Spaces of Urban Citizenship: Two European Examples from Milan and Rotterdam
by Alba Angelucci - 141-151 Hostile Immigration Policy and the Limits of Sanctuary as Resistance: Counter-Conduct as Constructive Critique
by Cathy A. Wilcock - 152-163 Diasporic Civic Agency and Participation: Inclusive Policy-Making and Common Solutions in a Dutch Municipality
by Antony Otieno Ong'ayo - 164-170 Migrant Capital as a Resource for Migrant Communities
by Sanna Saksela-Bergholm & Mari Toivanen & Östen Wahlbeck - 171-180 Nordic Ties and British Lives? Migrant Capital and the Case of Nordic Migrants Living in London
by Saara Koikkalainen - 181-189 The Utilisation of Migrant Capital to Access the Labour Market: The Case of Swedish Migrants in Helsinki
by Östen Wahlbeck & Sabina Fortelius - 190-191 Locating Forced Migrants’ Resources: Residency Status and the Process of Family Reunification in Finland
by Johanna Hiitola - 200-210 Syrian Refugee Entrepreneurship in Turkey: Integration and the Use of Immigrant Capital in the Informal Economy
by Reyhan Atasü-Topcuoğlu - 211-220 Transnational Practices and Migrant Capital: The Case of Filipino Women in Iceland
by Unnur Dís Skaptadóttir - 221-231 Welfare beyond Borders: Filipino Transnational Families’ Informal Social Protection Strategies
by Sanna Saksela-Bergholm - 232-242 Transnational Social Capital in Migration: The example of Educational Migration between Bulgaria and Germany
by Birgit Glorius - 243-252 Second Generation and Migrant Capital in the Transnational Space: The Case of Young Kurds in France
by Mari Toivanen - 253-256 Immigration from the Immigrants’ Perspective: Analyzing Survey Data Collected among Immigrants and Host Society Members
by Alice Ramos & Eldad Davidov & Peter Schmidt & Marta Vilar Rosales & Dina Maskileyson - 257-278 Political Interest among European Youth with and without an Immigrant Background
by Oshrat Hochman & Gema García-Albacete - 279-292 The Influence of a Migration Background on Attitudes Towards Immigration
by Charlotte Clara Becker - 293-303 Feeling Blue by Extension: Intrafamily Transmission and Economic Pressures Explain the Native-Immigrant Gap in Well-Being among Youth in Switzerland
by Oriane Sarrasin & Eva G. T. Green & Gina Potarca & Claudio Bolzman & Ursina Kuhn - 304-319 In Search of the Healthy Immigrant Effect in Four West European Countries
by Dina Maskileyson & Moshe Semyonov & Eldad Davidov - 320-331 Contacts between Natives and Migrants in Germany: Perceptions of the Native Population since 1980 and an Examination of the Contact Hypotheses
by Bryan Bohrer & Maria-Therese Friehs & Peter Schmidt & Stefan Weick - 332-342 Nostalgic, Converted, or Cosmopolitan: Typology of Young Spanish Migrants
by Rubén Rodríguez-Puertas & Alexandra Ainz
2019, Volume 7, Issue 3
- 1-3 Old-Age Exclusion: Active Ageing, Ageism and Agency
by Wouter De Tavernier & Marja Aartsen - 4-16 Social Exclusion and Mental Wellbeing in Older Romanians
by Iuliana Precupetu & Marja Aartsen & Marian Vasile - 17-26 What Are the Structural Barriers to Planning for Later Life? A Scoping Review of the Literature
by Claire Preston & Nick Drydakis & Suzanna Forwood & Suzanne Hughes & Catherine Meads - 27-43 Internalised Ageism and Self-Exclusion: Does Feeling Old and Health Pessimism Make Individuals Want to Retire Early?
