GCU Home Site Admin

Find Audio & Video » Search

Not logged in » Log in

13 results were found for the query:

Records where keywords include: 'Sociology'

Sort: » A-Z | » Z-A | » Newer first | » Older first | » Shorter first | » Longer first

Subscribe: Atom Feed RSS Feed Subscribe with Bloglines

N.B. Registered users can also subscribe to podcasts of search results

BBC BREAKFAST NEWS
Main prog inc items on Stephen LAWRENCE; C.A.P; Snow; Tennis; Kosovo; Nigeria Oscars; Racism in Police. Presented by John NICOLSON & Sophie RAWORTH. Prog includes S.E. News,Sports News, Weather and Papers Review. Business news... » Show rest
Heart of the matter - Sanctions
David JESSEL pres prog in which striking teenage Dublin shopworkers, Mary MANNING & Karen GEARON, confront top businessmen on ? of sanctions v S.A.
THINKING ALLOWED - THE GANG AS STREET ORGANISATION
What happens when a violent gang tries to refashion itself as a political movement and the authorities don't want to know? Regardless of motive, actions have meanings and consequences that neither side may have foreseen. David... » Show rest
THINKING ALLOWED - TRANSVESTITES
Laurie Taylor turns his mind to sartorial matters: could it be that you are what you wear? Dr Charlotte Suthrell author of Unzipping Gender: Sex, Cross-Dressing and Culture joins Laurie Taylor to discuss her cross-cultural study... » Show rest
THINKING ALLOWED - SINGLE WOMEN
Jan MacVarish's latest paper, Understanding the 'Popularity' of Living Alone, contains the results of her 10 years' study of single women. The research looked at the representation and identity of single women: are... » Show rest
THINKING ALLOWED - JUVENILE OFFENDING and LONG-TERM CRIMINALS
A new study brings up to date the stories of fifty men first encountered as boys in an American reform school in the 1950s. Laurie Taylor meets Professor John Laub to find out what the boys subsequent biographies have to tell us about... » Show rest
THINKING ALLOWED - HOW UNWANTED ACTS BECOME CRIMES
The relationship between levels of crime and fear of crime continues to exercise academics and policy makers alike. Do soaring prison populations accurately reflect the former or the latter? Nils Christie, Professor of Criminology... » Show rest
THINKING ALLOWED - PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT
Following last weeks interview with Sociologist James Stockinger, Professor Peter Nolan talks to Laurie Taylor on the uniqueness of the British the public sector ethos and finds out why its employees, despite being the most motivated,... » Show rest
THINKING ALLOWED - SHYNESS
Susie Scott, Research Associate in the School of Social Sciences at Cardiff University, spent three years collecting personal stories and accounts of people who see themselves as shy, exploring the social context in which this feeling... » Show rest
THINKING ALLOWED - MULTICULTURALISM AND SECULARISM + MILLTOWN BOYS REVISITED
MULTICULTURALISM AND SECULARISM How appropriate is a western notion of secularism in dealing with the complexities of a multi- faith society? Laurie Taylor is joined by Rajeev Bhargava, Professor of Political Science at the University... » Show rest
THINKING ALLOWED - MANAGEMENT OF RISK IN EVERYDAY LIFE
Almost every decision a person makes involves some weighing up of the odds of success or failure and risk has become a popular area of sociological debate. Laurie Taylor talks to some delegates at the British Sociology Association's... » Show rest
THINKING ALLOWED - THE FAMILY + INEQUALITY
THE FAMILY In 1960 research was published on social change and kinship patterns in Swansea which showed how extended family networks operate. Forty years on, a group of social scientists decided to replicate the 1960 survey and track... » Show rest
Woman's Hour - Loneliness
Are we becoming more lonely? A recent report by the Economic and Social Research Council said that more Britons live alone than ever before - and loneliness seems to be the one thing all of us dread. But does living alone necessarily... » Show rest