Content
June 2024, Volume 19, Issue 1-3
- 1-20 Enabling a just transition
by Alex de Ruyter & Gill Bentley - 21-40 Just Transition in Australia – depoliticisation?
by Al Rainnie & Darryn Snell - 41-65 Alternative pathways for green hydrogen economy: the case of Colombia
by Nadia Catalina Combariza Diaz - 66-85 International solidarity for a de-colonised Just Transition: electric vehicles and lithium in Mexico and Europe
by Karen Bell - 86-116 Owning the just transition: comparing citizen participation in South African and German wind farms
by Lisa Schulte & Bryan Robinson - 117-134 Building a democratic expertise to inform labour’s struggle for a just transition
by Jane Lethbridge - 135-153 Varieties of just transitions in the European car industry
by Bob Hancké & Laurenz Mathei - 154-177 Politics of a Just Transition: lessons from the UK coal mines
by Sara Kaizuka - 178-198 Just transitions in the Australian automotive sector?
by Andrew Beer & Sally Weller & Helen Dinmore & Julie Ratcliffe & Ilke Onur & David Bailey & Tom Barnes & Jacob Irving & Sandy Horne & Josefina Atienza & Markku Sotarauta - 199-222 A ‘just transition’ for workers in the automotive sector? Survey evidence from the West Midlands
by Alex de Ruyter & Gill Bentley & David Hearne & David Bailey & Beverley Nielsen - 223-243 The ‘Wellbeing Wardrobe’ as a tool to promote just transitions in the fashion and textile industry
by Rhiannon Pugh & Taylor Brydges & Samantha Sharpe & Mariangela Lavanga & Monique Retamal - 244-261 Three pillars of just transition labour market policies
by Jing Ding & Tuuli Hirvilammi - 262-282 People-centred policies for a just transition (digital, green and skills)
by Patrizio Bianchi & Lisa De Propris & Sandrine Labory - 283-302 Decarbonisation, place attachment and agency: just transition in old industrial regions
by Laura Norris & Gillian Bristow & Eleanor Cotterill & Adrian Healy & Adam P. Marshall - 303-336 Exploring opportunities for public sector organisations to connect wellbeing to resource loops in a regional circular economy
by Carla De Laurentis & Katie Beverley & Nick Clifton & Emily Bacon & Jennifer Rudd & Gary Walpole - 337-354 Transition obstructionism and ‘embodied energy injustice:’ a Wyoming case study
by Matthew S. Henry - 355-374 Place-based just transition: domains, components and costs
by Sally Weller & Andrew Beer & Jessica Porter
October 2023, Volume 18, Issue 5
- 575-579 Contemporary Social Science, publishing and looking forwards
by David Bailey - 580-598 Inequality: the scourge of the twenty-first century
by Syed Mansoob Murshed & Blas Regnault - 599-617 Third places in precarious workers’ lives: a scoping review of associated social experiences and outcomes
by Debbie Laliberte Rudman & Sarah Larkin & Kassandra Fernandes & Gorety Nguyen & Rebecca Aldrich - 618-636 Policy making and artificial intelligence in Scotland
by Hartwig Pautz - 637-656 EU enlargement in wartime Europe: three dimensions and scenarios
by Tyyne Karjalainen - 657-673 Community sentiment influences community participation: evidence from Ethiopia
by Bereket Roba Gamo & Duk-Byeong Park - 674-685 “A modern research profession’: government social research, evidence-based policymaking and blind spots in contemporary governance research
by Julian Molina & John Connolly - 686-686 Correction
by The Editors
August 2023, Volume 18, Issue 3-4
- 285-297 Levelling up or down? Addressing regional inequalities in the UK
by Felicia M. Fai & Philip R. Tomlinson - 298-317 Levelling Up UK regions: scale-related challenges of Brexit, investment and land use
by Philip McCann - 318-356 Tackling the UK’s regional economic inequality: binding constraints and avenues for policy intervention
by Anna Stansbury & Dan Turner & Ed Balls - 357-380 Space exploration as a propulsive industry in levelling up
by Leslie Budd & Stefania Paladini - 381-405 Capitalism divided? London, financialisation and the UK’s spatially unbalanced economy
by Ron Martin & Peter Sunley - 406-427 Levelling up policies and the failure to learn
by Diane Coyle & Adam Muhtar - 428-448 England’s catch-22: institutional limitations to achieving balanced growth through devolution
by Charlotte Hoole & Simon Collinson & Jack Newman - 449-468 Levelling-up beyond the metropolis: is the UK government’s preferred governance model appropriate?
