Problems of knowledge, problems of order: the open science field site
Ethnographers can and should not just do or not do open science, but study the push to share data, instruments, and other research materials as an important moment of change and contest in contemporary...
View ArticleTweets don’t vote – Twitter discourse from Wales and England during Brexit
The Welsh vote for “leave” in the Brexit referendum surprised some academics and analysts due to its strong preference for Labor and its close financial ties to the EU. It also brought up a debate...
View ArticleDistress in the care of people with chronic low back pain: insights from an...
IntroductionDistress is part of the experiences and care for people with chronic low back pain. However, distress is often pathologised and individualised; it is seen as a problem within the individual...
View ArticleInternalization of negative societal views on old age into self-perceptions...
IntroductionA growing number of research has provided evidence for the negative impact of ageism on older people’s health and well-being. Among the three different manifestations of ageism, namely...
View ArticleEthical questioning in arts and health-based research: propositions and...
Ethical questioning is a framework for considering the ethical implications and practices in research and is used as a tool for thinking about the connections between art and health. It enables...
View ArticleExploring the concepts of decent work through the lens of SDG 8: addressing...
Promoting decent work and sustainable economic growth within the framework of Sustainable Development Goal 8 (SDG 8) entails addressing gender inequality, the consequences of market economies, and the...
View ArticleThe fight for power: historical women’s movements of Russia and Great Britain...
In the second half of the 19th century, women began to organize worldwide to achieve the goal of gender equality. National women’s movements emerged and were followed somewhat later by the first...
View ArticleCombining experiential knowledge with scholarship in charting the decline of...
The sustained governmental assault on the National Health Service (NHS) in England during post-1970s financialised or rentier capitalism has received considerable attention by the research community....
View ArticleNarratives of Italian Transatlantic (re)migration, 1897–1936
Remigration is typically envisioned as the final stage of the migration experience, a one-way movement from the host country to the country of origin. This article offers a novel, intimate view of...
View ArticlePsychometric properties of the Curiosity and Exploration Inventory-II among...
IntroductionCuriosity is a fundamental trait that drives exploration, motivation, learning, and growth. However, research on this character strength in sub-Saharan African populations is very scarce....
View ArticleMaternalism and new imperialism in Russia: “good mothers” for a militarizing...
This article explores maternalism in Russia in the context of the contemporary Russian authoritarian state. In particular, I analyze what implications maternalism has for women, mothers, and families...
View Article‘Total pain’: reverence and reconsideration
Dame Cicely Saunders’ conceptualization of ‘total pain’, or ‘total suffering’, is one of her most significant and lasting contributions to the field of palliative care. It was Saunders’ unique...
View ArticlePandemic and new perspectives on living: the role of the smart home
Based on ongoing multidisciplinary research, this essay offers some theoretical and scenario considerations on the transformations of social rituals in housing contexts during the pandemic period. The...
View ArticleThe emergence of social order in everyday interacting: re-conceptualizing a...
For more than a century social theorists have asked how order at the macro-social level is related to human activity at the micro-social level. Among their answers are accounts of macro-level social...
View Article
More Pages to Explore .....