Institutions
|
About Us
|
Help
|
Gaeilge
0
1000
Home
Browse
Advanced Search
Search History
Marked List
Statistics
A
A
A
Show search options
Hide search options
Search using:
All
Any
None of these
Exact Phrase
in
Keyword (All Fields)
Title
Author
Subject
Institution
Funder
All
Any
None of these
Exact Phrase
in
Keyword (All Fields)
Title
Author
Subject
Institution
Funder
All
Any
None of these
Exact Phrase
in
Keyword (All Fields)
Title
Author
Subject
Institution
Funder
From
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
1993
1992
1991
1990
1989
1988
1987
1986
1985
1984
1983
1982
1981
1980
1979
1978
1977
1976
1975
1974
1973
1972
1971
1970
1969
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1963
1962
1961
1960
1959
1958
1957
1956
1955
1954
1953
1952
1951
1950
1949
1948
1947
1946
1944
1943
1942
1941
1940
1939
1938
1937
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1928
1927
1925
1923
1920
1919
1917
1915
1914
1913
1912
1911
1909
1908
1907
1906
1905
1904
1903
1902
1901
1900
1899
1898
1897
1896
1895
1894
1893
1892
1891
1890
1889
1888
1887
1886
1885
1884
1883
1882
1881
1880
1879
1878
1877
1876
1875
1874
1873
1872
1871
1870
1869
1867
1866
1865
1864
1862
1861
1859
1858
1857
1856
1855
1854
1853
1852
1851
1849
To
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
1993
1992
1991
1990
1989
1988
1987
1986
1985
1984
1983
1982
1981
1980
1979
1978
1977
1976
1975
1974
1973
1972
1971
1970
1969
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1963
1962
1961
1960
1959
1958
1957
1956
1955
1954
1953
1952
1951
1950
1949
1948
1947
1946
1944
1943
1942
1941
1940
1939
1938
1937
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1928
1927
1925
1923
1920
1919
1917
1915
1914
1913
1912
1911
1909
1908
1907
1906
1905
1904
1903
1902
1901
1900
1899
1898
1897
1896
1895
1894
1893
1892
1891
1890
1889
1888
1887
1886
1885
1884
1883
1882
1881
1880
1879
1878
1877
1876
1875
1874
1873
1872
1871
1870
1869
1867
1866
1865
1864
1862
1861
1859
1858
1857
1856
1855
1854
1853
1852
1851
1849
Optionally, filter by:
(Leave unchecked to search all fields)
Item Type
Book
Book chapter
Conference item
Contribution to newspaper/magazine
Doctoral thesis
Journal article
Master thesis (research)
Master thesis (taught)
Multimedia
Patent
Report
Review
Working paper
Other
Peer Review Status
Peer reviewed
Non peer reviewed
Unknown
Institution
Dublin City University
Dublin Institute of Technology
NUI Galway
NUI Maynooth
Trinity College Dublin
University College Cork
University College Dublin
University of Limerick
Funder
Enterprise Ireland (EI)
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Health Research Board (HRB)
Higher Education Authority (HEA)
Irish Aid
Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences (IRCHSS)
Irish Research Council for Science Engineering and Technology (IRCSET)
Marine Institute
Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
Teagasc
Language
Irish
English
Danish
French
German
Interlingue; Occidental
Italian
Japanese
Spanish; Castilian
Current Search:
'Sociology' in all fields;
519 items found
Sort by
Relevance
Title
Author
Item type
Date
Institution
Peer review status
Language
Order
Ascending
Descending
25
50
100
per page
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Bibtex
CSV
EndNote
RefWorks
RIS
XML
Displaying Results 26 - 50 of 519 on page 2 of 21
Marked
Mark
Folk Poetry and Working Class Identity in Ulster: An Analysis of James Orr’s ‘The Penitent.’
(1993)
Gray, Jane
Folk Poetry and Working Class Identity in Ulster: An Analysis of James Orr’s ‘The Penitent.’