by Paul Hildreth & David Bailey - 469-484 Levelling up or down? Examining the case of North-East England
by Joyce Liddle & John Shutt & Cameron Forbes - 485-499 Balancing the incentives in English higher education: the imperative to strengthen civic influence for levelling up
by Chris Millward - 500-526 What needs to happen to ‘level up’ public health?
by Sarah Ayres & Andrew Barnfield & Geoff Bates & Anna Le Gouais & Nick Pearce - 527-545 When is a fund not a fund? Exploring the financial support for levelling up
by Graeme Atherton & Marc Le Chevallier - 546-561 ‘Levelling Up? That’s never going to happen’: perceptions on Levelling Up in a ‘Red Wall’ locality
by Luke Telford - 562-573 Beyond levelling-up: labour’s response to regional inequalities and the challenge of governance
by John Connolly & Robert Pyper
March 2023, Volume 18, Issue 2
- 125-131 People, places and policies beyond Brexit
by David Bailey & David Hearne & Leslie Charles Budd - 132-149 The impact of the post-Brexit migration system on the UK labour market
by Jonathan Portes & John Springford - 150-167 When (EU) migration came to Great Yarmouth
by Catherine Barnard & Fiona Costello - 168-184 ‘Northern Ireland and the Economic Consequences of Brexit: taking back control or perpetuating underperformance?’
by Graham Brownlow - 185-196 Regulation in Scotland and Wales after Brexit
by Michael Keating - 197-215 Gone but not forgotten (yet): Interreg in post-Brexit UK
by Irene McMaster & Heidi Vironen - 216-234 Higher education and research: multiple negative effects and no new opportunities after Brexit
by Ludovic Highman & Simon Marginson & Vassiliki Papatsiba - 235-249 Brexit and ‘missing’ financial services jobs in the United Kingdom
by Sarah Hall & Martin Heneghan - 250-265 Brexit, trade and UK advanced manufacturing sectors: a Midlands’ perspective
by David Bailey & Lisa De Propris & Alex De Ruyter & David Hearne & Raquel Ortega-Argilés - 266-283 How did Brexit affect UK trade?
by Jun Du & Emine Beyza Satoglu & Oleksandr Shepotylo
January 2023, Volume 18, Issue 1
- 1-6 Editorial. Covid-19, sport and society
by E. Michelini & N. Bortoletto & A. Porrovecchio - 7-25 Does the COVID-pandemic affect the educational and financial inequality in weekly sport participation in the Netherlands?
by Malou Grubben & Remco Hoekman & Gerbert Kraaykamp - 26-40 Lampedusa, football and COVID-19: transitions at the border and the role of sport
by Alessio Norrito & Carolynne Mason - 41-57 Tennis coaching in China before and during COVID-19. The mediatisation of a precarious profession
by Giovannipaolo Ferrari & Paolo Diana & Yingxin Tan - 58-75 Gender differences in the characteristics of gaming and esport aspirations in Hungary
by Klára Kovács & Zsolt Békési & Krisztina Győri & Dávid Papp - 76-89 The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on sports-based youth development: the case of the rugby association ‘Rebonds!’