by Mariska van der Horst - 44-53 Excluded from the Good Life? An Ethical Approach to Conceptions of Active Ageing
by Larissa Pfaller & Mark Schweda - 54-57 A Critical Perspective on Ageism and Modernization Theory
by Wouter De Tavernier & Laura Naegele & Moritz Hess - 58-64 Types of Education, Achievement and Labour Market Integration over the Life Course
by Irene Kriesi & Juerg Schweri - 65-78 Does It Matter Where They Train? Transitions into Higher Education After VET and the Role of Labour Market Segments
by Miriam Grønning & Ines Trede - 79-94 The Relationship between Educational Pathways and Occupational Outcomes at the Intersection of Gender and Social Origin
by Barbara Zimmermann & Simon Seiler - 95-109 Adult Vocational Qualifications Reduce the Social Gradient in Education
by Bernt Bratsberg & Torgeir Nyen & Oddbjørn Raaum - 110-121 Why Enrol in a Lifelong Learning Programme? A Comparative Study of Austrian and Spanish Young Adults
by Domingo Barroso-Hurtado & Ralph Chan - 122-135 Putting Tasks to the Test: The Case of Germany
by Daniela Rohrbach-Schmidt - 136-153 Medium and Long-Term Returns to Professional Education in Switzerland: Explaining Differences between Occupational Fields
by Fabian Sander & Irene Kriesi - 154-176 The Signal and the Noise: The Impact of the Bologna Process on Swiss Graduates’ Monetary Returns to Higher Education
by David Glauser & Christoph Zangger & Rolf Becker - 177-201 ‘Virtuous’ and ‘Vicious’ Circles? Adults’ Participation in Different Types of Training in the UK and Its Association with Wages
by Daria Luchinskaya & Peter Dickinson - 202-223 Does Vocational Education Give a Labour Market Advantage over the Whole Career? A Comparison of the United Kingdom and Switzerland
by Maïlys Korber - 224-253 Vocational Education and Employment: Explaining Cohort Variations in Life Course Patterns
by Fabian Kratz & Alexander Patzina & Corinna Kleinert & Hans Dietrich - 254-269 The Interplay between Education, Skills, and Job Quality
by Alexandra Wicht & Nora Müller & Simone Haasler & Alexandra Nonnenmacher - 270-281 "I Didn’t Have the Luxury to Wait": Understanding the University-to-Work Transition among Second-Generations in Britain
by Jawiria Naseem
2019, Volume 7, Issue 2
- 1-3 Exhausted Women, Exhausted Welfare and the Role of Religion
by Martha Middlemiss Lé Mon - 4-13 Welfare State Supporter and Civil Society Activist: Church of Sweden in the “Refugee Crisis” 2015
by Jonas Ideström & Stig Linde - 14-23 Faith-Based Organisations as Welfare Providers in Brazil: The Conflict over Gender in Cases of Domestic Violence
by Kim Beecheno - 24-32 Making Structural Change with Relational Power: A Gender Analysis of Faith-Based Community Organizing
by Sarah B. Garlington & Margaret R. Durham Bossaller & Jennifer A. Shadik & Kerri A. Shaw - 33-43 Making Gendered Healthcare Work Visible: Over-Looked Labour in Four Diverse European Settings
by Hannah Bradby & Jenny Phillimore & Beatriz Padilla & Tilman Brand - 44-47 Religion, Gender, and Social Welfare: Considerations Regarding Inclusion
by Susan Crawford Sullivan - 48-52 The European Refugee Controversy: Civil Solidarity, Cultural Imaginaries and Political Change
by Robin Vandevoordt & Gert Verschraegen - 53-63 Responding to the Dutch Asylum Crisis: Implications for Collaborative Work between Civil Society and Governmental Organizations
by Robert Larruina & Kees Boersma & Elena Ponzoni - 64-73 Making Volunteering with Refugees Governable: The Contested Role of ‘Civil Society’ in the German Welcome Culture
by Larissa Fleischmann - 74-84 Solidarity as a Field of Political Contention: Insights from Local Reception Realities
by Miriam Haselbacher - 85-95 Use-Values for Inclusion: Mobilizing Resources in Popular Education for Newly Arrived Refugees in Sweden
by Nedžad Mešić & Magnus Dahlstedt & Andreas Fejes & Sofia Nyström - 96-105 “It’s That Kind of Place Here”: Solidarity, Place-Making and Civil Society Response to the 2015 Refugee Crisis in Wales, UK
by Taulant Guma & Michael Woods & Sophie Yarker & Jon Anderson - 106-117 Eroding Rights, Crafting Solidarity? Shifting Dynamics in the State–Civil Society Nexus in Flanders and Brussels
by Robin Vandevoordt - 118-127 Taking Care of the Other: Visions of a Caring Integration in Female Refugee Support Work
by Sophia Schmid - 128-138 Buddy Schemes between Refugees and Volunteers in Germany: Transformative Potential in an Unequal Relationship?