(1993)
Gray, Jane
Abstract:
This paper explores changing patterns of collective identity amongst rural industrial producers in the North of Ireland through an extended analysis of a single poem, 'The Penitent,' (see Appendix) written by the weaver-poet James Orr in 1800. The poem was written at the culmination of a time of great social and political upheaval in Ireland, particularly in the north-east. The growth of rural domestic linen production in the eighteenth century had been accompanied by rapid population growth, land subdivision and (by the end of the century) the emergence in some districts of petty entrepreneurs who employed poorer weaving households to manufacture cloth by the piece.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/1118/
Marked
Mark
Making Space for Sociability: How Children Animate the Public Realm in Suburbia
(2009)
Corcoran, Mary; Peillon, Michel; Gray, Jane
Making Space for Sociability: How Children Animate the Public Realm in Suburbia
(2009)
Corcoran, Mary; Peillon, Michel; Gray, Jane
Abstract:
This article aims to demonstrate the significant role children play in new suburban communities, and in particular, the extent to which their circuits of sociability contribute to social cohesion in the suburbs. The discussion is located within the field of sociology of childhood, which argues that children are active agents who help to create and sustain social bonds within their neighborhoods. Drawing on focus group discussions and short essays by children on “The place where I live,” we paint a picture of how suburban life is interpreted and experienced from a child’s perspective. We argue that children develop a particular suburban sensibility that structures their view of their estate, the wider neighborhood, and the metropolitan core. Although children express considerable degrees of satisfaction with suburban life, they are critical of the forces that increasingly limit their access to suburban public space.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/1207/
Marked
Mark
The Political Preferences and Value Orientations of Irish Journalists
(2004)
Corcoran, Mary
The Political Preferences and Value Orientations of Irish Journalists
(2004)
Corcoran, Mary
Abstract:
There is a dearth of sociologically informed literature on Irish journalists. In her seminal paper. Kelly (1983) laid out the factors influencing the production of news in a general context, acknowledging in her analysis the limited range of research on the Irish media. She highlighted the ideological and personal preferences of journalists on the one hand, and their professional values and practices on the other as key determinants of the news agenda. However, to date no systematic study of Irish journalists has addressed these twin concerns. Drawing on data obtained from a national survey of daily news journalists in the Republic of Ireland conducted in the late 1990s, this paper offers some insight into the class position, political orientation and value system ofa key group of 'meaning producers'in Irish society. In particular, the article seeks to provide insight into the professional culture of Irish journalists and their views on the relationship between the messeng...
http://eprints.nuim.ie/1210/
Marked
Mark
Informalization of Metropolitan Labour Forces: The Case of Irish Immigrants in the New York Construction Industry.
(1991)
Corcoran, Mary
Informalization of Metropolitan Labour Forces: The Case of Irish Immigrants in the New York Construction Industry.
(1991)
Corcoran, Mary
Abstract:
This paper discusses Sassen's model of informalization in advanced urban economies, and in particular, its applicantion to the construction industry in New York City. The validity of the model is assessed in light of the ethnogmphic accounts of Irish construction workers, mhich deal with both the formal and informal economies within the construction sector. While the findings are generally compatible with Sassen's model, the paper concludes that greater attention needs to be paid to the role of ethnicity as an independent variable operating in the labour market.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/1211/
Marked
Mark
Portrait of the ‘absent’ father: the impact of non-residency on developing and maintaining a fathering role
(2005)
Corcoran, Mary
Portrait of the ‘absent’ father: the impact of non-residency on developing and maintaining a fathering role
(2005)
Corcoran, Mary
Abstract:
This paper reports on an exploratory study conducted with nonresident fathers, to elucidate the key issues affecting the development and maintenance of a fathering role after a relationship has ended. In particular, the paper focuses on the contingent nature of fatherhood for young marginalised men in Dublin. The extent to which fathers identify with a fathering role is explored and comparisons are drawn between the experiences of estranged, committed and activist fathers. Key factors that militate against fathers maintaining an active role in their children’s lives are identified. The paper concludes that while the experiences of fatherhood vary across different categories of fathers, the majority of them aspire toward and value their fathering role. However, their capacity to adopt a positive fathering role is affected by a range of institutional, economic and social barriers.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/1212/
Marked
Mark
Determinants of Sexual Behaviour
(2003)
Lalor, Kevin; O'Regan, Cathal; Quinlan, Siobhan
Determinants of Sexual Behaviour
(2003)
Lalor, Kevin; O'Regan, Cathal; Quinlan, Siobhan
http://arrow.dit.ie/aaschsslarts/6
Marked
Mark
Fair City: a Case Study in the Proletarianisation of Cultural Production
(2004)
Brennan, Edward
Fair City: a Case Study in the Proletarianisation of Cultural Production
(2004)
Brennan, Edward
Abstract:
<p>Abstract This article is based in a broader study of the production of Fair City, Ireland’s most popular television soap opera. The study argues that such shows are potentially important in civil society. They can promote discussion and debate on hidden or taboo social issues. They may thus inform public opinion. Until recently the potential role of soap opera in civil society has largely been overlooked. The research examined the social issues that Fair City could introduce to public discussion by examining its production process. It found the main limits on what the show could and could not say to be determined by practical pressures. The study interprets cultural production through a Bourdieuian conceptual model. Thus in understanding the production of Fair City it takes stock of how the programme is shaped by long term processes at organisational, national and international levels. This article looks inside the production of Fair City. It argues that the show’s limitat...