by Jean-Charles Basson & Loïc Sallé - 90-108 Being a docile body: the effects on preadolescents of the social restrictions imposed during COVID-19
by Simone Digennaro & Alice Iannaccone - 109-124 The value of esports football. Towards new models of consumption and participatory experience in Italy
by Barbara Mazza & Giovanna Russo
December 2022, Volume 17, Issue 5
- 413-417 Editorial: Contemporary social science open access (CSS open)
by David Bailey - 418-433 Lessons from the UK’s handling of Covid-19 for the future of scientific advice to government: a contribution to the UK Covid-19 Public Inquiry
by Susan Michie & Philip Ball & James Wilsdon & Robert West - 434-449 Covid-19 and the crisis of food insecurity in the UK
by Hartwig Pautz & Damian Dempsey - 450-467 Self-testing for COVID-19 in Durban and Eastern Cape, South Africa: a qualitative inquiry targeting decision-takers
by Amanda N. Brumwell & Gbotemi B. Babatunde & Sonjelle Shilton & Jade Tso & Michael W. Wilson & Noeline Xulu & Jamila K. Adam & Monique M. Marks & Guillermo Z. Martínez-Pérez - 468-484 Perceiving and managing Brexit risk in UK manufacturing: evidence from the midlands
by David Bailey & Alex de Ruyter & Claire MacRae & Jon McNeill & Julie Roberts - 485-500 Relocating the political in education: why we need to revisit the marketisation of education in the contemporary political climate
by Ritika Arora-Kukreja - 501-516 Security politics and techno-securitisation in Star Wars: from the Fall of the Jedi to the Reign of the Empire
by Colin Atkinson - 517-527 Supporting interviews with technology: how software integration can benefit participants and interviewers
by Monique H. Harrison & Philip A. Hernandez - 528-540 Social and private goods: the duality of unpaid internships
by Andrew Morrison
August 2022, Volume 17, Issue 4
- 305-312 Gendered families: states and societies in transition
by Sirin Sung & Lisa Smyth - 313-325 The resilience of maternalism in European welfare states
by Mary Daly - 326-339 Balancing work and family? Young mother’s coordination points in contemporary China
by Yi Zhang - 340-352 The Polish family in transition: a shift towards greater gender equality?
by Anna Kwak - 353-367 Work–family policies and women’s job mobility: emerging divides in female workforce in Japan
by Junko Nishimura - 368-382 Do Europeans want children? The significance of job-related spatial mobility
by Pedro Romero-Balsas - 383-395 Mams, moms, mums: lone mothers’ accounts of management strategies
by Madeleine Leonard & Grace Kelly - 396-411 Restless sleep and emotional wellbeing among European full-time dual-earner couples: gendered impacts of children and workplace demands
by Xiao Tan & Leah Ruppanner & Belinda Hewitt & David Maume
May 2022, Volume 17, Issue 3
- 191-204 Informal practices in politics and society in Brazil
by Andreza Aruska de Souza Santos - 205-221 Historicising informal governance in 20th century Brazil
by Brodwyn Fischer - 222-234 Clientelism in Northeast Brazil: brokerage within and outside electoral times
by Martijn Koster & Flávio Eiró - 235-247 The ‘debate’ and the politics of the PCC’s informal justice in São Paulo
by Corentin Cohen - 248-261 The pacification of Brazil's urban margins: peripheral urbanisation and dynamic order-making
by Matthew Aaron Richmond - 262-275 Selling hope on credit: women's livelihoods, debt and the production of urban informality in Brazil
by Marie Kolling - 276-289 Activism, justice and the centrality of care: Brazilian’s ‘mother’s against police violence’ movements
by Débora Françolin Quintela & Flávia Biroli - 290-303 Resisting eviction: the polymorphy of peripheral spatial politics in Brazil
by Victor Albert
March 2022, Volume 17, Issue 2
- 77-83 Socioeconomic shocks, inequality and food systems in the Global South: an introduction
by Evans Osabuohien & Gbadebo Odularu & Daniel Ufua & Darline Augustine & Romanus Osabohien - 84-98 An exploration of the domains of the inequality trajectory in Zimbabwe
by Tatenda Nhapi - 99-116 Technical efficiency and socioeconomic effects on poverty dynamics among cassava-based farming households in rural Nigeria
by Oluwakemi Adeola Obayelu & Abiodun Elijah Obayelu & Ifeoluwase Tunrayo Awoku - 117-128 China’s involvement in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s resource curse mineral driven conflict: an Afrocentric review
by Makhura. B. Rapanyane - 129-142 Social protection and food security nexus in the Global South: empirical evidence from West Africa
by Romanus Osabohien & Junaid Ashraf & Tyrone De Alwis & Daniel E. Ufua & Evans Osabuohien & Gbadebo Odularu & Ambreen Noman & Darline Augustine - 143-156 COVID-19: an age of fear, simulacra, or reality?
