Items where Research Institute, Centre or Group is "Sociology, Politics and Policy Research Group"
- University Structure (114)
- Sociology, Politics and Policy Research Group (114)
Number of items at this level: 114.
ALBERTSON, Katherine, O'KEEFFE, Caroline, BURKE, Catherine, LESSING-TURNER, Georgina and RENFREW, Mary
(2014).
Addressing health inequalities for mothers and babies in prison: findings from a consultation exercise.
In: TODD, Angela and HIRST, Julia, (eds.)
Health and Inequality: Applying Public Health Research to Policy and Practice.
Abingdon, Routledge, 39-47.
[Book Section]
BENNETT, Cinnamon and TANG, Ning
(2008).
Tough at the top: women's career progression, an example in the local government sector.
In: YEANDLE, Sue, (ed.)
Policy for a Change: Local Labour Market Analysis and Gender Equality.
Bristol, Policy Press.
[Book Section]
BLACK, Jack
(2018).
From mood to movement: English nationalism, the European Union and taking back control.
Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research.
[Article]
BLACK, Jack
(2013).
'Narratives of Empire': An investigation into the English national press coverage of the 2012 London Olympic Ceremonies.
In: Olympic Legacies: International Conference – Impacts of Mega-Events on Cities, University of East London, London, UK, 4-6 September 2013.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
BLACK, Jack
(2013).
'Narratives of Empire': An investigation into the English national press coverage of the 2012 London Olympic Ceremonies.
In: BSA Teaching Group Regional Day Conference, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, UK, 15 June 2013.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
BLACK, Jack
(2013).
'Narratives of Empire': An investigation into the English national press coverage of the 2012 London Olympic Ceremonies’.
In: Britishness in the 21st Century, Keele University, Keele, UK, 19 June 2013.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
BLACK, Jack
(2018).
The subjective and objective violence of terrorism: analysing “British values” in newspaper coverage of the 2017 London Bridge attack.
Critical Studies on Terrorism.
[Article]
BLACK, Jack and EWEN, Neil
(2013).
Team GB, or no Team GB, that is the Question: Olympic football and the Post-War Crisis of Britishness.
Sport in History, XXII, 302-324.
[Article]
BLACK, Jack and FIELDING-LLOYD, Beth
(2017).
Re-establishing the ‘outsiders’: English press coverage of the 2015 FIFA Women’s World Cup.
International Review for the Sociology of Sport.
[Article]
BLACK, Jack and WHIGHAM, Stuart
(2017).
‘Team GB’ or ‘Team Scotland’? Media representations of ‘Britishness’ and ‘Scottishness’ at London 2012 and Glasgow 2014.
Journalism.
[Article]
BLAIN, J. and WALLIS, R. J.
(2006).
Pasts and pagan practices: moving beyond Stonehenge.
Public archaeology, 5, 211-222.
[Article]
BLAIN, J. and WALLIS, R. J.
(2004).
Sacred sites, contested rites/rights: contemporary pagan engagements with the past.
Journal of material culture, 9 (3), 237-261.
[Article]
BLAIN, J. and WALLIS, R. J.
(2008).
Sacred, secular, or sacrilegious? prehistoric sites, pagans and the Sacred Sites project in Britain.
In: SCHACHTER, J. and BROCKMAN, S., (eds.)
(Im)permanence: Cultures In/Out of Time.
Pittsburg, Penn State University Press, 212-223.
[Book Section]
BLAIN, Jenny
(2013).
Consciousness, Wights and Ancestors.
In: HARVEY, Graham, (ed.)
The handbook of contemporary animism.
Acumen Handbooks
.
London, Routledge, 423-110.
[Book Section]
BLAIN, Jenny
(2011).
Hills of the ancestors, townscapes of artisans.
In: MACLELLAN, Gordon, (ed.)
The Wanton Green.
Mandrake of Oxford, 173-186.
[Book Section]
BLAIN, Jenny
(2011).
Landscape, meaning, paganisms and ancestors.
In: New Spiritualities, Dept of Geography, University of Glasgow, 11 May 2011.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
BLAIN, Jenny
(2011).
Neo-Shamanism: Pagan and 'neo-shamanic' interactions with archaeology.
In: INSOLL, Tim, (ed.)
The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion.
OUP, 1017-1031.
[Book Section]
BLAIN, Jenny
(2012).
Seidr Oracles.
