Content
2019, Volume 7, Issue 3
- 136-153 Medium and Long-Term Returns to Professional Education in Switzerland: Explaining Differences between Occupational Fields
by Fabian Sander & Irene Kriesi - 154-176 The Signal and the Noise: The Impact of the Bologna Process on Swiss Graduates’ Monetary Returns to Higher Education
by David Glauser & Christoph Zangger & Rolf Becker - 177-201 ‘Virtuous’ and ‘Vicious’ Circles? Adults’ Participation in Different Types of Training in the UK and Its Association with Wages
by Daria Luchinskaya & Peter Dickinson - 202-223 Does Vocational Education Give a Labour Market Advantage over the Whole Career? A Comparison of the United Kingdom and Switzerland
by Maïlys Korber - 224-253 Vocational Education and Employment: Explaining Cohort Variations in Life Course Patterns
by Fabian Kratz & Alexander Patzina & Corinna Kleinert & Hans Dietrich - 254-269 The Interplay between Education, Skills, and Job Quality
by Alexandra Wicht & Nora Müller & Simone Haasler & Alexandra Nonnenmacher - 270-281 "I Didn’t Have the Luxury to Wait": Understanding the University-to-Work Transition among Second-Generations in Britain
by Jawiria Naseem
2019, Volume 7, Issue 2
- 1-3 Exhausted Women, Exhausted Welfare and the Role of Religion
by Martha Middlemiss Lé Mon - 4-13 Welfare State Supporter and Civil Society Activist: Church of Sweden in the “Refugee Crisis” 2015
by Jonas Ideström & Stig Linde - 14-23 Faith-Based Organisations as Welfare Providers in Brazil: The Conflict over Gender in Cases of Domestic Violence
by Kim Beecheno - 24-32 Making Structural Change with Relational Power: A Gender Analysis of Faith-Based Community Organizing
by Sarah B. Garlington & Margaret R. Durham Bossaller & Jennifer A. Shadik & Kerri A. Shaw - 33-43 Making Gendered Healthcare Work Visible: Over-Looked Labour in Four Diverse European Settings
by Hannah Bradby & Jenny Phillimore & Beatriz Padilla & Tilman Brand - 44-47 Religion, Gender, and Social Welfare: Considerations Regarding Inclusion
by Susan Crawford Sullivan - 48-52 The European Refugee Controversy: Civil Solidarity, Cultural Imaginaries and Political Change
by Robin Vandevoordt & Gert Verschraegen - 53-63 Responding to the Dutch Asylum Crisis: Implications for Collaborative Work between Civil Society and Governmental Organizations
by Robert Larruina & Kees Boersma & Elena Ponzoni - 64-73 Making Volunteering with Refugees Governable: The Contested Role of ‘Civil Society’ in the German Welcome Culture
by Larissa Fleischmann - 74-84 Solidarity as a Field of Political Contention: Insights from Local Reception Realities
by Miriam Haselbacher - 85-95 Use-Values for Inclusion: Mobilizing Resources in Popular Education for Newly Arrived Refugees in Sweden
by Nedžad Mešić & Magnus Dahlstedt & Andreas Fejes & Sofia Nyström - 96-105 “It’s That Kind of Place Here”: Solidarity, Place-Making and Civil Society Response to the 2015 Refugee Crisis in Wales, UK
by Taulant Guma & Michael Woods & Sophie Yarker & Jon Anderson - 106-117 Eroding Rights, Crafting Solidarity? Shifting Dynamics in the State–Civil Society Nexus in Flanders and Brussels
by Robin Vandevoordt - 118-127 Taking Care of the Other: Visions of a Caring Integration in Female Refugee Support Work
by Sophia Schmid - 128-138 Buddy Schemes between Refugees and Volunteers in Germany: Transformative Potential in an Unequal Relationship?