http://arrow.dit.ie/dmcart/37
Marked
Mark
The Market for Sociological Ideas in Early 1960s Ireland: Civil Service Departments and the Limerick Rural Survey, 1961- 64 (NIRSA) Working Paper Series No. 53.
(2009)
Murray, Peter; Feeney, Maria
The Market for Sociological Ideas in Early 1960s Ireland: Civil Service Departments and the Limerick Rural Survey, 1961- 64 (NIRSA) Working Paper Series No. 53.
(2009)
Murray, Peter; Feeney, Maria
Abstract:
Why, Joseph Lee asks, `was the market for ideas in independent Ireland so small? Why was it so stagnant?’ In attempting to answer these questions, Lee places most emphasis on demand side deficiencies, discussing in detail the ways in which the development of research in economics was stunted by the prevailing narrow-mindedness of the Department of Finance. Yet, he observes, `slowly though economics developed as a research discipline, it was exceptionally advanced compared with cognate subjects’ such as sociology. A prevalent disregard for research among government policy-makers and private entrepreneurs has more recently been noted by Tom Garvin who highlights `a general syndrome of unintellectual or even anti-intellectual thinking’ within which `a common reaction to academic commentary was “sure we knew all that anyway”’.. Widely accepted and influential as such broad critiques are, the response of the higher echelons of the civil service to early research produced by Irish sociolo...
http://eprints.nuim.ie/1905/
Marked
Mark
Lessons for higher education : the university as a site of activism
(2010)
Lynch, Kathleen
Lessons for higher education : the university as a site of activism
(2010)
Lynch, Kathleen
Abstract:
Len Barton is acutely aware of the power of the academy to either enhance critical thinking or to depress it. He is a true academic, never accepting the received wisdom or perspective of any given sociological standpoint, no matter how powerful or fashionable it was at the time. He has encouraged and promoted a unique blend of professional and public sociology of education that has left a profound legacy not only in the UK but beyond. While the neo-liberal ideology had hegemonic status for most of his professional life, Len chose to engage in a counter ideological struggle; he created new intellectual spaces in the academy where people could safely dissent from the reigning intellectual orthodoxies. He operated according to the principles of Gramscian thinking by mounting a war of position, in journals, books, teaching, conferences and research, for critical intellectuals. And he encouraged other people to do likewise. This article explores the ways in which Len’s work inspired the ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2492
Marked
Mark
Current debates: new religion(s) in Ireland ‘Alternative spiritualities, new religious movements and the New Age in Ireland’ conference report, NUI Maynooth, 30–31 October 2009
(2010)
Cox, Laurence
Current debates: new religion(s) in Ireland ‘Alternative spiritualities, new religious movements and the New Age in Ireland’ conference report, NUI Maynooth, 30–31 October 2009
(2010)
Cox, Laurence
Abstract:
Recent decades have seen a sea change in the study of religion in Ireland. Numerically dominated by theology until very recently – to the extent that Ireland is one of only two European countries without an association for the non-confessional study of religion – the quantitative decline in academic theology, the generational change of staff, the merging of seminaries and the increasingly lay character of their students are all pointing towards a gradual transformation into departments of religious studies, following the experience of other Northern countries.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2197/
Marked
Mark
Revolution in the air: images of winning in the Irish anti-capitalist movement
(2010)
Cox, Laurence; Curry, Liz
Revolution in the air: images of winning in the Irish anti-capitalist movement
(2010)
Cox, Laurence; Curry, Liz
Abstract:
This article explores strategic conceptions within the alter-globalisation movement in Ireland. Based on action research carried out within the left-libertarian (“Grassroots’) wing of the movement, it notes imbalances in participation in a very intensive form of political activity, and asks how activists understand winning. It finds substantial congruence between organisational practice and long-term goals, noting social justice and participatory democracy along with feminist, environmental and anti-war concerns as central. Using Wallerstein’s proposed transition strategy for anti-systemic movements, it argues that Irish alter-globalisation activists are realistic about popular support and state power, and concerned to link short-term work around basic needs with the construction of alternative institutions and long-term struggles for a different social order.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2475/
Marked
Mark
A case of productive entanglement? Researching a post compulsory learning network.