by Inka Stock - 139-148 Humanitarianism as Politics: Civil Support Initiatives for Migrants in Milan’s Hub
by Giulia Sinatti - 149-164 Rearranging Differential Inclusion through Civic Solidarity: Loose Coupling in Mentorship for “Unaccompanied Minors”
by Eberhard Raithelhuber - 165-175 More or Less Political: Findings on a Central Feature of Local Engagement for Refugees in Germany
by Verena Schmid & Adalbert Evers & Georg Mildenberger - 176-186 The Imagination of the Other in a (Post-)Sectarian Society: Asylum Seekers and Refugees in the Divided City of Belfast
by Ulrike M. Vieten & Fiona Murphy - 187-197 The Discursive Appeal to Solidarity and Partisan Journalism in Europe’s Migration Crisis
by Stefan Wallaschek - 198-207 Solidarity Cities and Cosmopolitanism from Below: Barcelona as a Refugee City
by Óscar García Agustín & Martin Bak Jørgensen - 208-218 Challenging the Nation-State from within: The Emergence of Transmunicipal Solidarity in the Course of the EU Refugee Controversy
by Christiane Heimann & Sandra Müller & Hannes Schammann & Janina Stürner - 219-229 Reimagining a Transnational Right to the City: No Border Actions and Commoning Practices in Thessaloniki
by Charalampos Tsavdaroglou
2019, Volume 7, Issue 1
- 1-6 Access to Higher Education: An Instrument for Fair Societies?
by Gaële Goastellec & Jussi Välimaa - 7-17 Expanding Access to Higher Education and Its (Limited) Consequences for Social Inclusion: The Brazilian Experience
by Elizabeth Balbachevsky & Helena Sampaio & Cibele Yahn de Andrade - 18-27 School Market in Quebec and the Reproduction of Social Inequalities in Higher Education
by Pierre Canisius Kamanzi - 28-37 Second-Chance Alternatives and Maintained Inequality in Access to Higher Education in Israel
by Eyal Bar-Haim & Carmel Blank - 38-51 Who Goes to College via Access Routes? A Comparative Study of Widening Participation Admission in Selective Universities in Ireland and England
by Katriona O’Sullivan & Delma Byrne & James Robson & Niall Winters - 52-60 The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and Choices
by Melanie Walker - 61-70 The Widening Participation Agenda in German Higher Education: Discourses and Legitimizing Strategies
by Julia Mergner & Liudvika Leišytė & Elke Bosse - 71-79 Refugee Students’ Access to Three European Universities: An Ethnographic Study
by Katrin Sontag - 80-89 Reliability of Longitudinal Social Surveys of Access to Higher Education: The Case of Next Steps in England
by Nadia Siddiqui & Vikki Boliver & Stephen Gorard - 90-100 Equal Access to the Top? Measuring Selection into Finnish Academia
by Jouni Helin & Kristian Koerselman & Terhi Nokkala & Timo Tohmo & Jutta Viinikainen - 101-110 Open House? Class-Specific Career Opportunities within German Universities
by Frerk Blome & Christina Möller & Anja Böning - 111-113 People with Disabilities: The Overlooked Consumers
by Kirsi Laitala & Anita Borch - 114-123 Disabled Mothering? Outlawed, Overlooked and Severely Prohibited: Interrogating Ableism in Motherhood
by Julia N. Daniels - 124-135 Dressing a Demanding Body to Fit In: Clean and Decent with Ostomy or Chronic Skin Disease
by Kirsi Laitala & Ingun Grimstad Klepp - 136-151 User Involvement of People with Mild Disabilities in Technology Innovations: Does It Make a Difference?