by Inka Stock - 139-148 Humanitarianism as Politics: Civil Support Initiatives for Migrants in Milan’s Hub
by Giulia Sinatti - 149-164 Rearranging Differential Inclusion through Civic Solidarity: Loose Coupling in Mentorship for “Unaccompanied Minors”
by Eberhard Raithelhuber - 165-175 More or Less Political: Findings on a Central Feature of Local Engagement for Refugees in Germany
by Verena Schmid & Adalbert Evers & Georg Mildenberger - 176-186 The Imagination of the Other in a (Post-)Sectarian Society: Asylum Seekers and Refugees in the Divided City of Belfast
by Ulrike M. Vieten & Fiona Murphy - 187-197 The Discursive Appeal to Solidarity and Partisan Journalism in Europe’s Migration Crisis
by Stefan Wallaschek - 198-207 Solidarity Cities and Cosmopolitanism from Below: Barcelona as a Refugee City
by Óscar García Agustín & Martin Bak Jørgensen - 208-218 Challenging the Nation-State from within: The Emergence of Transmunicipal Solidarity in the Course of the EU Refugee Controversy
by Christiane Heimann & Sandra Müller & Hannes Schammann & Janina Stürner - 219-229 Reimagining a Transnational Right to the City: No Border Actions and Commoning Practices in Thessaloniki
by Charalampos Tsavdaroglou
2019, Volume 7, Issue 1
- 1-6 Access to Higher Education: An Instrument for Fair Societies?
by Gaële Goastellec & Jussi Välimaa - 7-17 Expanding Access to Higher Education and Its (Limited) Consequences for Social Inclusion: The Brazilian Experience
by Elizabeth Balbachevsky & Helena Sampaio & Cibele Yahn de Andrade - 18-27 School Market in Quebec and the Reproduction of Social Inequalities in Higher Education
by Pierre Canisius Kamanzi - 28-37 Second-Chance Alternatives and Maintained Inequality in Access to Higher Education in Israel
by Eyal Bar-Haim & Carmel Blank - 38-51 Who Goes to College via Access Routes? A Comparative Study of Widening Participation Admission in Selective Universities in Ireland and England
by Katriona O’Sullivan & Delma Byrne & James Robson & Niall Winters - 52-60 The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and Choices
by Melanie Walker - 61-70 The Widening Participation Agenda in German Higher Education: Discourses and Legitimizing Strategies
by Julia Mergner & Liudvika Leišytė & Elke Bosse - 71-79 Refugee Students’ Access to Three European Universities: An Ethnographic Study
by Katrin Sontag - 80-89 Reliability of Longitudinal Social Surveys of Access to Higher Education: The Case of Next Steps in England
by Nadia Siddiqui & Vikki Boliver & Stephen Gorard - 90-100 Equal Access to the Top? Measuring Selection into Finnish Academia
by Jouni Helin & Kristian Koerselman & Terhi Nokkala & Timo Tohmo & Jutta Viinikainen - 101-110 Open House? Class-Specific Career Opportunities within German Universities
by Frerk Blome & Christina Möller & Anja Böning - 111-113 People with Disabilities: The Overlooked Consumers
by Kirsi Laitala & Anita Borch - 114-123 Disabled Mothering? Outlawed, Overlooked and Severely Prohibited: Interrogating Ableism in Motherhood
by Julia N. Daniels - 124-135 Dressing a Demanding Body to Fit In: Clean and Decent with Ostomy or Chronic Skin Disease
by Kirsi Laitala & Ingun Grimstad Klepp - 136-151 User Involvement of People with Mild Disabilities in Technology Innovations: Does It Make a Difference?