(2007)
Kamp, Annelies
A case of productive entanglement? Researching a post compulsory learning network.
(2007)
Kamp, Annelies
Abstract:
In this paper I aim to achieve two outcomes. The first is to open up thinking around how, in a context where governments are increasingly exploring and drawing on notions of fluid networks, joined-up government, interagency collaboration and so on, we can develop forms of policy sociology that can capture the complex 'what happened' of policy outcomes. Secondly, I want to briefly share the findings of my own case study research into one such government-instituted network in Victoria, Australia.
http://doras.dcu.ie/16249/
Marked
Mark
Irish mobilities
(2007)
WICKHAM, JAMES JOHN RUFUS
Irish mobilities
(2007)
WICKHAM, JAMES JOHN RUFUS
Abstract:
The ‘mobility turn’ in sociology challenges any easy equation of ‘society’ with a given territorial area. This approach allows us to link the study of migration with the study of other forms of mobility, to examine the origins of mobility within social structure and the impact of mobility on social structure. The chapter discusses four different examples of mobility in contemporary Ireland: auto-mobility and car dependency; migration as mobility through Ireland; business travel and mobile working; second home ownership and mobile property.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/56813
Marked
Mark
Premarital cohabitation as a pathway into marriage. An investigation into how premarital cohabitation is transforming the institution of marriage in Ireland. Athlone as a case study.
(2011)
Jackson, Ashling
Premarital cohabitation as a pathway into marriage. An investigation into how premarital cohabitation is transforming the institution of marriage in Ireland. Athlone as a case study.
(2011)
Jackson, Ashling
Abstract:
The purpose of this study is to investigate how premarital co-habitation is transforming the institution of marriage in Ireland. I conducted forty-one in-depth interviews in Athlone in 2007. The sample comprised cohabiting couples with plans to marry, cohabiting couples with no plans to marry, as well as couples who married without living together first. Respondents also filled in an event history calendar, recording key events in their lives, since the age of 16 years. Using a life course analysis methodology, the findings make a major contribution to the debate in sociology over the dynamics of change in the transformation of the institution of marriage. Interview thematic analysis and event history calendar information demonstrate that it is the interplay between structural constraints and individual decision making in relationship development, and how that plays out in people‘s lives that produces innovative family formation patterns, such as premarital cohabitation. The wider s...
