Working Class Literature, Emma O’Neill-Sandham
A conversation about Western Sydney Literature and Working Class Literature with creative writer Emma O’Neill-Sandham who is a PhD researcher at the University of Sydney. Emma’s research and …
With #SocialMobility, it can be rare to meet others who share the experience. I appreciated this conversation with a fellow PhD researcher who is also a #FirstGen scholar. Emma is a creative writer whose research relates to working class literature.
wideopenairexchange.com/2025/05/10/w...
01.08.2025 01:52 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Irish poet Anne Casey
Dr Anne Casey is an internationally acclaimed poet from west Clare in Ireland. Throughout this conversation, Anne kindly reads and introduces several of her poems and shares insights from her acade…
For St Patrick's Day, I spoke with Irish poet Dr Anne Casey about her doctoral research on the Great Irish Famine and her approach to 'reviving lost histories through poetics of resistance'. The podcast includes poetry readings by Anne.
wideopenairexchange.com/2025/03/17/i...
#AcademicSky
17.03.2025 07:03 — 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Title page: Respectability, Identity, Stigma, and the Politics of Social Control in Unequal Societies
Hakeem Jefferson
February 8, 2025
Abstract
Respectability: Identity, Stigma, and the Politics of Social Control in Unequal Societies critiques and extends prevailing ideas about shared identity by examining how the burdens of collective costs complicate group solidarity. While shared identity often fosters cohesion, this book demonstrates how stigma and structural inequality impose unique pressures on Black Americans and other marginalized groups, leading not only to solidarity but also to intragroup surveillance, policing, and punishment. Respectability politics is a particularly salient manifestation of these dynamics, emerging in response to stigma and inequality. Although rooted in the Black American experience, respectability politics reflects broader patterns that appear across cultures and contexts, where marginalized groups contend with shared burdens and their consequences.
A key contribution of this book is the development of the Respectability Politics Scale (RPS), a novel measure that provides a systematic way to study respectability politics and its consequences. This scale allows for empirical exploration of how respectability politics shapes attitudes toward punitive policies, intragroup dynamics, and broader systems of control. By introducing the concept of perceptions of collective costs—the belief that individual behavior reflects on and affects the group as a whole—this work situates respectability politics within a larger framework of identity, stigma, and social control.
Through rigorous empirical evidence and comparative insights, this book not only illuminates respectability politics as a critical lens for understanding intragroup dynamics but also demonstrates its broader relevance to understanding systems of control in unequal societies worldwide. By doing so, it offers a path forward for scholars and practitioners seeking to challenge and transform these dynamics.
Finally coming up for air! The preliminary draft of my book is officially in the hands of the book workshop attendees. Feels crazy to step out from under the urgent writing grind. Excited (and a little nervous) to hear their thoughts, but for now, I’m gonna enjoy the breather.
08.02.2025 23:08 — 👍 411 🔁 48 💬 13 📌 1
Power in International Politics | International Organization | Cambridge Core
Power in International Politics - Volume 59 Issue 1
I’m presenting a paper on Barnett and Duvall’s taxonomy of power at UVA today exactly 20 yrs since it was published in @iojournal.bsky.social. Originating in IR, the taxonomy guides my research on domestic social policy issues.
#AcademicSky #Polisky #PolicySky
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
09.01.2025 12:52 — 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Our new research digest is out 👇. If you have anything on political and economic inequality, accountability or distributive politics coming out in the next four weeks and would like it featured in our next digest let us know!
10.12.2024 08:10 — 👍 3 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
Calling all social scientists whose work touches on offshore finance! Please submit your work to the special issue of the journal Socio-Economic Review that I'll be guest editing with my fellow sociologist Kimberly Kay Hoang & historian Vanessa Ogle. Due date:15 May.
academic.oup.com/ser/pages/cf...
08.12.2024 06:00 — 👍 75 🔁 47 💬 4 📌 5
Is wealth inequality bad for growth?
Will Snell, Chief Executive @fairness.bsky.social , argues that it is 👇 https://t.co/OGanUjLC3J
06.12.2024 16:10 — 👍 12 🔁 7 💬 2 📌 0
Fascinating paper on where 6000 global elites went to college. Billionaires, CEOs, heads of state, central bankers, etc.
In a word: Harvard.
Fully 10% of global elites went to Harvard. Elite US schools are over-represented (23% IvyPlus), but nobody comes close to Harvard.
🧵
06.12.2024 19:12 — 👍 721 🔁 299 💬 37 📌 79
Yes, it's not because wealthy people are naturally more intelligent or capable: access to opportunity makes a difference to outcomes.
22.11.2024 09:38 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
👋
22.11.2024 07:25 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
I imagine this is snow covered today! My Oxford college was Pembroke where I was the MCR Access Rep interested in socioeconomic outreach.
22.11.2024 05:44 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Join the Stone Center Team!
We’re searching for Postdoctoral Scholars with research priorities in wealth inequality and intergenerational mobility. 1 year renewable position, starting summer 2025.
Apply by January 31, 2025.
Application Link: bit.ly/4eGP0Rp
21.11.2024 20:07 — 👍 59 🔁 46 💬 1 📌 2
Looking at the findings of this paper, there is greater intergenerational persistence of socioeconomic status for farmers, judges, doctors, and professors, and for occupational classes in which more inequality of opportunity is found? Thanks!
22.11.2024 05:02 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
This is a great tip! Someone shared this with me in a different vocational setting a few years ago and it was a huge time saver for answering common questions and requests. After you've inserted the signature template, you can still tinker with it to make it more personal if you wish.