In: DRURY, Nevill, (ed.)
Pathways in Modern Western Magic.
Ars Concrescent.
[Book Section]
BLAIN, Jenny and WALLIS, Robert
(2009).
Beyond Sacred:
Recent Pagan Engagements with Archaeological Monuments – Current findings of the Sacred Sites Project.
The Pomegranate: The International Journal of Pagan Studies, 11 (1), 97-123.
[Article]
BLAIN, Jenny and WALLIS, Robert
(2012).
Negotiating archaeology/spirituality : pagan engagements with the prehistoric past in Britain.
In: ROWNTREE, Kathryn, MORRIS, Christine and PEATFIELD, Alan, (eds.)
Archaeology of spiritualities.
One world archaeology
.
New York, Springer, 47-70.
[Book Section]
BLAIN, Jenny and WALLIS, Robert
(2004).
Sites, Texts, Contexts and Inscriptions of Meaning: Investigating Pagan Authenticities. in a Text-Based Society.
Pomegranate: The International Journal of Pagan Studies, 6 (2), 231-252.
[Article]
BLAIN, Jenny and WALLIS, Robert J
(2009).
Heathenry.
In: LEWIS, James and PIZZA, Murph, (eds.)
Handbook of Contemporary Paganisms.
Leiden, The Netherlands, Brill, 413-432.
[Book Section]
BREEZE, B and DEAN, Jonathan
(2012).
Pictures of me : user views on their representation in homelessness fundraising appeals.
International Journal of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Marketing, 17 (2), 132-143.
[Article]
BREEZE, Beth and DEAN, Jonathan
(2012).
User views of fundraising.
Project Report.
Alliance Publishing Trust.
[Monograph]
BROOKS, Jennifer
(2012).
Practice example 5, George: 'It's like having a friend around'.
In: DAVIES, Martin, (ed.)
Social Work with Adults: Policy, law, theory, research and practice.
London, Palgrave Macmillan, p. 82.
[Book Section]
BROOKS, Jennifer
(2014).
Workplace personal assistants : what do we need to know?
Revaluing Care Research Network.
[Other]
BROOKS, Jennifer, GRIDLEY, Kate and SAVITCH, Nada
(2017).
Removing the 'gag': involving people with dementia in research as advisers and participants.
Social Research Practice, 3-14.
[Article]
BROOKS, Jennifer, MITCHELL, Wendy and GLENDINNING, Caroline
(2017).
Personalisation, personal budgets and family carers: Whose assessment? Whose budget?
Journal of Social Work, 17 (2), 147-166.
[Article]
COUSINS, Christine R. and TANG, Ning
(2004).
Working time and work and family conflict in the Netherlands, Sweden and the UK.
Work, employment and society, 18 (3), 531-549.
[Article]
CROSSLEY, Nick and IBRAHIM, Joseph
(2012).
Critical mass, social networks and collective action: exploring student political worlds.
Sociology, 46 (4), 596-612.
[Article]
DEAN, Jon and WOOD, Rachel
(2017).
‘You can try to press different emotional buttons’: The conflicts and strategies of eliciting emotions for fundraisers.
International Journal of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Marketing, 22 (4), e1603.
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2011).
Baden-Powell’s Scouting for Boys : governmentality, state power and the responsibilization of youth.
In: Contesting the State Conference, University of Kent, 13 May, 2011.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2011).
Challenging narratives : the importance of informal volunteering.
In: NCVO/VSSN Researching the Voluntary Sector Conference 2011, NCVO, London, 7-8 September 2011.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2015).
Class diversity and youth volunteering in the UK : applying Bourdieu's habitus and cultural capital.
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 45 (1), 95S-113S.
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2015).
Desert Island Data : an experiment in researcher positionality and interpretivism.
In:
Societies in transition : progression or regression : conference programme and abstract book.
British Sociological Association.
[Book Section]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2017).
Doing reflexivity: an introduction.
Bristol, Policy Press.
[Authored Book]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2015).
Drawing what homelessness looks like : using creative visual methods as a tool of critical pedagogy.
Sociological research online, 20 (1).
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2014).
How structural factors promote instrumental motivations within youth volunteering : a qualitative analysis of volunteer brokerage.
Voluntary Sector Review, 5 (2), 231-247.
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2012).
'It's just part of what they do': Habitus, social class and youth volunteering policy.