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2582/
Marked
Mark
Cultural Differences in Parenting Practices
(2011)
MURRAY, AISLING
Cultural Differences in Parenting Practices
(2011)
MURRAY, AISLING
Abstract:
There is an increasing acceptance across the disciplines of psychology, sociology and health that an individual’s development does not take place in a social vacuum (see for example Bronfenbrenner’s bio-ecological model, e.g. Bronfenbrenner & Morris, 2006). The development of infants, in particular, is influenced by their parents: relying on them for food, shelter, protection, health care and fostering development. Hence we might expect that those individuals and organisations which influence parents (grandparents, friends, the media) will also have an indirect, but important, influence on infants
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/57203
Marked
Mark
Family Support as an Approach to Working with Children and Families in Ireland: An Explorative Study of Past and Present Perspectives among Pioneers and Practitioners
(2011)
Carmel, Devaney
Family Support as an Approach to Working with Children and Families in Ireland: An Explorative Study of Past and Present Perspectives among Pioneers and Practitioners
(2011)
Carmel, Devaney
Abstract:
In Ireland, the value and merit of Family Support as an approach to working with children is debated and contested. From a policy and practice perspective, Family Support is at times recognised and applauded as a worthwhile orientation in addressing difficulties in children's lives or conversely demeaned or ignored. As Family Support is a relatively new orientation in children's services there has been little consideration as to the factors which have shaped and informed its growth. A lack of clarity and vagueness remains in policy and practice terms as to what Family Support is. Furthermore, a purposely designed postgraduate education programme in Family Support Studies delivered by the Child and Family Research Centre, at the School of Political Science and Sociology, National University of Ireland, Galway has not been evaluated in terms of its influence on participating students. Considering this gap in knowledge, the overarching aim of this study therefore is to review...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/2141
Marked
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
Building counter culture: the radical praxis of social movement milieux
(2011)
Cox, Laurence
Building counter culture: the radical praxis of social movement milieux
(2011)
Cox, Laurence
Abstract:
This thesis falls into two parts. The first (chapters one to three) states the problematic of the research, develops a critique of the dominant “social movements” literature as unhelpful for understanding the counter culture and argues that the latter can more effectively be theorised in terms of the implicit theory of social movement found within agency-oriented Western Marxism and socialist feminism. This latter theory is developed as an understanding of movement as direction, developing from the local rationalities of everyday life through articulated but partial campaigns to a “movement project” which attempts to deploy such local rationalities to restructure the social whole. Within these terms, it argues for an understanding of counter culture as a movement project from below within disorganised capitalism. This mode of analysis is seen as that of a historical sociology geared to the production of open concepts which can be used by participants to theorise the context of their...
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2817/
Marked
Mark
Rethinking Difficult Pasts: Bloody Sunday (1972) as a Case Study
(2009)
Conway, Brian
Rethinking Difficult Pasts: Bloody Sunday (1972) as a Case Study
(2009)
Conway, Brian
Abstract:
The sociological literature on collective memory puts forward fragmented and multivocal commemorations as two dominant ways of responding to difficult pasts. This article argues that there is room for improvement in these models by specifying the conditions under which a controversial past can be remembered initially in a fragmented way and, with greater temporal distance from the original event, can evolve into a more consensual form of commemoration in which the past is seized upon as a resource to advance the politics of reconciliation between two opposing identity groups in an unsettled society. An evolving political climate, active memory choreography, and the usability of the past in the present all help account for this. The empirical evidence to support this theoretical claim comes from a long-range, historical study of the case of Bloody Sunday (1972).
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2874/
Marked
Mark
Review: A. Costall and O. Dreier (2006) Doing Things with Things: The Design and Use of Everyday Objects. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing. 242 pp. ISBN 0 7546 4656 4 hardback. £55.
(2009)
Kerr, Aphra
Review: A. Costall and O. Dreier (2006) Doing Things with Things: The Design and Use of Everyday Objects. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing. 242 pp. ISBN 0 7546 4656 4 hardback. £55.
(2009)
Kerr, Aphra
Abstract:
Abstract included in text.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2894/
Marked
Mark
Innovation and Knowledge in the Digital Media Sector
(2009)
Preston, Paschal ; Kerr, Aphra; Cawley, Anthony
Innovation and Knowledge in the Digital Media Sector
(2009)
Preston, Paschal ; Kerr, Aphra; Cawley, Anthony
Abstract:
Academic research on service innovation has highlighted the distinct characteristics of services innovation, the knowledge complexes involved, and how services can be autonomous sites of innovation. It also highlights that successful services innovations are often not technology based but can depend on new organizational or managerial practices or marketing and distribution strategies. This paper makes an empirical and a conceptual contribution to this literature by focusing on one sub-sector of the services sector: digital media applications and services. Conceptually, this paper is interdisciplinary and draws upon a range of work on innovation and production in media and communication studies, innovation studies, evolutionary economics, and sociology. Empirically, this paper draws on ten years of qualitative case study research focused on innovation in the digital media sector in Ireland and, to a lesser extent, Europe. More specifically, we draw upon research on the internet, mob...