by Zakia Resshid Ehsen & Khurshid Alam - 157-172 Specifics knowledge links between COVID-19 and urban food systems in Nigeria
by Olalekan Tolulope B. Aduloju & Abdullateef Iyanda Bako & Abdulfatai Olanrewaju Anofi - 173-190 Socio-economic impact of COVID-19 on the informal sector in India
by B. L. Gururaja & N. Ranjitha
January 2022, Volume 17, Issue 1
- 1-2 Introduction: identity in an open world order
by S. Petroccia & A. Pitasi & A. Folloni - 3-14 Identity and citizenship in a cosmopolitan open world
by Sara Petroccia & Andrea Pitasi - 15-25 Individuality over identity: individual freedom and responsibility within social identity
by André Folloni - 26-37 Ascribed identities in the global era: a complex approach
by Massimiliano Ruzzeddu - 38-50 Cross-border identity as a daily resistance tactic in a time of global health emergency: Gorizia-Nova Gorica go borderless
by Giorgio Porcelli - 51-62 Globalisation in the context of subjective identity, deviance and social control
by G. Cifaldi & N. Malizia - 63-76 World disorder and peace research: a sociological, post-nationalist reading of the pathway to sustainable peace
by Romina Gurashi
December 2021, Volume 16, Issue 5
- 523-537 Governing ‘levelling-up’ in the UK: challenges and prospects
by John Connolly & Robert Pyper & Arno van der Zwet - 538-555 Conceptualising and measuring levels of risk by immigration status for children in the UK
by Leon Feinstein & Yousef Khalifa Aleghfeli & Charlotte Buckley & Rebecca Gilhooly & Ravi K. S. Kohli - 556-572 Chile’s perfect storm: social upheaval, COVID-19 and the constitutional referendum
by Mauricio Morales Quiroga - 573-588 Identity resilience: its origins in identity processes and its role in coping with threat
by Glynis M. Breakwell - 589-603 Considering the Autistic advantage in qualitative research: the strengths of Autistic researchers
by Aimee Grant & Helen Kara - 604-617 In search of role models of successful academic retirement
by Graham Crow
August 2021, Volume 16, Issue 4
- 417-431 Comparative perspectives on educational inequalities in Europe: an overview of the old and emergent inequalities from a bottom-up perspective
by Lyudmila Nurse & Edward Melhuish - 432-447 Moroccan immigrant mothers’ experiences of Italian preschool institutions. A mixed-method study
by Giulia Pastori & Alessandra Mussi & Irene Capelli & Ryanne J. R. M. Francot - 448-463 Resilience capacity and supportive factors of compulsory education in ethnic minority families: mixed methods study of Czech Roma mothers
by Jana Obrovská & Kateřina Sidiropulu Janků - 464-479 Socio-spatial segregation in school-society relational spaces from the perspectives of Turkish immigrant mothers: “Where are the Germans?”