In: University of Kent Sociology Seminar Series.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2010).
‘I’ve never met them or spoken to them’: statutory and voluntary sector relationships - a case study approach to understanding youth volunteering.
In: NCVO/VSSN Researching the Voluntary Sector Conference 2010, 6-7 September 2010.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2013).
Manufacturing citizens : the dichotomy between policy and practice in youth volunteering in the UK.
Administrative Theory and Praxis, 35 (1), 46-62.
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2014).
Recruiting young volunteers in an area of selective education : a qualitative case study.
British Journal of Sociology of Education, 37 (4), 643-661.
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2015).
“Submitting Love?”: a sensory sociology of Southbourne.
Qualitative Inquiry, 22 (3), 162-168.
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2011).
Volunteering and social class : a narrative approach.
In: ARNOVA Conference 2011, Toronto, Canada, 17-19 November, 2011.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2015).
Volunteering, the market, and neoliberalism.
People, place and policy online, 9 (2), 139-148.
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2010).
Youth volunteering policy : the rise of governmentality.
In: Voluntary Action History Society Conference 2010, University of Kent at Canterbury, 14-16 July 2010.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2014).
The images in our heads : fundraising literature and drawing what homelessness looks like.
In:
Changing society : conference programme and abstarct book.
British Sociological Association.
[Book Section]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2013).
A market to sell experience: how neoliberal volunteering policies trade on the pressures of being young.
In: 42nd ARNOVA Conference : Recession, renewal, revolution? Nonprofit and coluntary action in an age of turbulence, Hertford, Connecticut, 21-23 November 2013.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2013).
The representation and perception of need : the moral choices facing homelessness fundraisers.
Homeless in Europe, 2012/3 (Winter), 21-22.
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan
(2014).
The role of the reflexive self in mailer's protests.
Contention: The Multidisciplinary Journal of Social Protest, 1 (2), 11-26.
[Article]
DEAN, Jonathan, FURNESS, Penny, VERRIER, Diarmuid, LENNON, Henry, BENNETT, Cinnamon and SPENCER, Stephen
(2018).
Desert island data: an investigation into researcher positionality.
Qualitative Research, 18 (3), 273-289.
[Article]
DIMELOW, Nicola, WALKER, Ann and HEAVEY, Lisa
(2013).
Group work experiences.
Student Engagement and Experience Journal, 2 (1).
[Article]
GLENDINNING, Caroline, MITCHELL, Wendy, BERESFORD, Bryony, MORAN, Nicola and BROOKS, Jennifer
(2014).
Taking on and taking over: physically disabled young adults and their care and support arrangements.
[Video]
[Video]
GLENDINNING, Caroline, MITCHELL, Wendy and BROOKS, Jennifer
(2014).
Ambiguity in practice? Carers' roles in personalised social care in England.
Health and Social Care in the Community, 23 (1), 23-32.
[Article]
GLENDINNING, Caroline, MITCHELL, Wendy and BROOKS, Jennifer
(2013).
Carers and personalisation.
Working Paper.
York, Social Policy Research Unit, University of York.
[Monograph]
GRANT, Steph, ATHERTON, Alistair, BROOKS, Jennifer, COLBECK, Matthew, FORTESCUE, Deborah and VANDERHOVEN, Dave
(2016).
Experiences of Homelessness and Brain Injury.
Project Report.
Homelessness and Head Injury Research Group.
[Monograph]
GRIDLEY, Kate, BROOKS, Jennifer, BIRKS, Yvonne, BAXTER, Kate and PARKER, Gillian
(2015).
Improving care for people with dementia: development and initial feasibility study for evaluation of Life Story Work in Dementia care.
Project Report.
NIHR/Social Policy Research Unit.
[Monograph]
GRIDLEY, Kate, BROOKS, Jennifer, BIRKS, Yvonne, BAXTER, Kate and PARKER, Gillian
(2016).
Improving care for people with dementia: development and initial feasibility study for evaluation of life story work in dementia care.
Health Services and Delivery Research, 4 (23).
[Article]
GRIDLEY, Kate, BROOKS, Jennifer and GLENDINNING, Caroline
(2013).
Good practice in social care for disabled adults and older people with severe and complex needs: evidence from a scoping review.
Health & Social Care In The Community, 22 (3), 234-248.
[Article]
GRIDLEY, Kate, BROOKS, Jennifer and GLENDINNING, Caroline
(2014).