by Anita Borch & Pål Strandbakken - 152-163 The Drake Music Project Northern Ireland: Providing Access to Music Technology for Individuals with Unique Abilities
by Koichi Samuels - 164-172 Publicly-Researchable Accessibility Information: Problems, Prospects and Recommendations for Inclusion
by Carol Kaufman-Scarborough - 173-179 Equal Access to Make Emergency Calls: A Case for Equal Rights for Deaf Citizens in Norway and Sweden
by Camilla Warnicke - 180-184 "Producing People" in Documents and Meetings in Human Service Organizations
by Malin Åkerström & Katarina Jacobsson - 185-195 Social Work on the Whiteboard: Governing by Comparing Performance
by Teres Hjärpe - 196-206 Digital Clients: An Example of People Production in Social Work
by Elizabeth Martinell Barfoed - 207-217 Documenting Practices in Human Service Organisations through Information Systems: When the Quest for Visibility Ends in Darkness
by Jochen Devlieghere & Rudi Roose - 218-227 Blend Gaps through Papers and Meetings? Collaboration between the Social Services and Jobcentres
by Renita Thedvall - 228-237 Gendered Practices in Child Protection: Shifting Mother Accountability and Father Invisibility in Situations of Domestic Violence
by Beth Archer-Kuhn & Stefan de Villiers - 238-247 “How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, Australia
by Jora Broerse - 248-258 Things Left Unwritten: Interview Accounts versus Institutional Texts in a Case of Detention Home Violence
by David Wästerfors - 259-268 Contingent Control and Wild Moments: Conducting Psychiatric Evaluations in the Home
by Robert M. Emerson & Melvin Pollner
2018, Volume 6, Issue 4
- 1-7 Gender Equality and Beyond: At the Crossroads of Neoliberalism, Anti-Gender Movements, “European” Values, and Normative Reiterations in the Nordic Model
by Katarina Giritli Nygren & Lena Martinsson & Diana Mulinari - 8-15 Basic Income: The Potential for Gendered Empowerment?
by Alison Koslowski & Ann-Zofie Duvander - 16-24 The Traps of International Scripts: Making a Case for a Critical Anthropology of Gender and Sexuality in Development
by Rahil Roodsaz & An Van Raemdonck - 25-35 Gender and Struggles for Equality in Mining Resistance Movements: Performing Critique against Neoliberal Capitalism in Sweden and Greece
by Angelika Sjöstedt Landén & Marianna Fotaki - 36-47 A New Service Class in the Public Sector? The Role of Femonationalism in Unemployment Policies
by Paula Mulinari - 48-58 Women’s Coalitions beyond the Laicism–Islamism Divide in Turkey: Towards an Inclusive Struggle for Gender Equality?
by Selin Çağatay - 59-66 When the Personal Is Always Political: Norwegian Muslims’ Arguments for Women’s Rights
by Hannah Helseth - 67-81 Solidarity in Head-Scarf and Pussy Bow Blouse: Reflections on Feminist Activism and Knowledge Production
by Lena Gemzöe - 82-94 Feminism as Power and Resistance: An Inquiry into Different Forms of Swedish Feminist Resistance and Anti-Genderist Reactions
by Mona Lilja & Evelina Johansson - 95-102 “Sweden Has Been Naïve”: Nationalism, Protectionism and Securitisation in Response to the Refugee Crisis of 2015
by Mathias Ericson - 103-106 Editorial: Students with Disabilities in Higher Education
by Geert Van Hove & Alice Schippers & Minne Bakker - 107-115 Contemporary Social Theory as a Tool to Understand the Experiences of Disabled Students in Higher Education
by Jonathan Harvey - 116-124 Disability Awareness, Training, and Empowerment: A New Paradigm for Raising Disability Awareness on a University Campus for Faculty, Staff, and Students
by Dana Roth & Timothy Pure & Samuel Rabinowitz & Carol Kaufman-Scarborough - 125-136 Disability in Higher Education: Explanations and Legitimisation from Teachers at Leipzig University
by Robert Aust - 137-148 Learning Experiences of Students Who Are Hard of Hearing in Higher Education: Case Study of a South African University
by Diane Bell & Estelle Swart - 149-157 Mind the Gap Between Higher Education and the Labour Market for Students with a Disability in the Netherlands: A Research Agenda
by Marjolein Büscher-Touwen & Marian de Groot & Lineke van Hal - 158-167 Inclusion in Norwegian Higher Education: Deaf Students’ Experiences with Lecturers
by Patrick Stefan Kermit & Sidsel Holiman - 168-181 Designing a Model for Facilitating the Inclusion of Higher Education International Students with Disabilities in South Africa
by Nina (HG) du Toit - 182-193 Fear of Stigmatisation among Students with Disabilities in Austria