by Anita Borch & Pål Strandbakken - 152-163 The Drake Music Project Northern Ireland: Providing Access to Music Technology for Individuals with Unique Abilities
by Koichi Samuels - 164-172 Publicly-Researchable Accessibility Information: Problems, Prospects and Recommendations for Inclusion
by Carol Kaufman-Scarborough - 173-179 Equal Access to Make Emergency Calls: A Case for Equal Rights for Deaf Citizens in Norway and Sweden
by Camilla Warnicke - 180-184 "Producing People" in Documents and Meetings in Human Service Organizations
by Malin Åkerström & Katarina Jacobsson - 185-195 Social Work on the Whiteboard: Governing by Comparing Performance
by Teres Hjärpe - 196-206 Digital Clients: An Example of People Production in Social Work
by Elizabeth Martinell Barfoed - 207-217 Documenting Practices in Human Service Organisations through Information Systems: When the Quest for Visibility Ends in Darkness
by Jochen Devlieghere & Rudi Roose - 218-227 Blend Gaps through Papers and Meetings? Collaboration between the Social Services and Jobcentres
by Renita Thedvall - 228-237 Gendered Practices in Child Protection: Shifting Mother Accountability and Father Invisibility in Situations of Domestic Violence
by Beth Archer-Kuhn & Stefan de Villiers - 238-247 “How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, Australia
by Jora Broerse - 248-258 Things Left Unwritten: Interview Accounts versus Institutional Texts in a Case of Detention Home Violence
by David Wästerfors - 259-268 Contingent Control and Wild Moments: Conducting Psychiatric Evaluations in the Home
by Robert M. Emerson & Melvin Pollner
2018, Volume 6, Issue 4
- 1-7 Gender Equality and Beyond: At the Crossroads of Neoliberalism, Anti-Gender Movements, “European” Values, and Normative Reiterations in the Nordic Model
by Katarina Giritli Nygren & Lena Martinsson & Diana Mulinari - 8-15 Basic Income: The Potential for Gendered Empowerment?
by Alison Koslowski & Ann-Zofie Duvander - 16-24 The Traps of International Scripts: Making a Case for a Critical Anthropology of Gender and Sexuality in Development
by Rahil Roodsaz & An Van Raemdonck - 25-35 Gender and Struggles for Equality in Mining Resistance Movements: Performing Critique against Neoliberal Capitalism in Sweden and Greece
by Angelika Sjöstedt Landén & Marianna Fotaki - 36-47 A New Service Class in the Public Sector? The Role of Femonationalism in Unemployment Policies
by Paula Mulinari - 48-58 Women’s Coalitions beyond the Laicism–Islamism Divide in Turkey: Towards an Inclusive Struggle for Gender Equality?
