Posted by Stephen Dunne in School of Business Blog on January 14, 2015
Lecturer in Social Theory and Consumption at the School, Stephen Dunne, attempts to renew a recent academic argument through a more accessible medium Social scientists engage in debates which matter to people other than themselves. Very often, however, those potentially publicly meaningful debates preside within academic journals which regularly assume a lot of terminological familiarity and disposable […]
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Academia, Academic Freedom, Academic Journals, Blogging, Centre for Philosophy and Political Economy (CPPE), Critique, Debate, Jargon, Leicester Sociology, Michel Foucault, Norbert Elias, Open Access, Open Access Publishing, Pay Wall, Philosophy, Political Philosophy, Public Debate, Publishing, Rhetoric, Social Science, Sociology, The Civilising Process |
Posted by Rutvica Andrijasevic in School of Business Blog on November 10, 2014
Rutvica Andrijasevic, Lecturer in Employment Studies at the School, overviews some provisional findings from the research she has been doing into the ongoing protest While ‘Occupy Central’ has become the umbrella term applied to Hong Kong’s ongoing mobilisations, three less heeded groups are also playing very active roles within it. Scholarism, founded by Joshua […]
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Admiralty, Barricades, Benny Tau, Causeway Bay, Chan Kin, Chu Yiu, Citizenship, Consumer Culture, Consumerism, Cyber-Politics, Debate, Democracy, Electoral Reform, Ethnography, Federation of Students, Hong Kong, Joshua Wong, Kowloon, Mobilisation, Mong Kok, Occupy, Occupy Central, Occupy Central with Love and Peace, Occupy Hong Kong, Police, Politics, Poverty, Protest, Protest Camps, Public Debate, Scholarism, Sociology, Solidarity, Sovereignty, Student Protest, surveillance, Tiananmen Square |
Posted by Thomas Swann in School of Business Blog on August 20, 2014
Thomas Swann, Graduate Teaching Assistant at the School and the recent recipient of a Times Higher Education Best Essay Prize, encourages us to pay more attention to the Grassroots of the movement toward Scottish Independence Those who struggled through the recently televised debate between between Alex Salmond and Alistair Darling witnessed a pretty dour affair. […]
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Alistair Darling, Broadcast, Campaigns, Debate, Driech, Grassroots, NGO, Nuclear Disarmament, Political Economy, Political Philosophy, Politics, Radical Theory, Referendum, Scotland, Scottish Independence, Scottish National Party, Social Justice, Yes Campaign |
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