by Sarah Zaussinger & Berta Terzieva - 194-206 Barriers to Higher Education for Students with Bipolar Disorder: A Critical Social Model Perspective
by Allison K. Kruse & Sushil K. Oswal - 207-217 “Everywhere We Go, People Seem to Know”: Mad Students and Knowledge Construction of Mental Illness in Higher Education
by Lieve Carette & Elisabeth De Schauwer & Geert Van Hove - 218-229 “Everyone Is Normal, and Everyone Has a Disability”: Narratives of University Students with Visual Impairment
by Nitsan Almog - 230-240 Pursuing Inclusive Higher Education in Egypt and Beyond through the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
by Janet E. Lord & Michael Ashley Stein - 241-243 The Inherent Value of Disability in Higher Education
by Benjamin J. Ostiguy
2018, Volume 6, Issue 3
- 1-5 Returns to Human Capital and the Incorporation of Highly-Skilled Workers in the Public and Private Sector of Major Immigrant Societies: An Introduction
by Neli Demireva & Ivana Fellini - 6-33 An Examination of Ethnic Hierarchies and Returns to Human Capital in the UK
by Wouter Zwysen & Neli Demireva - 34-47 Poor Returns to Origin-Country Education for Non-Western Immigrants in Italy: An Analysis of Occupational Status on Arrival and Mobility
by Ivana Fellini & Raffaele Guetto & Emilio Reyneri - 48-63 Employment Outcomes of Ethnic Minorities in Spain: Towards Increasing Economic Incorporation among Immigrants and the Second Generation?
by Mariña Fernández-Reino & Jonas Radl & María Ramos - 64-77 Employment Returns to Tertiary Education for Immigrants in Western Europe: Cross-Country Differences Before and After the Economic Crisis
by Raffaele Guetto - 78-103 Perfect for the Job? Overqualification of Immigrants and their Descendants in the Norwegian Labor Market
by Edvard N. Larsen & Adrian F. Rogne & Gunn E. Birkelund - 104-118 Incorporation of Immigrants and Second Generations into the French Labour Market: Changes between Generations and the Role of Human Capital and Origins
by Yaël Brinbaum - 119-141 Employment and Education–Occupation Mismatches of Immigrants and their Children in the Netherlands: Comparisons with the Native Majority Group
by Yassine Khoudja - 142-152 Returns to Foreign and Host Country Qualifications: Evidence from the US on the Labour Market Placement of Migrants and the Second Generation
by Sergio Lo Iacono & Neli Demireva - 153-161 Migration, Boundaries and Differentiated Citizenship: Contested Frameworks for Inclusion and Exclusion
by Terry Wotherspoon - 162-171 Differentiation of Rights in the Norwegian Welfare State: Hierarchies of Belonging and Humanitarian Exceptionalism
by Synnøve Bendixsen - 172-189 On “Genuine” and “Illegitimate” Refugees: New Boundaries Drawn by Discriminatory Legislation and Practice in the Field of Humanitarian Reception in Germany
by Anne-Kathrin Will - 190-200 No Recourse to Social Work? Statutory Neglect, Social Exclusion and Undocumented Migrant Families in the UK
by Andy Jolly - 201-209 ‘Damn It, I Am a Miserable Eastern European in the Eyes of the Administrator’: EU Migrants’ Experiences with (Transnational) Social Security
by Elisabeth Scheibelhofer & Clara Holzinger - 210-228 Becoming Citizen: Spatial and Expressive Acts when Strangers Move In
by Peter Kærgaard Andersen & Lasse Mouritzen & Kristine Samson - 229-236 Passing the Test? From Immigrant to Citizen in a Multicultural Country
by Elke Winter - 237-247 Fixed Narratives and Entangled Categorizations: Educational Problematizations in Times of Politicized and Stratified Migration
by Kenneth Horvath - 248-259 Political Integration in Practice: Explaining a Time-Dependent Increase in Political Knowledge among Immigrants in Sweden
by Per Adman & Per Strömblad - 260-269 A Migration Project in Retrospect: The Case of the Ageing Zero Generation in Emirdağ
by Christiane Timmerman & Meia Walravens & Joris Michielsen & Nevriye Acar & Lore Van Praag - 270-281 Integration Journey: The Social Mobility Trajectory of Ethnic Minority Groups in Britain
by Yaojun Li - 282-288 Sustainable Collaboration to Support Vulnerable Youth: Mental Health Support Teams in Upper Secondary School
by Cecilie Anvik & Ragnhild Holmen Waldahl - 289-300 Between Idealism and Pragmatism: Social Policies and Matthew Effect in Vocational Education and Training for Disadvantaged Youth in Switzerland
by Delia Pisoni - 301-309 The UK Government’s Troubled Families Programme: Delivering Social Justice?
