My @IJPCS article "Does Phenomenology (Still) Matter? Three Phenomenological Traditions and Sociological Theory" has been awarded Honorable Mention for Best Article Award from the Section on the History of Sociology and Social Thought of the @ASAnews ๐
https://t.co/KEYFX0s0Q1
Introduction to a new special issue on Informal Participation by Laurence Bherer, Pascale Dufour and Franรงoise Montambeault - 'What Is Informal Participation?' https://t.co/jLC6u0la3K
New research article by @J_Koscinska develops Bourdieu's theory of social class to investigate urban social movements in #Warsaw#Poland https://t.co/nws3EyAu6I
New review exchange: @MaxwellACameron reviews @davidlehma After the Decolonial: Ethnicity, Gender and Social Justice in Latin America (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2022)
https://t.co/NskNR33wmD
How do activists encourage ethical eating? Political Energy and Political Evaporation: Evaluating the Practice of Shopping for Food System Change investigates strategies used by 'eat local' activists
https://t.co/OaxVtpNgZI
New paper: Discreet Mobilizations Against Discrimination: Informal Participation in the French Suburbs by Marion Carrel reveals how young people mobilise informally to resist stigmatization. https://t.co/7vdupeWWYL
New paper: Regional Think Tanks in Japan: Place Priority Through Infrastructural Consulting, Information Generation, and Leadership Development by Anthony Rausch examines smaller think tanks around Japan https://t.co/irN3cZckQT
New research article: Mehr Latif explores a case of dispute resolution from Pakistan where kinship leaders play a key role in resolving local disputes.
https://t.co/bzUTzmlPIn
https://t.co/bz1yQtRgrN
New research article: "Agricultural Liberalization and Diverging Modes of Farm Mobilization in Japan and Korea" by Jennifer S. Oh investigates why voter mobilization of farmers has diverged between Japan and Korea
https://t.co/FOK5EP8j5p
New research article: 'Neoliberal Malaise, 2013 โJune Journeysโ and the Criminalization of the Protests in Brazil: a Re-reading Through Louis Althusser'
by Guilherme Leite Gonรงalves provides an analysis of how the Brazilian state has responded to protests
https://t.co/G4BODmFG9i
New research article: 'The So-called Failure of the State: Rethinking the State, Civil Society, and Criminal Organizations' by Lynn Holland reframes the relation between transnational criminal organisations and states as a partnership, not opposition
https://t.co/9hmSjxpCNh
In 'Reclaiming Placemaking for an Alternative Politics of Legitimacy and Community in Homelessness', Gordon Douglas @Neighborhoodist shows how placemaking becomes part of a subtle politics of visibility, being, and legitimacy for unhoused people
https://t.co/Lkt86hM6Lb
In 'โDubaiโ as a Place of Memory in Malayalam Cinema' (Open Access),
@ShafeeqVly investigates cinematic memory as a resource for remembering large-scale Keralan migration to the Gulf since the late 1960s