Good practice in social care: the views of people with severe and complex needs and those who support them.
Health and Social Care in the Community, 22 (6), 588-597.
[Article]
GRIDLEY, Kate, BROOKS, Jennifer and GLENDINNING, Caroline
(2012).
Good support for people with complex needs: What does it look like and where is the evidence?
Project Report.
NIHR School for Social Care Research.
[Monograph]
HEATON, Caroline
(2015).
Review of Dekker and Middleton's The Roaring Girl (directed by Jo Davies for the Royal Shakespeare Company) at the Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, 9 June 2014.
Shakespeare, 11 (3), 316-318.
[Article]
HIRST, Julia
(2012).
It's got to be about enjoying yourself: young people, sexual pleasure,and sex and relationships education.
Sex Education: sexuality, society and learning, 13 (4), 423-436.
[Article]
HIRST, Julia, WOOD, Rachel and BURNS-O'CONNELL, Georgina
(2017).
Initiatives to support the inclusion of pleasure in sexual health and sex education work with young people
An impact evaluation.
Project Report.
Sheffield, Sheffield Hallam University.
[Monograph]
HIRST, Julia, WOOD, Rachel and MARSHALL, Daisy
(2018).
‘Boys think it's just a hairless hole’: Young people’s reflections on binary and heteronormative pedagogies in school based sexualities education.
In: SANJAKDAR, Fida and YIP, Andrew, (eds.)
Critical pedagogy, sexuality education, and young people.
New York, Peter Lang.
[Book Section]
IBRAHIM, Joseph
(2011).
Political distinction in the British anti-capitalist movement.
Sociology, 45 (2), 318-334.
[Article]
JEFFERY, Bob
(2018).
Gentrification and the Return of Class.
Sheffield Institute for Policy Studies.
[Other]
JEFFERY, Bob
(2018).
'I probably would never move, but ideally like I’d love to move this week': class and residential experience, beyond elective belonging.
Sociology, 52 (2), 245-261.
[Article]
JEFFERY, Bob and TUFAIL, Waqas
(2015).
'The riots were where the police were': Deconstructing the Pendelton Riot.
Contention: The Multidisciplinary Journal of Social Protest, 2 (2), 37-56.
[Article]
JEFFERY, Bob, TUFAIL, Waqas and JACKSON, Will
(2015).
Policing and the Reproduction of Local Social Order : a case study of Greater Manchester.
Journal on European History of Law, 6 (1), 118-128.
[Article]
JEFFERY, Robert and TUFAIL, Waqas
(2014).
Police deviance.
In: ATKINSON, Rowland, (ed.)
Shades of deviance : a primer on crime, deviance and social harm.
Abingdon, Routledge, 147-150.
[Book Section]
LETCHER, Andy, BLAIN, Jenny and WALLIS, Robert J
(2009).
Re-viewing the past: discourse and power in images of prehistory.
In: ROBINSON, Mike and PICARD, David, (eds.)
The Framed World: Tourism, Tourists and Photography.
Ashgate, 169-184.
[Book Section]
MADRIAGA, M.
(2007).
Enduring disablism: students with dyslexia and their pathways into UK higher education and beyond.
Disability and Society, 22 (4), 399-412.
[Article]
MADRIAGA, M.
(2010).
'I avoid pubs and the student union like the plague': Students with Asperger Syndrome and their negotiation of university spaces.
Children's geographies, 8 (1), 39-50.
[Article]
MADRIAGA, M.
(2005).
Understanding the symbolic idea of the American dream and its relationship with the category of whiteness.
Sociological research online, 10 (3).
[Article]
MADRIAGA, M.
(2010).
Why US nationalism should never be considered postnationalist.
National identities, 12 (1), 81-94.
[Article]
MADRIAGA, M.
(2005).
The star-spangled banner, US military veterans and the category of whiteness.
In: Flying the flag: critical perspectives on symbolism and identity, Cultural Complexity in the New Norway, University of Oslo, 24-25 November 2005.
[Conference or Workshop Item]
MADRIAGA, M., GOODLEY, D., HODGE, N. and MARTIN, N.
(2008).
Enabling transition into higher education for students with asperger syndrome.
Project Report.
Higher Education Academy.
[Monograph]
MADRIAGA, Manuel
(2013).
Output of radical collegiality?
Student Engagement and Experience Journal, 2 (1).