by Stephen Crossley - 310-318 Individual or Structural Inequality? Access and Barriers in Welfare Services for Women Who Sell Sex
by Anette Brunovskis & May-Len Skilbrei - 319-326 Users’ Choice in Providing Services to the Most Vulnerable Homeless People
by Inger Lise Skog Hansen - 327-336 Housing First in Denmark: An Analysis of the Coverage Rate among Homeless People and Types of Shelter Users
by Lars Benjaminsen - 337-346 Foreign Immigrants in Depopulated Rural Areas: Local Social Services and the Construction of Welcoming Communities
by Rosario Sampedro & Luis Camarero
2018, Volume 6, Issue 2
- 1-11 Shallow Inclusion (or Integration) and Deep Exclusion: En-Dis-Abling Identities through Government Webpages in Hong Kong
by Alex Cockain - 12-21 Power, Ideology and Structure: The Legacy of Normalization for Intellectual Disability
by Murray K. Simpson - 22-33 Theorising Disability Care (Non-)Personalisation in European Countries: Comparing Personal Assistance Schemes in Switzerland, Germany, Sweden, and the United Kingdom
by Christoph Tschanz - 34-45 Workplace Adaptations Promoting the Inclusion of Persons with Disabilities in Mainstream Employment: A Case-Study on Employers’ Responses in Norway
by Yuliya Kuznetsova & João Paulo Cerdeira Bento - 46-55 Deaf Learners’ Experiences in Malaysian Schools: Access, Equality and Communication
by Khairul Farhah Khairuddin & Susie Miles & Wendy McCracken - 56-65 A Refamilialized System? An Analysis of Recent Developments of Personal Assistance in Sweden
by Dietmar Rauch & Elisabeth Olin & Anna Dunér - 66-73 ‘Evidence’ of Neglect as a Form of Structural Violence: Parents with Intellectual Disabilities and Custody Deprivation
by Hanna Björg Sigurjónsdóttir & James G. Rice - 74-82 Being a Disabled Patient: Negotiating the Social Practices of Hospitals in England
by Stuart Read & Val Williams & Pauline Heslop & Victoria Mason-Angelow & Caroline Miles - 83-86 Editorial: “Complex Religion: Intersections of Religion and Inequality”
by Melissa J. Wilde - 87-97 Colorblind Islam: The Racial Hinges of Immigrant Muslims in the United States
by Jeffrey Guhin - 98-106 Complexity Beyond Intersections: Race, Class, and Neighborhood Disadvantage among African American Muslims
by Pamela Prickett - 107-126 Religious Inequality in America
by Melissa J. Wilde & Patricia Tevington & Wensong Shen - 127-139 “You Help Them Out and God Gets the Glory:” Social Class and Inequality in a Fundamentalist Christian Church
by Lindsay W. Glassman - 140-150 “You’re Throwing Your Life Away”: Sanctioning of Early Marital Timelines by Religion and Social Class
by Patricia Tevington - 151-161 The Muslim Employment Gap, Human Capital, and Ethno-Religious Penalties: Evidence from Switzerland
by Anaïd Lindemann & Jörg Stolz - 162-172 Rethinking Canadian Discourses of “Reasonable Accommodation”
by Amélie Barras & Jennifer A. Selby & Lori G. Beaman - 173-180 Systems over Service: Changing Systems of Inequality through Congregational Political Engagement
by Rebecca Sager - 181-191 “It’s Not Equality”: How Race, Class, and Gender Construct the Normative Religious Self among Female Prisoners
by Rachel Ellis
2018, Volume 6, Issue 1
- 1-8 Achieving Disability Equality: Empowering Disabled People to Take the Lead
