This seminar is designed for researchers who are interested in exploring, through their empirical work, psycho-social approaches to mixing (or mixedness, mixity) in contexts of ‘intimacy’.
Dr Stephanie Taylor’s book Narratives of Identity and Place has recently been published on Routledge. The book investigates the continuing importance of place for women’s identities, employing a theoretical and empirical approach based on previous work in narrative and discursive psychology.
This book launch celebrates the release of Dr Stephanie Taylor’s Narratives of Identity and Place (Routledge, 2009), which investigates the continuing importance of place for women’s identities, employing a theoretical and empirical approach based on previous work in narrative and discursive psychology.
In this podcast from CCIG Forum 3 (7 April 2009) Professor Çiğdem Kağitçibaşi of Koç University, Istanbul, gives a seminar on autonomy and relatedness in different cultural contexts.
This is the second of two roundtable discussions that launched the new books of 13 members of the Centre for Citizenship, Identities and Governance. The discussion, focused on Identities, included Kath Woodward, Jane McCarthy, Sarah Neal, Helen Lucey, Darren Langdridge and Wendy Hollway. The discussion was chaired by Professor Ann Phoenix.
This is the first of two roundtable discussions that launched the new books of 13 members of the Centre for Citizenship, Identities and Governance. The discussion, focused on Citizenship and Governance, included John Clarke, Janet Newman, Michael Saward, Paul Lewis, Jef Huysmans, Margaret Wetherell, Celia Davies and Elizabeth Barnett.
Professor Margie Wetherell has been awarded a competitive one-year ESRC Director's Research Fellowship, which are awarded to former Directors of large ESRC investments (in this case the Identities and Social Action programme). The award will allow a final round of research development and publication.
The aim for this ESRC-funded work is to extend the implications of Professor Wendy Holloway’s recent empirical project on the identity transition involved in becoming a mother to wider theoretical, methodological, epistemological and applied questions raised by a psycho-social approach to identi
Prof Steven Brown from the University of Leicester will be visiting The Open University, to present a paper drawn from a larger project on 'psychology without foundations' exploring the potential of reflexively founded process thought for the discipline.