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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 1184 on page 1 of 48
Marked
Mark
A sociology of institutionalisation of the 'mentally ill' in Ireland
(2007)
Brennan, Damien John
A sociology of institutionalisation of the 'mentally ill' in Ireland
(2007)
Brennan, Damien John
Abstract:
THESIS 8092
A Sociology of Institutionalisation of the ?Mentally ill? in Ireland. This dissertation proposes that the trajectory of the institutionalisation of ?mentally ill? persons in Ireland can be understood as a multi-layered social process resulting from an interconnectivity of various social forces and human actions, rather than any biological or psychological phenomenon that is situated within the mental state of those institutionalised. A national public asylum system was established during the early nineteenth century, which developed into a significant physical and social feature of Irish communities. This system entailed the building of a network of asylum buildings, the establishing of an administrative bureaucracy and the development of institutional policy and routine, all of which were controlled centrally through the colonial administrative centre at Dublin Castle. These asylum buildings were added to and expanded throughout the mid to late nineteenth century an...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/76998
Marked
Mark
Movements making knowledge: a new wave of inspiration for sociology?
(2014)
Cox, Laurence
Movements making knowledge: a new wave of inspiration for sociology?
(2014)
Cox, Laurence
Abstract:
Sociology’s marginality to public discussion of the crisis stems partly from naïveté about the sociology of its own knowledge, in particular about its interlocutors’ interests. Historically, sociology has repeatedly re-established its intellectual relevance through its dialogue with movements for social change; this article argues that another such dialogue is overdue. Starting from existing discussions of social movements and their knowledge production, the article focuses on the organisational dimension of such knowledge and explores how this is elaborated in the current movement wave. Looking at movement spaces of theoretical analysis, new popular education processes and movements’ knowledge creation institutions, the article highlights potential contributions to renewing sociological processes of theorising, teaching and engaged research respectively, paying particular attention to movement practices of ‘talking between worlds’. It concludes with a call for a dialogue of critica...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/5499/
Marked
Mark
Catholic Sociology in Ireland in Comparative Perspective
(2011)
Conway, Brian
Catholic Sociology in Ireland in Comparative Perspective
(2011)
Conway, Brian
Abstract:
This paper examines the relationship between the Catholic Church and Irish sociology within a comparative framework. Drawing on archival and documentary research, this linkage is investigated at an institutional and intellectual level, across three stages of the “career” of Irish Catholic sociology, and employing comparisons with Catholic sociology in France, Germany, and the United States. I discern important sources of variation between the four cases including major intellectuals, organisational hosts, and publishing outlets. Irish Catholic sociology’s quite sudden movement in the direction of secular sociology in the 1950s is explained as a result of normative pressure to jettison its value-driven orientation as a result of more frequent interaction with the mainstream discipline via scholarly collaboration, the reforms of Vatican II emphasising engagement with the modern world, the demise of the broader Catholic Action movement of which it was a part, and changes in the nationa...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/8985/
Marked
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Book review: A sociology of Ireland / by Hilary Tovey and Perry Share. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 2000.
(2001)
McCullagh, Ciaran; Tovey, Hilary; Share, Perry
Book review: A sociology of Ireland / by Hilary Tovey and Perry Share. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 2000.