by Laufey Löve & Rannveig Traustadóttir & James Gordon Rice - 9-17 Dis-Equality: Exploring the Juxtaposition of Disability and Equality
by Bronagh Byrne - 18-28 Leveraging Employer Practices in Global Regulatory Frameworks to Improve Employment Outcomes for People with Disabilities
by Matthew C. Saleh & Susanne M. Bruyère - 29-39 Equality of What? The Capability Approach and the Right to Education for Persons with Disabilities
by Andrea Broderick - 40-50 Reasonable Accommodation as a Gateway to the Equal Enjoyment of Human Rights: From New York to Strasbourg
by Delia Ferri - 51-60 Disability, Access to Food and the UN CRPD: Navigating Discourses of Human Rights in the Netherlands
by Mitzi Waltz & Tanja Mol & Elinor Gittins & Alice Schippers - 61-72 Rehabilitation as a Disability Equality Issue: A Conceptual Shift for Disability Studies?
by Tom Shakespeare & Harriet Cooper & Dikmen Bezmez & Fiona Poland - 73-81 Inclusions and Exclusions in Rural Tanzanian Primary Schools: Material Barriers, Teacher Agency and Disability Equality
by Susie Miles & Jo Westbrook & Alison Croft - 82-93 Education, Work, and Motherhood in Low and Middle Income Countries: A Review of Equality Challenges and Opportunities for Women with Disabilities
by Belaynesh Tefera & Marloes L. van Engen & Alice Schippers & Arne H. Eide & Amber Kersten & Jac van der Klink - 94-109 Social Inclusion through Community Living: Current Situation, Advances and Gaps in Policy, Practice and Research
by Jan Šiška & Julie Beadle-Brown & Šárka Káňová & Pavlína Šumníková - 110-114 The Transformative Forces of Migration: Refugees and the Re-Configuration of Migration Societies
by Ulrike Hamann & Gökçe Yurdakul - 115-123 Mobile Peoples: Transversal Configurations
by Engin Isin - 124-134 Municipal Responses to ‘Illegality’: Urban Sanctuary across National Contexts
by Harald Bauder & Dayana A. Gonzalez - 135-146 Refugees’ Access to Housing and Residency in German Cities: Internal Border Regimes and Their Local Variations
by Nihad El-Kayed & Ulrike Hamann - 147-156 The Civil Society Dynamic of Including and Empowering Refugees in Canada’s Urban Centres
by Oliver Schmidtke - 157-165 Imperceptible Politics: Illegalized Migrants and Their Struggles for Work and Unionization
by Holger Wilcke - 166-175 Facing Precarious Rights and Resisting EU ‘Migration Management’: South European Migrant Struggles in Berlin
by Celia Bouali - 176-187 The Politics of Syrian Refugees in Turkey: A Question of Inclusion and Exclusion through Citizenship
by Sebnem Koser Akcapar & Dogus Simsek - 188-198 Dancing with ‘The Other’: Challenges and Opportunities of Deepening Democracy through Participatory Spaces for Refugees
by Maria Charlotte Rast & Halleh Ghorashi - 199-207 Who Undermines the Welfare State? Austerity-Dogmatism and the U-Turn in Swedish Asylum Policy
by Simone Scarpa & Carl-Ulrik Schierup
2017, Volume 5, Issue 4
- 1-4 Multilingualism and Social Inclusion
by László Marácz & Silvia Adamo - 5-13 Urban Multilingualism and the Civic University: A Dynamic, Non-Linear Model of Participatory Research
by Yaron Matras & Alex Robertson - 14-28 “Hindi Bayani/Not a Hero”: The Linguistic Landscape of Protest in Manila
by Jennifer Monje - 29-37 Language Planning and Policy, Law and (Post)Colonial Relations in Small Island States: A Case Study