[Article]
MADRIAGA, Manuel
(2007).
The Star-Spangled Banner and "whiteness" in American national identities.
In: ERIKSEN, Thomas Hylland and JENKINS, Richard, (eds.)
Flag, nation and symbolism in Europe and America.
Routledge, 53-67.
[Book Section]
MADRIAGA, Manuel and GOODLEY, Dan
(2010).
Moving beyond the minimum: socially just pedagogies and Asperger's syndrome in UK higher education.
International Journal of Inclusive Education, 14 (2), 115-131.
[Article]
MADRIAGA, Manuel, HANSON, Katie, HEATON, Caroline, KAY, Helen, NEWITT, Sarah and WALKER, Ann
(2010).
Confronting similar challenges? : disabled and non‐disabled students’ learning and assessment experiences.
Studies in Higher Education, 35 (6), 647-658.
[Article]
MADRIAGA, Manuel, HANSON, Katie, KAY, Helen and WALKER, Ann
(2011).
Marking-out normalcy and disability in higher education.
British Journal of Sociology of Education, 32 (6), 901-920.
[Article]
MALLETT, Rebecca and MADRIAGA, Manuel
(2010).
Images of criminality, victimisation and disability.
In: SHOHAM, S.G., KNEEPER, P. and KETT, M., (eds.)
International handbook of victimology.
Boca Raton, Fla. ; London, CRC, 585-610.
[Book Section]
MALLETT, Rebecca and MADRIAGA, Manuel
(2009).
Negotiating 'normal': how notions of US national identity are (re)constructed in The West Wing.
In: Society for Disability Studies Conference, Tucson, Arizona, 17-20 June 2009.
(Unpublished)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
MCCAIG, Colin, STEVENS, Anna and BOWERS-BROWN, Tamsin
(2006).
Does Aimhigher work? evidence from the national evaluation.
In: Higher Education Research Network, Sheffield, 2006.
1-16.
(Submitted)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
MITCHELL, Wendy, BERESFORD, Bryony, GLENDINNING, Caroline, BROOKS, Jennifer and MORAN, Nicola
(2017).
Taking on choice and control in personal care and support : the experiences of physically disabled young adults.
Journal of Social Work, 17 (4), 413-433.
[Article]
MITCHELL, Wendy, BROOKS, Jennifer, BERESFORD, Bryony, MORAN, Nicola and GLENDINNING, Caroline
(2015).
Taking on and taking over : choice and control for physically disabled young adults.
Project Report.
NIHR School for Social Care Research.
[Monograph]
MITCHELL, Wendy, BROOKS, Jennifer and GLENDINNING, Caroline
(2013).
Carers and personalisation.
Project Report.
School for Social Care Research, National Institute for Health Research.
[Monograph]
MITCHELL, Wendy, BROOKS, Jennifer and GLENDINNING, Caroline
(2014).
Carers' roles in personal budgets: tensions and dilemmas in front line practice.
British Journal of Social Work, 45 (5), 1433-1450.
[Article]
MITCHELL, Wendy, BROOKS, Jennifer and GLENDINNING, Caroline
(2014).
Personalisation : where do carers fit?
In: NEEDHAM, Catherine and GLASBY, Jon, (eds.)
Debates in Personalisation.
Bristol, Policy Press, 65-74.
[Book Section]
RODER, Knut
(2017).
The Missing Linke? Restraint and Realignment in the German Left, 2005-2017
¿El eslabón perdido? Restricción y realineamiento dentro de la izquierda alemana, 2005-2017.
Revista Española de Ciencia Política - Ciencia Política y de la Administración (45), 43-65.
[Article]
SOUTHERN, Neil
(2015).
Conflict transformation and truth-seeking : the impact of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission on
the National Party.
Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 21 (3), 335-356.
[Article]
SOUTHERN, Neil
(2008).
The Freedom Front Plus: an analysis of Afrikaner politics and ethnic identity in the new South Africa.
Contemporary Politics, 14 (4), 463-478.
[Article]
SOUTHERN, Neil
(2015).
The Government of National Unity and the demise of the National Party in post-settlement South Africa.
Politikon: South African Journal of Political Studies, 42 (2), 235-254.
[Article]
SOUTHERN, Neil
(2011).
Political opposition and the challenges of a dominant party system: the democratic alliance in South Africa.
Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 29 (3), 281-298.