22.11.2024 03:29 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
I created this list a couple of days ago based on some people I know about but there has been a ton of new arrivals--please let me know who else to include. Also, this is an interdisciplinary list! #EconSky #Sociology #PoliSky #Demography
go.bsky.app/T667spi
14.11.2024 15:59 — 👍 121 🔁 60 💬 69 📌 4
👋Thanks very much for creating this list. This is the topic of my PhD project (and my lived experience).
19.11.2024 06:03 — 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Good advice, thanks.
19.11.2024 04:58 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Just to make sure that our new generation of researchers does not get less attention than more senior scholars, I have made a starter pack with PhD researchers in Political Science go.bsky.app/MYHYycU
15.11.2024 12:11 — 👍 463 🔁 185 💬 53 📌 5
I couldn’t find the Starter Pack I wanted, so I had to crest it myself - please let me know if you or someone you know belongs on it as I slowly work to build it between chasing a ten month old around. go.bsky.app/QJY9Nup #polisci #politics #policy
19.11.2024 02:54 — 👍 55 🔁 16 💬 15 📌 1
This line from the story about tribal land rights speaks volumes:
'The property, described by Tribal leaders as "the lungs" of their ancestral lands...'
That's an impressive metaphor (or is it an analogy)
19.11.2024 04:45 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
I'm treading 😂
19.11.2024 04:17 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
This is well done and informative. In my former vocational life, I had 12 yrs working in news-talk radio production and there's a high degree of difficulty with being this efficient in broadcast communication. Tip of the hat to you!
(I've seen "skeet" used as the BSky word for "tweet")
19.11.2024 04:14 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Thanks. I am new here and trying to find where I fit!
19.11.2024 03:47 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Great idea. I've been looking around Bluesky for other first gens in academia. I'm a PhD researcher. My parents finished school aged around 14 and 15.
18.11.2024 10:04 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Yes, please! If there is still room, I'd like to be added. Thank you for being inclusive of PhD researchers. I'm new around here.
18.11.2024 09:49 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Brilliant. This post is underappreciated.
18.11.2024 09:18 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Professor of Comparative Politics
Sociologist studying social stratification, the life course, gender and the labor market, and health disparities
Max Weber fellow @EUI_EU
https://camportier.wordpress.com
Official journal of the Australian Political Studies Association (@auspsa.bsky.social). Find us at https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/cajp20
We are a network of London-based scholars interested in socio-economic inequality. Join our events and workshops!
Coordinated by @cmtneztt.bsky.social, @valentinaconsil.bsky.social, @marcoranaldi.bsky.social, @mikbavaro.bsky.social and @yonatanberman.com
🦕 PhD in Paleontology 🦖 Soon a Researcher at CUHK 香港中文大学 🦇 Museum Collections Curator ⚒ Drawing Dinosaurs 🦖 1st Gen in Academia 🧳 Immigrant
Reputation management and privacy lawyer by day. CEO of a social mobility charity, @acceptedcharity.bsky.social / 'BVL' by night. All views my own
Email me: victoria.anderson@accepted.org.uk
Assistant professor of political science. I think about identity, stigma, race, and politics more than any normal person should. Lover of life. Pro-democracy.
People should dance more.
Not Hakeem Jeffries, the Minority Leader.
Peer-reviewed journal of the American Political Science Association, cultivating a political science public sphere.
https://apsanet.org/publications/journals/perspectives-on-politics/
International Organization is peer-reviewed journal, covering a wide range of topics in international relations and global politics.
Editorial team: @bashleyleeds.bsky.social @laynamosley.bsky.social @peterrosendorff.bsky.social @aysezarakol.bsky.social
PS: Political Science & Politics is the journal of record for the discipline. Email: ps@apsanet.org. Co-editors: Lina Benabdallah, Justin Esarey, Peter Siavelis, Betina Wilkinson.
Millennium publishes critical scholarship in international studies, rewriting International Relations since 1971. Posting as Vol. 54.
Professor of Sociology, Dartmouth;views my own. Author, 'Capital w/out Borders' https://shorturl.at/bGsLB and 'Offshore' https://shorturl.at/rTacl; words
@washingtonpost.com, @nytimes.com, the Atlantic & the Guardian.
All at brookeharrington.com
Yale-trained economist thinking about labor, organizational, and personnel economics. RTs, likes, or interactions =/= endorsements.
https://soumitrashukla.github.io/
Development economist, @Yale / @UniofOxford / @MIT. Asso editor, REHO + CER. Editorial board member, BMC Public Health + PloS One. Structural transformation, agriculture, gender, IPV. Views my own
Economist: Labo(u)r, Macro, Inequality || Ass't Prof @MITSloan @MIT_IWER || Nonres fellow @piie
Econ prof @dartmouth, founder devdatalab.org
r2: a morass of disjointed streams of consciousness
🤷♂️
Professor socioeconomic inequalities in health (@ Maastricht University) and lector citizen science for health (@Avans University of Applied Sciences).
Based in the Netherlands. Posts in Dutch and English.
The Australian Journal of Public Administration is committed to the study and practice of public administration, public management and policy making (since 1937)
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/14678500
Lecturer and researcher, Royal Holloway, University of London. Interested in all things class, culture, education, equality, history, museums
Lecturer in Work and Organisations at University of Stirling. Research on labour markets, policy, politics, and what to have for lunch...