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2900/
Marked
Mark
A Literature Review for Integrated Planning for Improved Outcomes for Children and Families
(2008)
Child and Family Research Centre
A Literature Review for Integrated Planning for Improved Outcomes for Children and Families
(2008)
Child and Family Research Centre
Abstract:
Increasingly, policy makers and service managers, planners and practitioners are encouraged, and often mandated, to work together to achieve better outcomes for children and young people. The momentum towards formally integrating the work of numerous interrelated agencies emerges from a couple of areas: the publication of strategy documents in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland relating to children and young people which serve to underpin the development of services in this policy area; and the increasing promotion and acceptance of policy provision underpinned by a 'child-rights' discourse and the 'whole-child' perspective.However, in moving towards integrated service planning and delivery, a number of questions arise: Where has the child rights agenda come from and what does it involve? What does it actually mean to integrate service planning and provision, and why do it? Who should participate in such activities? What is an outcome and is it ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/2456
Marked
Mark
A Review of the Teenage Health Initiative (THI) in the former Western Health Board - Final Report
(2008)
Kearns, Noreen; Reddy, John; Canavan, John
A Review of the Teenage Health Initiative (THI) in the former Western Health Board - Final Report
(2008)
Kearns, Noreen; Reddy, John; Canavan, John
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/2477
Marked
Mark
The influence of the promotion of the Irish language on Ireland's socio-economic development
(2006)
Walsh, John Charles
The influence of the promotion of the Irish language on Ireland's socio-economic development
(2006)
Walsh, John Charles
Abstract:
This dissertation is an investigation of the influence of the promotion of the Irish language on Ireland's socio-economic development. The research question is based on a tradition of understanding of the link between the Irish language and Ireland's socio-economic development, stretching back at least 150 years. Various authors have argued that the promotion of Irish is not only about re-establishing the language as a means of communication, but that it will bring broader social, economic and cultural benefits to Ireland as a whole. In order to investigate the research question, the relationships which these authors posit are interrogated in the light of various bodies of theory in the social sciences (economics, sociology, political economy, development studies and sociolinguistics). A typology of competing approaches to language and development is presented and a theoretical framework appropriate to the analysis elaborated. This framework - the linguistic political econ...
http://doras.dcu.ie/16977/
Marked
Mark
Boy Cultures and the Performance of Teenage Masculinities
(2007)
Barnes, Cliona, (Thesis)
Boy Cultures and the Performance of Teenage Masculinities
(2007)
Barnes, Cliona, (Thesis)
Abstract:
<p>This thesis is a response to negative media and public portrayals of young white working class men in Ireland It is prompted by the emergence into the public sphere of the Department of Education and Science’s Exploring Masculinities programme, a curriculum initiative designed to counter perceived problematic elements of youthful masculinity. This programme initiated a debate in the Irish media on men and boys, and gave a particular Irish dimension to the international focus on issues and questions about masculinity, social class and youth culture. My research seeks to uncover what lies behind increasingly negative and intransigent portrayals of young white working class men in Ireland who are, through their ‘deviant subcultures’, commonly presented as possessing or embodying a threat to established, middle class social norms and values. My focus throughout is on uncovering and generating an understanding of not only the material elements of the lived culture of young ...
http://arrow.dit.ie/appadoc/5
Displaying Results 26 - 50 of 519 on page 2 of 21
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Bibtex
CSV
EndNote
RefWorks
RIS
XML
Item Type
Book (13)
Book chapter (80)
Conference item (81)
Doctoral thesis (24)
Journal article (234)
Master thesis (research) (1)
Master thesis (taught) (9)
Report (49)
Review (4)
Working paper (6)
Other (18)
Institution
Dublin City University (44)
NUI Galway (21)
NUI Maynooth (273)
Trinity College Dublin (30)
University College Cork (3)
University College Dublin (11)
University of Limerick (8)
Dublin Institute of Technology (129)
Peer Review Status
Peer reviewed (335)
Non peer reviewed (173)
Unknown (11)
Year
2012 (11)
2011 (69)
2010 (60)
2009 (60)
2008 (60)
2007 (57)
2006 (46)
2005 (30)
2004 (22)
2003 (18)
2002 (17)
2001 (14)
2000 (12)
1999 (6)
1998 (4)
1997 (6)
1996 (5)
1995 (4)
1994 (2)
1993 (4)
1992 (2)
1991 (3)
1988 (1)
1982 (1)
1981 (1)
Language
English (114)
Italian (1)
built by Enovation Solutions