by Selin Çağatay - 59-66 When the Personal Is Always Political: Norwegian Muslims’ Arguments for Women’s Rights
by Hannah Helseth - 67-81 Solidarity in Head-Scarf and Pussy Bow Blouse: Reflections on Feminist Activism and Knowledge Production
by Lena Gemzöe - 82-94 Feminism as Power and Resistance: An Inquiry into Different Forms of Swedish Feminist Resistance and Anti-Genderist Reactions
by Mona Lilja & Evelina Johansson - 95-102 “Sweden Has Been Naïve”: Nationalism, Protectionism and Securitisation in Response to the Refugee Crisis of 2015
by Mathias Ericson - 103-106 Editorial: Students with Disabilities in Higher Education
by Geert Van Hove & Alice Schippers & Minne Bakker - 107-115 Contemporary Social Theory as a Tool to Understand the Experiences of Disabled Students in Higher Education
by Jonathan Harvey - 116-124 Disability Awareness, Training, and Empowerment: A New Paradigm for Raising Disability Awareness on a University Campus for Faculty, Staff, and Students
by Dana Roth & Timothy Pure & Samuel Rabinowitz & Carol Kaufman-Scarborough - 125-136 Disability in Higher Education: Explanations and Legitimisation from Teachers at Leipzig University
by Robert Aust - 137-148 Learning Experiences of Students Who Are Hard of Hearing in Higher Education: Case Study of a South African University
by Diane Bell & Estelle Swart - 149-157 Mind the Gap Between Higher Education and the Labour Market for Students with a Disability in the Netherlands: A Research Agenda
by Marjolein Büscher-Touwen & Marian de Groot & Lineke van Hal - 158-167 Inclusion in Norwegian Higher Education: Deaf Students’ Experiences with Lecturers
by Patrick Stefan Kermit & Sidsel Holiman - 168-181 Designing a Model for Facilitating the Inclusion of Higher Education International Students with Disabilities in South Africa
by Nina (HG) du Toit - 182-193 Fear of Stigmatisation among Students with Disabilities in Austria
by Sarah Zaussinger & Berta Terzieva - 194-206 Barriers to Higher Education for Students with Bipolar Disorder: A Critical Social Model Perspective
by Allison K. Kruse & Sushil K. Oswal - 207-217 “Everywhere We Go, People Seem to Know”: Mad Students and Knowledge Construction of Mental Illness in Higher Education
by Lieve Carette & Elisabeth De Schauwer & Geert Van Hove - 218-229 “Everyone Is Normal, and Everyone Has a Disability”: Narratives of University Students with Visual Impairment
by Nitsan Almog - 230-240 Pursuing Inclusive Higher Education in Egypt and Beyond through the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
by Janet E. Lord & Michael Ashley Stein - 241-243 The Inherent Value of Disability in Higher Education
by Benjamin J. Ostiguy
2018, Volume 6, Issue 3
- 1-5 Returns to Human Capital and the Incorporation of Highly-Skilled Workers in the Public and Private Sector of Major Immigrant Societies: An Introduction
by Neli Demireva & Ivana Fellini - 6-33 An Examination of Ethnic Hierarchies and Returns to Human Capital in the UK
by Wouter Zwysen & Neli Demireva - 34-47 Poor Returns to Origin-Country Education for Non-Western Immigrants in Italy: An Analysis of Occupational Status on Arrival and Mobility
by Ivana Fellini & Raffaele Guetto & Emilio Reyneri - 48-63 Employment Outcomes of Ethnic Minorities in Spain: Towards Increasing Economic Incorporation among Immigrants and the Second Generation?
by Mariña Fernández-Reino & Jonas Radl & María Ramos - 64-77 Employment Returns to Tertiary Education for Immigrants in Western Europe: Cross-Country Differences Before and After the Economic Crisis
by Raffaele Guetto - 78-103 Perfect for the Job? Overqualification of Immigrants and their Descendants in the Norwegian Labor Market
by Edvard N. Larsen & Adrian F. Rogne & Gunn E. Birkelund - 104-118 Incorporation of Immigrants and Second Generations into the French Labour Market: Changes between Generations and the Role of Human Capital and Origins
by Yaël Brinbaum - 119-141 Employment and Education–Occupation Mismatches of Immigrants and their Children in the Netherlands: Comparisons with the Native Majority Group
by Yassine Khoudja