by Herman Bröring & Eric Mijts - 38-47 Beyond the Nation-State? The Ideology of the Esperanto Movement between Neutralism and Multilingualism
by Federico Gobbo - 48-59 Politics of Multilingualism in Roma Education in Early Soviet Union and Its Current Projections
by Elena Marushiakova & Vesselin Popov - 60-68 Accommodating Multilingualism in Macedonia
by Renata Treneska-Deskoska - 69-77 Language Use and Social Inclusion in International Retirement Migration
by Per Gustafson & Ann Elisabeth Laksfoss Cardozo - 78-86 Language Provision in Education: A View from Scotland
by Róisín McKelvey - 87-97 Why Context Matters: Social Inclusion and Multilingualism in an Austrian School Setting
by Ulrike Jessner & Kerstin Mayr-Keiler - 98-107 Fostering Social Inclusion through Multilingual Habitus in Estonia: A Case Study of the Open School of Kalamaja and the Sakala Private School
by Svetlana L’nyavskiy-Ekelund & Maarja Siiner - 108-115 The Importance of Transport for Social Inclusion
by Janet Stanley & John Stanley - 116-131 Indicators of Socio-Spatial Transport Disadvantage for Inter-Island Transport Planning in Rural Philippine Communities
by David Cao & John Stanley & Janet Stanley - 132-146 Visualizing the Impacts of Movement Infrastructures on Social Inclusion: Graph-Based Methods for Observing Community Formations in Contrasting Geographic Contexts
by Jamie O'Brien & Laura García Vélez & Martin Zaltz Austwick - 147-160 ‘Forced Car Ownership’ in the UK and Germany: Socio-Spatial Patterns and Potential Economic Stress Impacts
by Giulio Mattioli - 161-174 Understanding Capabilities, Functionings and Travel in High and Low Income Neighbourhoods in Manila
by Robin Hickman & Mengqiu Cao & Beatriz Mella Lira & Alexis Fillone & Jose Bienvenido Biona - 175-182 Mobility-Related Economic Exclusion: Accessibility and Commuting Patterns in Industrial Zones in Turkey
by Nihan Akyelken - 183-195 The Kindness of Strangers: Exploring Interdependencies and Shared Mobilities of Elderly People in Rural Japan
by Fuyo (Jenny) Yamamoto & Junyi Zhang - 196-208 Transport Infrastructure and Social Inclusion: A Case Study of Tourism in the Region of Gilgit-Baltistan
by Asif Hussain & David Fisher & Stephen Espiner - 209-225 Analysing the Role of Social Visits on Migrants’ Social Capital: A Personal Network Approach
by Gil Viry & Olga Ganjour & Jacques-Antoine Gauthier & Emmanuel Ravalet & Eric D. Widmer - 226-234 Navigating Urban Life in Lisbon: A Study of Migrants’ Mobilities and Use of Space
by Franz Buhr & Jennifer McGarrigle - 235-250 Transport-Based Social Exclusion in Rural Japan: A Case Study on Schooling Trips of High School Students
by David Perez-Barbosa & Junyi Zhang
2017, Volume 5, Issue 3
- 1-6 Perspectives on the European Border Regime: Mobilization, Contestation and the Role of Civil Society
by Eva Youkhana & Ove Sutter - 7-16 Feeling the Scope of Solidarity: The Role of Emotions for Volunteers Supporting Refugees in Germany
by Serhat Karakayali - 17-27 The Myth of Apolitical Volunteering for Refugees: German Welcome Culture and a New Dispositif of Helping
by Larissa Fleischmann & Elias Steinhilper - 28-37 Demand and Deliver: Refugee Support Organisations in Austria