(2001)
McCullagh, Ciaran; Tovey, Hilary; Share, Perry
Abstract:
According to its authors, this book has two aims. The first is to offer an interpretation of the development of Irish society. The second is to provide an introduction to the discipline of sociology. Underpinning both of these is a particular vision of the nature of sociology. This regards all sociologies as in part at least national ones. The concern of sociology is to understand the particular society that the sociologist is a part of rather than interpreting it as a distorted version of some kind of amorphous modern society that is only inhabited by social theorists. As such this perspective involves taking Irish society seriously as a society in its own terms and not as an inferior or defective version of supposedly modern societies such as the United States, Germany or Great Britain. This is a useful and important starting argument all the more significant for the fact that it had to be made. It is an odd reflection on the institutional status of Irish sociology and of the stat...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/62258
Marked
Mark
Foreigners, Faith and Fatherland: The Historical Origins Development and Present Status of Irish Sociology
(2006)
Conway, Brian
Foreigners, Faith and Fatherland: The Historical Origins Development and Present Status of Irish Sociology
(2006)
Conway, Brian
Abstract:
This paper examines whether Irish sociology represents a distinct "national" sociology in terms of its empirical work and theoretical program.I began by situating this paper within existing scholarship on the history of Sociology in Ireland and then examine the social forces that have crucially shaped or misshaped the discipline in Ireland. I also address the imprint left by this history on the orientation of the discipline today.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/711/
Marked
Mark
New Directions in the Sociology of Collective Memory and Commemoration
(2010)
Conway, Brian
New Directions in the Sociology of Collective Memory and Commemoration
(2010)
Conway, Brian
Abstract:
The study of memory straddles a wide range of social science disciplines including sociology, psychology, anthropology, and geography. Within sociology, reviews of the literature have already been carried out, but these are now somewhat dated. This article takes the measure of recent prior research on the sociology of collective memory and commemoration by (1) proposing a classification of collective memory research; (2) organising the literature under the headings of theoretical developments, methodological strategies, and methodological challenges; and (3) offering suggestions for maximising the internal cohesion and external utility of the sub-field.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/8981/
Marked
Mark
An Irish sociology professor writes a student reference, May 1958
(2014)
Murray, Peter
An Irish sociology professor writes a student reference, May 1958
(2014)
Murray, Peter
Abstract:
From the Dublin Diocesan Archives a May 1958 letter from Maynooth Sociology Professor Jeremiah Newman to the Director of the Dublin Institute of Catholic Sociology appraises the contribution that a group of students about to be ordained for the Dublin archdiocese might best make to the Institute's work. A Cold War context of politico-ideological struggle links this peculiarly Irish epistle with an international literature concerning letters of recommendation and reports to police agencies about practitioners of sociology.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/9077/
Marked
Mark
The urban sociology of castells,manuel - a critical-examination of the central concepts
(1980)
Mckeown, K
The urban sociology of castells,manuel - a critical-examination of the central concepts
(1980)
Mckeown, K
Abstract:
The writings of Manuel Castells are centrally concerned with the development of a Marxist urban sociology. This article provides a critical examination of the central concepts of these writings. The article begins with some preparatory remarks on Castells's critique of conventional urban sociology and on the Althusserian variant of historical materialism which he adopts. This is followed by an examination of the four central concepts of Castells's work, namely, collective consumption, the urban system, urban planning and urban social movements. It will be argued throughout that, although Castells's writings may act as a catalyst in the future development of a Marxist urban sociology, the conceptual core of his work makes no substantial contribution per se towards this development.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/68678
Marked
Mark
Optimal matching analysis and life course data: the importance of duration
(2008)
Halpin, Brendan
Optimal matching analysis and life course data: the importance of duration
(2008)
Halpin, Brendan
Abstract:
The Optimal Matching Algorithm is widely used for sequenace analysis in sociology. It has a natural interpretation for discrete-time sequences, but is also widely used for life history data, which is continuous in time. Life history data is arguably better dealt with in terms of episodes rather than as a string of time-unit observations, and the paper addresses the question of whether standard the OM algorithm is unsuitable for such sequences. A modified version of the algorithm is proposed, which weights OM’s elementary operations inversely with episode length. In the general case, the modified algorithm produces pairwise distances much lower than the standard algorithm, the more the sequences are composed of long spells in the same state. However, where all the sequences in a data set consist of few long spells, and there is low variability in the number of spells, the modified algorithm generates an overall pattern of distances that is not very different from standard OM.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3627
Marked
Mark
Muintir na Tire Seeks Funding for Rural Sociology in 1960s Ireland
(2011)
Murray, Peter; Feeney, Maria
Muintir na Tire Seeks Funding for Rural Sociology in 1960s Ireland
(2011)
Murray, Peter; Feeney, Maria
Abstract:
working paper
Muintir na Tire’s role in the emergence of the discipline of Sociology in Ireland is usually acknowledged with reference to the Limerick Rural Survey (1958-64) that it initiated, part-funded and published. In the first half of the 1960s the movement also put proposals to the Irish government and sought US foundation grants for a centre or institute that would operate in the field of rural sociology and form part of Muintir na Tire’s organisational structure. Although Taoiseach Sean Lemass was positively disposed towards these initatives, opposition from the Departments of Agriculture, Education and Finance prevailed against them and Muintir na Tire was ultimately to find itself completely excluded from participation in the state-resourced institutional arrangements for carrying out social/sociological research in Ireland.