by Hande Erdem-Möbius & Özen Odağ & Yvonne Anders - 480-493 Greek Roma mothers’ relationship with education: aspirations and expectations regarding the educational future of their children
by Ioanna Strataki & Konstantinos Petrogiannis - 494-508 Polish low-income mothers: conversions of human, social and cultural capitals through their lifetime
by Katarzyna Gajek & Paulina Marchlik - 509-522 Immigrant families in France and their experience of professionals’ prejudice against their children
by Catherine Delcroix
May 2021, Volume 16, Issue 3
- 271-279 Social stratification: past, present, and future
by Jennifer Jarman & Paul Lambert & Roger Penn - 280-293 Social class inequalities in educational attainment: measuring social class using capitals, assets and resources
by Roxanne Connelly & Vernon Gayle & Chris Playford - 294-308 Social class inequalities in Scottish school qualifications
by Vernon Gayle & Christopher J. Playford & Roxanne Connelly - 309-324 Parental social class and school GCSE outcomes: two decades of evidence from UK household panel surveys
by Sarah Stopforth & Vernon Gayle & Ellen Boeren - 325-343 Three spheres of stratification in how social origin relates to educational achievement: a large-scale analysis
by Steffen Hillmert - 344-358 Like parents, like children. Does the stratification of education systems moderate the direct effect of origins on destinations?
by Claudia Traini - 359-370 New ways of exploring the changing nature of work: neglected themes in contemporary social stratification research
by Roger Penn - 371-383 Caste-based migration and exposure to abuse and exploitation: Dadan labour migration in India
by Arun Kumar Acharya - 384-399 Social stratification and housing inequality in transitional urban China
by Qiong (Miranda) Wu - 400-415 Not just ‘the left behind’? Exploring the effects of subjective social status on Brexit-related preferences
by Lindsay Richards & Anthony Heath & Noah Carl
March 2021, Volume 16, Issue 2
- 141-155 Social dimensions of evidence-based policy in a digital society
by Linda Hantrais & Ashley Thomas Lenihan - 156-169 Opportunities and challenges for official statistics in a digital society
by Paul Allin - 170-184 Regulating artificial intelligence and robotics: ethics by design in a digital society
by Ron Iphofen & Mihalis Kritikos - 185-198 Challenges and opportunities for e-mental health policy: an Estonian case study
by Melita Sogomonjan - 199-212 Assessing smart city projects and their implications for public policy in the Global South
by Prathivadi B. Anand - 213-226 Using global evidence to benefit children’s online opportunities and minimise risks
by Sonia Livingstone & Mariya Stoilova - 227-240 Offensive communications: exploring the challenges involved in policing social media
by Mark Williams & Michelle Butler & Anna Jurek-Loughrey & Sakir Sezer - 241-255 Disinformation and digital influencing after terrorism: spoofing, truthing and social proofing
by Martin Innes & Diyana Dobreva & Helen Innes - 256-270 Covid-19 and the digital revolution
by Linda Hantrais & Paul Allin & Mihalis Kritikos & Melita Sogomonjan & Prathivadi B. Anand & Sonia Livingstone & Mark Williams & Martin Innes
January 2021, Volume 16, Issue 1
- 1-13 Situating urban animals – a theoretical framework
by Andrea Mubi Brighenti & Andrea Pavoni - 14-28 Animal waste work. The case of urban sewage management in Sweden
by Tora Holmberg - 29-42 Three bugs in the city: urban ecology and multispecies relationality in postsocialist Belgrade
by Andrija Filipović - 43-56 Planning in the shadow of extinction: Carnaby’s Black cockatoos and urban development in Perth, Australia
by Donna Houston - 57-70 Bird play: raising red-whiskered bulbuls and (re)inventing urban ‘nature’ in contemporary Vietnam
by Nhi Ha Nguyen - 71-83 Incongruous killing: cats, nonhuman resistance, and precarious life beyond biopolitical techniques of making-live
by Jacquelyn Johnston - 84-95 Horse/power: human–animal mobile assemblage in the contemporary city
by Bradley Rink & Justin Crow - 96-112 Corals in the city: cultivating ocean life in the Anthropocene
