School of Social and Political Sciences - Research Publications

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    Familism and Modernity amongst Young Chinese: An Exploration into Multiple Modernities
    CHANG, J (Asian Studies Association of Australia (ASAA) & Research School of Pac, 2006)
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    Online Dating and Intimacy in a Mobile World
    BARRAKET, J. ; HENRY-WARING, M. (The Sociological Association of Australia (TASA), 2006)
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    Global movements: Action and culture
    Scalmer, S (O L SOCIETY LTD, 2006)
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    Thinking about generations: Conceptual positions and policy implications
    Biggs, S (WILEY, 2007)
    Three traditions of social theory are examined in this article, with a special emphasis being given to the ways that the concept of “generation” has been conceived and developed over time. These include Psychodynamic, Sociological, and Gerontological approaches with attention drawn to the similarities and differences among them. It is concluded that while conceptual development has been uneven, taken together, they provide a rich basis for a critical examination of contemporary social problems with implications for policy toward intergenerational relationships.
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    Imaginings, narratives, and otherness: On diacritical hermeneutics
    Rundell, J ; Gratton, P ; Manoussakis, JP (Northwestern University Press, 2007-12-01)
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    Themes and dialogues in contemporary French critical theory
    Deranty, JP ; Petherbridge, D ; Rundell, J ; Deranty, JP ; Petherbridge, D ; Rundell, J ; Sinnerbrink, R (BRILL, 2007-01-01)
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    Archaeologies of Anti-Capitalist Utopianism
    BURGMANN, V (Arena Printing and Publications, 2006)
    In Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism, Fredric Jameson anticipates the emergence of “cognitive mapping” of a new and global type’ and explains this as a code-word for class consciousness ‘of a new and hitherto undreamed of kind’. This paper explores Jameson’s concept of ‘cognitive mapping’ to suggest that, at the end of the 1990s, the world witnessed the first glimmerings in radical political practice of precisely such mapping in the efforts of the anti-capitalist/anti-corporate globalisation movement. The utopian dimension to this movement is explored through examination of the declared aims in its rhetoric and the euphoric responses to its potential by its participants. The practical significance of utopian extremism in political agitation is then investigated through consideration of the impact of the anti-capitalist/anti-corporate globalisation movement on the institutions and systems it confronted.
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    The Current Significance of Risk
    Taylor-Gooby, P ; Zinn, J ; Taylor-Gooby, P ; Zinn, J (Oxford University Press, 2006)
    Abstract Risk is to do with uncertainties: possibilities, chances, or likelihoods of events, often as consequences of some activity or policy. As such, risk has always accompanied the development of human society (Sahlins 1974; Garnsey 1988; Gallant 1991). Harvest failure, pestilence, migrations, new currents in religion, technological developments, and the unforeseen consequences of urbanization have all exerted a powerful and typically unpredicted influence on the problems and difficulties we face.
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    The Challenge of (Managing) New Risks
    Taylor-Gooby, P ; Zinn, J ; The Challenge of (Managing) New Risks, P ; Zinn, J (Oxford University Press, 2006)
    Abstract Research in the field of risk has expanded rapidly in recent years, as Chapter 2 shows. Social science approaches have developed from an initial concern with the management of technical issues, drawing on rational actor models of behaviour, to include psychological and sociological perspectives which seek to capture the complexity of the factors that influence risk responses in different settings, and the ways in which thinking about and managing risk is embedded in social and cultural contexts.