http://hdl.handle.net/11019/687
Marked
Mark
Muintir na Tire seeks funding for rural sociology in 1960s Ireland (NIRSA) Working Paper Series 63
(2010)
Murray, Peter; Feeney, Maria
Muintir na Tire seeks funding for rural sociology in 1960s Ireland (NIRSA) Working Paper Series 63
(2010)
Murray, Peter; Feeney, Maria
Abstract:
Muintir na Tire’s role in the emergence of the discipline of Sociology in Ireland is usually acknowledged with reference to the Limerick Rural Survey (1958-64) that it initiated, part-funded and published. In the first half of the 1960s the movement also put proposals to the Irish government and sought US foundation grants for a centre or institute that would operate in the field of rural sociology and form part of Muintir na Tire’s organisational structure. Although Taoiseach Sean Lemass was positively disposed towards these initatives, opposition from the Departments of Agriculture, Education and Finance prevailed against them and Muintir na Tire was ultimately to find itself completely excluded from participation in the state-resourced institutional arrangements for carrying out social/sociological research in Ireland.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/2296/
Marked
Mark
Grounding Waste: Towards a Sociology of Waste Networks (NIRSA) Working Paper Series. No. 18
(2002)
Fagan, Honor
Grounding Waste: Towards a Sociology of Waste Networks (NIRSA) Working Paper Series. No. 18
(2002)
Fagan, Honor
Abstract:
This article contributes towards building a sociology of waste. It advances a network analysis framework to understand the position and role of the various actors involved in waste governance in Ireland, North and South. It is the state at the EU and national levels that has sought to deal with waste within the competing sustainability and competitiveness paradigms. However, this article also argues for the critical importance of local action around waste management (incinerators in particular) in developing a sociology of waste. The issue of waste is seen in parallel terms to that of money as a new global fluid, which, nevertheless, needs to be governed. A major argument of the article is that we need to take a grounded globalisation approach to build insights into networks of waste and networked political processes of waste governance.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/470/
Marked
Mark
‘Much leeway needs to be made up in our equipment’: Muintir na Tire and US scholarships for Irish sociology students, 1958–59
(2012)
Murray, Peter
‘Much leeway needs to be made up in our equipment’: Muintir na Tire and US scholarships for Irish sociology students, 1958–59
(2012)
Murray, Peter
Abstract:
Documentary investigation has particular strengths to offer the study of the historical emergence of sociological research. Here two documents relating to a Muintir na Tire initiative of the late 1950s to secure US scholarship funding for Irish students of sociology are introduced and reproduced. The reasons why the scheme did not get off the ground, even though financial support appeared to be on offer, are discussed. Here a combination of Muintir na Tire's limited support within the Catholic Church and a modest, but significant, expansion of Irish social science educational capacity brought about by the use of Archbishop McQuaid's power within University College Dublin are emphasised.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/9076/
Marked
Mark
The nature of legal sociology
(1955)
Montrose, J. L.
The nature of legal sociology
(1955)
Montrose, J. L.
Abstract:
Centuries, whether in cricket or chronology, are arbitrary divisions, but we are conditioned by conventions, and I find it convenient to describe the nineteenth century as giving birth to sociological jurisprudence and the twentieth century to legal sociology. A case can be made out for regarding 1900 as a turning point in the graph of legal study in the common law world. A few years earlier Holmes had expressed the conclusions of his reflections on legal education in addresses to his own Law School at Cambridge and to the rival Law School at Boston, which had been established some years earlier as a protest against Harvard's adoption of the case method.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/3943
Marked
Mark
Towards a sociology of counter cultures?
(1995)
Cox, Laurence
Towards a sociology of counter cultures?