by Irus Braverman - 113-126 Urban topologies of epistemic change: the zoo and the heterotopia of the map
by Priska Gisler - 127-139 The rules we make that coyotes break
by Shelley M. Alexander & Dianne L. Draper
November 2020, Volume 15, Issue 5
- 503-503 Introduction
by Jacqueline Barnes & John Connolly - 504-516 Mistrust, uncertainty and health risks
by Glynis M. Breakwell - 517-532 Brexit, Europe and othering
by Arno Van Der Zwet & Murray Stewart Leith & Duncan Sim & Elizabeth Boyle - 533-547 The facilitators of interagency working in the context of European public service reform
by John Connolly & Jacqueline Barnes & Joana Guerra & Robert Pyper - 548-560 De-constructing the other: an integrated pedagogy of inclusive learning and teaching approaches in and beyond Prison
by Eric Baumgartner - 561-576 From agency to root causes: addressing structural Barriers to transformative justice in transitional and post-conflict settings
by Eric T. Hoddy & Paul Gready - 577-594 Hedgehogs, foxes and other embodiments of academics’ research career trajectories
by Graham Crow
October 2020, Volume 15, Issue 4
- 407-415 Changing world, changing work
by Polly Lord - 416-429 Feeling secure vs. being secure? Qualitative evidence on the relationship between labour market institutions and employees’ perceived job security from Germany and the U.S
by Lena Hipp - 430-445 Examining employees’ behavioural outcomes within the context of organisational justice
by Young Waribo & Dayo I. Akintayo & Adewale Omotayo Osibanjo & David Imhonopi & Ayodotun Stephen Ibidunni & Olatunji Idowu Fadeyi - 446-460 Factors influencing the choice of teaching as a career: an empirical study of students in colleges of education in Ghana
by Anselm Komla Abotsi & Cynthia Fofo Dsane & Pearl Adiza Babah & Patrick Kwarteng - 461-475 ‘Esusu cooperative’ as a means of extending social protection to the Nigerian informal economy
by Abigail Osiki - 476-488 Digitalisation and work: challenges from the platform-economy
by Elena Gramano - 489-501 The rise of artificial intelligence and robots in the 4th Industrial Revolution: implications for future South African job creation
by M. B. Rapanyane & F. R. Sethole
July 2020, Volume 15, Issue 3
- 275-290 Family change, intergenerational relations and policy implications
by Linda Hantrais & Julia Brannen & Fran Bennett - 291-301 Generations, age and life course: towards an integral social policy framework of analysis
by Mary Daly - 302-315 Family change, intergenerational relations and policy development in contemporary France
by Marie-Thérèse Letablier - 316-329 Changing family values across the generations in twentieth-century Lithuania
by Laima Žilinskienė & Melanie Ilic - 330-345 Social policies and intergenerational support in Italy and South Korea
by Ginevra Floridi - 346-359 Reconceptualising co-residence in post-growth Japanese society
by Misa Izuhara - 360-377 The impact of China’s one-child policy on intergenerational and gender relations
by Yang Hu & Xuezhu Shi - 378-391 Ageing and intergenerational care in rural China: a qualitative study of policy development
by Jieyu Liu & Joanne Cook - 392-405 The implications of changing living arrangements for intergenerational relations in Chile
by Julieta Palma & Jacqueline Scott
April 2020, Volume 15, Issue 2
- 119-133 The ethics of researching ‘terrorism’ and political violence: a sociological approach
by Tom Mills & Narzanin Massoumi & David Miller - 134-152 Secrecy, coercion and deception in research on ‘terrorism’ and ‘extremism’
by Narzanin Massoumi & Tom Mills & David Miller - 153-174 Terrorism discourses, public and secret
by Remi Brulin - 175-195 The ESRC university project on ‘dissident’ Irish republicanism: some reflections on the relationship between research, academia, and the security state
by Mark Hayes - 196-210 Conducting effective research into state complicity in human rights abuses
by Ruth Blakeley & Sam Raphael - 211-226 Questioning our agency inside agencies: rethinking the possibility of scholars’ critical contributions to security agencies