by Sara de Jong & Ilker Ataç - 38-48 Decolonial Perspectives on Charitable Spaces of “Welcome Culture” in Germany
by Katherine Braun - 49-57 The Noborder Movement: Interpersonal Struggle with Political Ideals
by Leslie Gauditz - 58-68 Under Control? Or Border (as) Conflict: Reflections on the European Border Regime
by Sabine Hess & Bernd Kasparek - 69-76 Transnational Solidarity—Not Aid: The Perspective of Migration on the Hype about Migration&Development
by Maria Schwertl - 77-88 Migration Regimes and the Translation of Human Rights: On the Struggles for Recognition of Romani Migrants in Germany
by Jure Leko - 89-92 Introduction to the Issue: “Promoting Children’s Participation in Research, Policy and Practice”
by Jo Aldridge - 93-103 A Clash of Conventions? Participation, Power and the Rights of Disabled Children
by Ralph Sandland - 104-112 Consultations with Children and Young People and Their Impact on Policy in Ireland
by Deirdre Horgan - 113-121 The Voices of Young Carers in Policy and Practice
by Daniel Phelps - 122-130 Children’s Participation: Questioning Competence and Competencies?
by Carine Le Borgne & E. Kay M. Tisdall - 131-147 Voice or Voice-Over? Harnessing the Relationship between a Child’s Right to Be Heard and Legal Agency through Norwegian Bullying Cases
by Sevda Clark - 148-154 Views of the Child Reports: Hearing Directly from Children Involved in Post-Separation Disputes
by Rachel Birnbaum - 155-163 Acknowledging Children’s Voice and Participation in Family Courts: Criteria that Guide Western Australian Court Consultants
by Vicki Banham & Alfred Allan & Jennifer Bergman & Jasmin Jau - 164-171 A Political Space for Children? The Age Order and Children’s Right to Participation
by Jeanette Sundhall - 172-182 Inclusion as Ethics, Equity and/or Human Rights? Spotlighting School Mathematics Practices in Scotland and Globally
by Dalene M. Swanson & Hong-Lin Yu & Stella Mouroutsou - 183-194 Incorporating Children and Young People’s Voices in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services Using The Family Model
by Benjamin Hoadley & Freya Smith & Cecilia Wan & Adrian Falkov - 195-206 Educating Future Planners about Working with Children and Young People
by Julie Rudner - 207-218 Achieving Child Friendly Justice through Child Friendly Methods: Let’s Start with the Right to Information
by Helen Stalford & Liam Cairns & Jeremy Marshall - 219-227 Doing It Write: Representation and Responsibility in Writing Up Participatory Research Involving Young People
by Catherine Wilkinson & Samantha Wilkinson - 228-239 Saying It Like It Is? Power, Participation and Research Involving Young People
by Emma Davidson - 240-250 Advocating for a More Relational and Dynamic Model of Participation for Child Researchers
by Christina R. Ergler - 251-261 Youth Reflexivity as Participatory Research in Senegal: A Field Study of Reciprocal Learning and Incremental Transformations
by Richard Maclure
2017, Volume 5, Issue 2
- 1-2 Perspectives on Human Trafficking and Modern Forms of Slavery
by Siddharth Kara - 3-15 Freedom, Commerce, Bodies, Harm: The Case of Backpage.com
by Elizabeth Swanson - 16-27 The UK’s Modern Slavery Legislation: An Early Assessment of Progress
by Gary Craig - 28-38 Trafficking and Syrian Refugee Smuggling: Evidence from the Balkan Route
by Danilo Mandic