(1995)
Cox, Laurence
Abstract:
Conventional accounts of "new social movements", "the Sixties", green parties, "the alternative economy", and some contemporary subcultures often accept the existence of connections between some at least of these developments, but without making the attempt to analyse them as parts of a single historical process or as aspects of a more complex social formation. It may be possible to overcome the (theoretical, methodological, disciplinary) isolation of these subjects from one another in terms of a concept of counter culture which attempts to locate them within the total life-worlds of the participants. This means treating counter cultures as historically developed complexes of institutions and practices, structures of meaning, forms of consciousness and modes of organisation of everyday life. This also makes it possible to distinguish between networks which are deeply involved in this counter cultural totality, and those which are essentially oriented ...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/441/
Marked
Mark
The spiralling swallow : a sociological auto-ethnography of "eating disorders(s)" and "recovery"
(2008)
O'Farrell, Br?d
The spiralling swallow : a sociological auto-ethnography of "eating disorders(s)" and "recovery"
(2008)
O'Farrell, Br?d
Abstract:
THESIS 8696
This thesis is a sociological auto-ethnography of "eating disorder(s)" and "recovery".Using creative methodologies, I have created an intersubjective, poly-vocal account of bodies in encounter with medicine. I position this thesis as a counter-narrative and narrative of resistance to the hegemonic narratives circulated in contemporary Western cultures about health, healing and dys-order. Exploring the impact of dualistic medicalised cultures upon the lived experience of the body, I have posed questions about and offered reflections upon "ontology" ("ways of being") and "epistemology" ("ways of knowing"). In doing so I have contributed to sociologies theories of "eating disorder(s)" and offered reflections and theory on "recovery" when sociology seems, apart from a single study (Garrett, 1998), to have forgotten about this experience.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/78146
Marked
Mark
Co-producing development : participation, power and conflict in the upgrading of informal settlements in Nairobi
(2013)
Rigon, Andrea
Co-producing development : participation, power and conflict in the upgrading of informal settlements in Nairobi
(2013)
Rigon, Andrea
Abstract:
THESIS 9857
This thesis analyses how social and political conflicts among different social actors shape the implementation of slum-upgrading programmes. The research focuses on the first two years (2008-2010) of the implementation of an internationally-funded slum-upgrading programme in Nairobi. In particular, the thesis explores the internal dynamics of the residents of one slum settlement and how they interact with the development programme and with the complex range of actors involved. The actor-oriented approach constitutes the main theoretical framework of this research. Mid-level theories from the sociology and anthropology of development are also employed to illuminate specific data. The thesis draws upon the body of work classified under the broad notion of a 'new ethnography of development?, a body of work which has so far predominantly focused on rural projects. The perspective offered by these works can also provide useful insights and tools to examine dispersed ...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/78179
Marked
Mark
Shareholder capitalism, normative smokescreens and the angry, insecure knowledge worker
(2010)
Cushen, Jean
Shareholder capitalism, normative smokescreens and the angry, insecure knowledge worker
(2010)
Cushen, Jean
Abstract:
THESIS 8971
This thesis is rooted within the discipline of industrial sociology. It makes connections between workplace structures and subjectivities within a contemporary, stock market listed, high technology and knowledge intensive organisation. This thesis arose from the largely incompatible conclusions offered in the literatures that claim to define the employment experience in such workplaces. This thesis is based on a six month, mixed methods, critical realist, ethnography. It was undertaken within an Irish based subsidiary of a multi-national corporation. I secured full-time access to this organisation from June 2007 to November 2007 inclusive. During this time I analysed a wide range of documentation, conducted seventy five interviews and attended twenty five meetings. Critical realism is particularly suitable for this study as it focuses on the interplay between structures and subjectivities. Critical realism is also suitable for ethnographic research as the realist ont...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/85270
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Mark
Socheolas: Critical reflections on the establishment of a peer-reviewed student sociology journal in Ireland
(2010)
Neville, Patricia; Power, Martin J.; Barnes, Cliona; Haynes, Amanda
Socheolas: Critical reflections on the establishment of a peer-reviewed student sociology journal in Ireland
(2010)
Neville, Patricia; Power, Martin J.; Barnes, Cliona; Haynes, Amanda
Abstract:
On 23rd April 2009 a new reviewed journal entitled Socheolas: Limerick Student Journal of Sociology was officially launched. The journal, now in its 3rd issue, is produced, edited and managed by a small team from within the Department of Sociology at the University of Limerick. The key purpose of the journal is to showcase the high-quality academic work undertaken by its undergraduate and postgraduate students. The journal offers undergraduate and first-year postgraduate students in the Department of Sociology an opportunity to improve their writing and sociological skills, both as authors and as readers of sociological research. It allows students to have first-hand experience of the process of editing and rewriting for publication in a supportive and constructive environment, while giving them the opportunity to see their work published online. This paper will document the establishment of Socheolas from its origin as part of a drive to increase...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3805
Marked
Mark
The Origins and Development of Sociology in Ireland
(2010)
Conway, Brian
The Origins and Development of Sociology in Ireland
(2010)
Conway, Brian
Abstract:
Abstract included in text.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/4881/
Marked
Mark
Teaching sociology in an age of teaching 'excellence'
(2015)
O'Sullivan, Sara
Teaching sociology in an age of teaching 'excellence'
(2015)
O'Sullivan, Sara
Abstract:
In 2004 Wright et al issued a challenge to sociologists, to examine 'the effect of the structure of the academy on teaching and learning outcomes' (2004: 155). In this paper I take up this challenge, beginning with a short overview of the changing Irish higher education context, highlighting three macro level changes that currently impact on teaching sociology in Ireland. I argue that such a structural lens is essential to our understanding of the meso (institutional and disciplinary) levels of teaching sociology. I argue a nascent ‘teaching and learning movement’ in Irish sociology may be emerging. A number of factors that have facilitated this are identified. However even a quick glance at Irish higher education also reveals contradictions and conflicts which threaten this movement before it is even established, including worsening staff-student ratios, increased casualization of teaching and the neo-liberal turn. The paper concludes with a call for more sociologically ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/6873
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Mark
Class, status and the stratification of residential preferences amongst accountants
(2011)
O'Regan, Philip; Halpin, Brendan
Class, status and the stratification of residential preferences amongst accountants
(2011)
O'Regan, Philip; Halpin, Brendan
Abstract:
Drawing primarily on data from the 1911 Irish Census, and adopting a specifically Weberian focus, this paper investigates the separate explanatory power of class and status in the stratification of outcomes. Specifically we find that both class and status do have independent explanatory power in terms of the geographical residential patterns of various occupations, including accountants, in early twentieth-century Dublin, Ireland. We also demonstrate the usefulness of considering the experience of accountants in a comparative context.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/1532
Marked
Mark
Private troubles, public issues: the Irish sociological imagination
(2006)
O'Connor, Pat
Private troubles, public issues: the Irish sociological imagination
(2006)
O'Connor, Pat
Abstract:
In contemporary Irish Society there is considerable uneasiness about both the existence of and threats to the ‘patriarchal dividend’ (O’Connell, 1995a:82). It is suggested that this wider social and cultural context, characterised by male dominance of key institutions, militates against the identification of gender related private troubles as public issues. Burawoy’s (2005) focus on the public aspect of each of the four types of sociology he identifies (viz policy, critical, public and professional sociology) is used as a framework to explore the recent contribution made by sociologists in Ireland to the identification of gender as such a public issue. The article concludes that, by not explicitly focussing on it their contribution as agenda setters has been more limited than it might otherwise have been.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3431
Marked
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Three narratives of sequence analysis
(2013)
Halpin, Brendan
Three narratives of sequence analysis
(2013)
Halpin, Brendan
Abstract:
no abstract available
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3624
Marked
Mark
Tracks through time and continuous processes: transitions, sequences, and social structure
(2003)
Halpin, Brendan
Tracks through time and continuous processes: transitions, sequences, and social structure
(2003)
Halpin, Brendan
Abstract:
In the social and economic sciences it appears that there was a pioneering enthusiasm for longitudinal data in the late 1960s and early 1970s, resulting inter alia in the US Panel Study on Income Dynamics (1968) and lifehistory studies such as Natalie Rogoff Ramsøy’s Norwegian Life History Study (Rogoff Ramsøy, 1975). While the continuity of the PSID helped a lot in the development of techniques for the use of individually longitudinal data, it has been a slow development, but has been nonetheless relentless and cumulative. By now we have a very substantial array of panel and life-history studies, longitudinal elements incorporated in exercises such as the Labour Force Survey, and a growing battery of longitudinal data sets based on official data collection. Commensurate with the rich data is a growing body of high-quality research that takes full advantage of its longitudinality. The argument no longer needs to be made for the greater richness, power and sheer interest of longitudi...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3634
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