by David H. Price - 227-240 Beyond the Human Terrain System: a brief critical history (and a look ahead)
by Roberto J. González - 241-257 Too dangerous for fieldwork? The challenge of institutional risk-management in primary research on conflict, violence and ‘Terrorism’
by Jeffrey Alan Sluka - 258-274 Interviewing combatants: lessons from the Boston College Case
by Marie Breen-Smyth
January 2020, Volume 15, Issue 1
- 1-6 Building knowledge economies in Africa: an introduction
by Simplice A. Asongu & John Kuada - 7-25 Education, lifelong learning, inequality and financial access: evidence from African countries
by Vanessa Simen Tchamyou - 26-47 Human capital, knowledge creation, knowledge diffusion, institutions and economic incentives: South Korea versus Africa
by Simplice A. Asongu & Vanessa S. Tchamyou - 48-61 Investigating the relevance of mobile technology adoption on inclusive growth in West Africa
by Jeremiah O. Ejemeyovwi & Evans S. Osabuohien - 62-81 Knowledge-driven economic growth: the case of Sub-Saharan Africa
by Stephen Oluwatobi & Isaiah Olurinola & Philip Alege & Adeyemi Ogundipe - 82-97 Knowledge transfer in the emerging solar energy sector in Ghana
by John Kuada & Esther Mensah - 98-117 Remittances, the diffusion of information and industrialisation in Africa
by Simplice A. Asongu & Nicholas M. Odhiambo
October 2019, Volume 14, Issue 3-4
- 361-378 Forever young: creative responses to challenging issues in biographical research
by Ana Caetano & Magda Nico - 379-393 Sociological biography and socialisation process: a dispositionalist-contextualist conception
by Bernard Lahire - 394-406 Tapping and assessing the concept of educational regret: methodological techniques for opening up biographical reflection
by Pamela Aronson & Matthew Fleming - 407-422 Using reflexive lifelines in biographical interviews to aid the collection, visualisation and analysis of resilience
by Jane Gray & Jennifer Dagg - 423-446 Self-administered event history calendars: a possibility for surveys?
by Davide Morselli & Jean-Marie Le Goff & Jacques-Antoine Gauthier - 447-462 There is more than one way – a study of mixed analytical methods in biographical narrative research
by Marta Eichsteller - 463-474 Subjects analysing subjects in the biographical approach: a generational study of Chilean musicians
by Camila Moyano Dávila & Francisca Ortiz Ruiz - 475-499 Creative biographical responses to epistemological and methodological challenges in generating a deaf life story telling instrument
by Goedele A. M. De Clerck - 500-514 Migrants’ lives matter: biographical research, recognition and social participation
by Elsa Lechner - 515-527 Facilitating the voice of disabled women: the biographic narrative interpretive method (BNIM) in action
by Christine Peta & Tom Wengraf & Judith McKenzie - 528-541 Searching for pearls: ‘Doing’ biographical research on Pearl Jephcott
by John Goodwin - 542-559 A moment of biographical analysis under the microscope: reading Felipe’s autobiographical narrative
by Me-Linh Hannah Riemann
April 2019, Volume 14, Issue 2
- 157-173 Brexit and beyond: a Pandora’s Box?
by David Bailey & Leslie Budd - 174-188 Brexit, foreign investment and employment: some implications for industrial policy?
by David Bailey & Nigel Driffield & Erika Kispeter - 189-207 The product and sector level impact of a hard Brexit across the EU
by Martina Lawless & Edgar L. W. Morgenroth - 208-225 The economic impact of potential migration policies in the UK after Brexit
by Gabriela Ortiz Valverde & María C. Latorre - 226-241 Negotiating as One Europe or several? The variable geometry of the EU’s approach to Brexit
by Ed Turner & Andrew Glencross & Vladimir Bilcik & Simon Green - 242-255 Making sense of the social policy impacts of Brexit
by Linda Hantrais & Kitty Stewart & Kerris Cooper - 256-275 Neither Brexit nor remain: disruptive solidarity initiatives in a time of false promises and anti-democracy
by David J. Bailey - 276-293 Brexit and the territorial governance of the United Kingdom
by Tom Mullen - 294-311 Sense making of Brexit for economic citizenship in Northern Ireland
by Graham Brownlow & Leslie Budd