[Article]
SOUTHERN, Neil
(2009).
Post-agreement societies and inter-ethnic competition: a comparative study of the Protestant community of Londonderry and the white population of Pretoria.
National Identities, 11 (4), 397-415.
[Article]
SOUTHERN, Neil
(2008).
Territoriality, alienation, and loyalist decommissioning: the case of the Shankill in Protestant West Belfast.
Terrorism and Political Violence, 20 (1), 66-86.
[Article]
STIELL, Bernadette, TANG, Ning, BENNETT, Cinnamon and PRICE, Christopher
(2006).
Building Policy/Research Relationships: Using Innovative Methodologies to Engage Ethnic Minority Women.
Local Economy, 21 (2), 211-218.
[Article]
TANG, Ning
(2011).
Book Review: Women, men, work and family in Europe
ROSEMARY CROMPTON, SUZAN LEWIS and CLARE LYONETTE, eds, 2007.
Journal of Gender Studies, 20 (1), 89-102.
[Article]
TANG, Ning
(2005).
Book review: Mothers’ Employment and Childcare Use in Britain. By G.PAULL and J. TAYLOR with A. DUNCAN.
Economica, 733-734.
[Article]
TANG, Ning
(2002).
Interviewer and Interviewee Relationships
Between Women.
Sociology, 36 (3), 703-721.
[Article]
TANG, Ning and COUSINS, Christine
(2005).
Working Time, Gender and Family: An East-West European Comparison.
Gender, Work and Organization, 12 (6), 527-550.
[Article]
TANG, Ning and NOLLENT, Andrea
(2007).
UK transnational education in China and Hong Kong.
Project Report.
British Council.
[Monograph]
TANG, Ning, NOLLENT, Andrea, BARLEY, Ruth and WOLSTENHOLME, Claire
(2009).
Linking outward and inward mobility : how raising the international horizons of UK students enhances the international student experience on the UK campus.
Project Report.
Sheffield Hallam University.
[Monograph]
TONGE, Jon, EVANS, Jocelyn, JEFFERY, Robert and MCAULEY, James W.
(2010).
New order: political change and the Protestant Orange tradition in Northern Ireland.
The British Journal of Politics & International Relations, 13 (3), 400-419.
[Article]
TONGE, Jon, MYCOCK, Andrew and JEFFERY, Robert
(2012).
Does citizenship education make young people better-engaged citizens?
Political Studies, 60 (3), 578-602.
[Article]
WALLIS, R. J. and BLAIN, J.
(2003).
Sites, sacredness, and stories: Interactions of archaeology and contemporary Paganism.
Folklore, 114 (3), 307-321.
[Article]
WALLIS, Robert and BLAIN, Jenny
(2007).
The Sanctity of Burial: Pagan Views, Ancient and Modern.
In: Respect for Ancient British Human Remains: Philosophy and Practice’, Manchester Museum, University of Manchester, 17 Nov 2006.
(Submitted)
[Conference or Workshop Item]
WALLIS, Robert J and BLAIN, Jenny
(2011).
From respect to reburial: negotiating pagan interest in prehistoric human remains in Britain, through the Avebury consultation.
Public Archaeology, 10 (1), 23-45.
[Article]
WALLIS, Robert J. and BLAIN, Jenny
(2009).
‘Sacred’ Sites, Artefacts and Museum Collections: Pagan Engagements with Archaeology in Britain.
In: LEWIS, James and PIZZA, Murph, (eds.)
Handbook of Contemporary Paganisms.
Leiden, Brill, 591-610.
[Book Section]
WHIGHAM, Stuart and BLACK, Jack
(2018).
Glasgow 2014, the media and Scottish politics – the (post)imperial symbolism of the Commonwealth Games.
The British Journal of Politics and International Relations., 20 (2), 360-378.
[Article]
WOOD, Rachel
(2017).
Look good, feel good: sexiness and sexual pleasure in
neoliberalism.
In: ELIAS, Ana Sofia, GILL, Rosalind and SCHARFF, Christina, (eds.)
Aesthetic labour: rethinking beauty politics in neoliberalism.
Dynamics of Virtual Work
.
Palgrave Macmillan.
(In Press)
[Book Section]
WOOD, Rachel
(2015).
Sexual consumption within sexual labour: producing and consuming erotic texts and sexual commodities.
Porn Studies, 2 (2-3), 250-262.
[Article]