Stephen Crossley is a Senior Lecturer in Social Policy at Northumbria University. His PhD thesis, a Bourdieusian analysis of the ‘troubled families’ field can be found here and a short summary of it can be found here. He has a book out, published by Pluto Press, called In Their Place: The Imagined Geographies of Poverty,… Continue reading Dr. Stephen Crossley: Studying up, reporting out, and support from within
Category: Early Careers
Dr. Rachel Thwaites: Talking about the early career stage
Rachel Thwaites is a Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Lincoln. She has interests in gender, work, health and illness, naming, and emotions. She is also a convenor of the BSA’s Early Career Forum (@BSAECForum) and can be found on twitter: @REThwaites or http://ulincoln.academia.edu/RachelThwaites. She co-edited Being an Early Career Feminist Academic: Global Perspectives,… Continue reading Dr. Rachel Thwaites: Talking about the early career stage
Public sociology and the role of the researcher: engagement, communication and academic activism
A BSA Postgraduate and Early Career Researcher Regional event Wednesday 29 March 2017, Queens Building, De Montfort University What is the role of the researcher outside the academy? This event invites Postgraduate and Early Career Researchers to innovate and critically reflect on three related areas of public sociology: academic activism, public engagement, and participation and… Continue reading Public sociology and the role of the researcher: engagement, communication and academic activism
Reflections on ‘Breaking our Silences on the Neoliberal Academy’ Workshop
Poster by Chloe Parkes On 26th October 2016, PhD students at Warwick University organised a workshop entitled 'Breaking Our Silences on the Neoliberal Academy'. In this blog post, organisers Elizabeth Ablett, Heather Griffiths and Kate Mahoney reflect on what PhD students everywhere can learn from the discussions. As PhD students, we often hear the refrain… Continue reading Reflections on ‘Breaking our Silences on the Neoliberal Academy’ Workshop
William Outhwaite, Newcastle University
1) What/Who inspired you to become a researcher in the first place? This was more or less automatic, with a heavy dose of luck, as I moved from my undergraduate degree to an MA and then PhD. For my MA I chose to go from Oxford to Sociology at Sussex, rather than doing more philosophy… Continue reading William Outhwaite, Newcastle University
Les Back: Scholarly Life and the University in Ruins
At the 2015 Autumn Postgraduate forum event on The Making of the Sociological Researcher, Les Back gave this thought provoking keynote. He has kindly agreed to share the text in full in addition to the podcast of his talk which can be found below. Ros Gill has argued that the neo-liberal university, with its… Continue reading Les Back: Scholarly Life and the University in Ruins