emmakjackson.com
On the mis/uses of Sunderland as Brexit symbol | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/2016/07/08/on-the-misuses-of-sunderland-as-brexit-symbol
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. On the mis/uses of Sunderland as Brexit symbol. July 8, 2016. I wrote this post for the ‘ Mapping Immigration Controversy. 8216; blog – on how Sunderland was being used as ‘Brexit-town’. Photo from Right to Remain. On election night I always proudly watch as my hometown is first to declare. First to declare and always Labour, although the worrying UKIP proportion. Piece (yes, even the New York Times is sending journalists to Sun...
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Indie Music’s Women Problem and Retrospective Sexism | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/2015/10/19/indie-musics-women-problem-and-retrospective-sexism/comment-page-1
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. Indie Music’s Women Problem and Retrospective Sexism. October 19, 2015. I really enjoyed the first and second episodes of ‘ Music For Misfits. I started to realise that women were almost entirely absent. The only woman talking on screen for the first 55 minutes of the hour-long show was journalist Sian Pattenden. One lone woman’s voice among countless men covering nearly 25 years of indie music history. Calls a cultural Clampdown.
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Watching ‘Capital’ Part 2: : Everyday encounters, multiculture and racism | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/2015/12/01/watching-capital-part-2-everyday-encounters-multiculture-and-racism
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. Watching ‘Capital’ Part 2: : Everyday encounters, multiculture and racism. December 1, 2015. Ahmed (ADEEL AKHTAR), Petunia (GEMMA JONES) – (C) Kudos – Photographer: Hal Shinnie. The first episode of Capital. The impact of living in cities on our social interactions is one that has preoccupied sociologists and philosophers since the Nineteenth Century. Engels. Looks at the crowds of people in London, ignoring each other:. After r...
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April | 2016 | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/2016/04
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. Skip to secondary content. Monthly Archives: April 2016. For a feminist punk sociology: collaboration as rebellious sociology? April 28, 2016. My ten minute talk from the BSA Postgraduate Day, 5. April 2016 on a panel about ‘Rebellious Sociology’*. What I want to do in my 10 mins is to explore another possible route through what Dave Beer. Has termed ‘ punk sociology. Fanzine this cartoon from the Sniffin Glue fanzine,. Doing It...
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Books | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/books
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. Young Homeless People and Urban Space’. This ethnographic exploration of contemporary spaces of homelessness takes an expanded view of homeless space, threading together experiences of organizational spaces, routes taken through the city and the occupation of public space. Through engaging with participants’ accounts of movement and place, the book argues that young homeless people become fixed in mobility. Must we burn Croydon?
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London: What happened to Social Mobility in the Arts? | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/2016/01/06/london-what-happened-to-social-mobility-in-the-arts
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. London: What happened to Social Mobility in the Arts? January 6, 2016. At the end of last year, I was part of a panel discussion arranged by CREATE London. On the issue of London and the future of London as a creative place. The full video of the debate has just been put online and is available here. The panel had quite divergent opinions which kept things interesting. The panel was chaired by Zoe Williams. White people in the a...
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Radio and Podcasts | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/radio-and-podcasts
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. New Books Network Podcast. Interview with Dr Dave O’Brien. 8216; The Last Word. 8216; tribute to Doreen Massey (Radio 4). 8216; Thinking Allowed. 8216; discussion of ‘Young Homeless People and Urban Space: Fixed in Mobility’ and its selection for the 2016 BSA Thinking Allowed Ethnography award. Appearance speaking on gentrification, social mix and the middle classes in London (Radio 4). Podcast for ‘Sociology’.
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Bowling Together? | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/2016/04/19/bowling-together
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. April 19, 2016. I finally got round to putting up my current research project on the Goldsmiths Sociology Research. Much more to come on this project but here’s the blurb…. 8216;‘The Choreography of Everyday Multiculture: Bowling together? This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). Blog at WordPre...
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Why the UK housing market is brutal if you’re young, LGBT and homeless | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/2016/03/22/why-the-uk-housing-market-is-brutal-if-youre-young-lgbt-and-homeless
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. Why the UK housing market is brutal if you’re young, LGBT and homeless. March 22, 2016. Published online today by Guardian Housing Network. Young lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people have long been over-represented among the homeless, with research from the Albert Kennedy Trust finding that this demographic comprises up to 24% of the young homeless population. While conducting sociological research. Changes in el...
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Journal articles | Emma Jackson
https://emmakjackson.com/journal-articles
Sociologist: cities, place, practices of belonging. Skip to primary content. Jackson, E and Butler, T. ‘ Revisiting ‘social tectonics’: The middle classes and social mix in gentrifying neighbourhoods. 8216; Urban Studies Published online before print September 5, 2014, doi: 10.1177/0042098014547370. Jackson, E. and Benson, M. (2014) ‘ Neither ‘Deepest, Darkest Peckham’ nor ‘Run-of-the-Mill’ East Dulwich: The middle classes and their others in an inner London neighbourhood. Lots of Planets Have a North.