Selected Articles

Undisciplining II The Sociological Review Foundation’s 2024 conference

Dates: to Location: The Lowry, Pier, 8 The Quays, Salford, Manchester M50 3AZ Book tickets for Undisciplining II

Just who is sociology for? At Undisciplining II, academics and educators, artists and activists, and thinkers and doers across many fields will come together to consider that question. Discounted early bird tickets are on sale now.

Uncommon Sense Season 3 Podcast returns with new ten-part series and fundraising campaign

Lively, listenable and sociologically informed, Uncommon Sense insists that sociology is for everyone. Returning on 15 March for its third season, the acclaimed podcast’s ten new episodes will feature special guests in conversation with hosts Rosie Hancock and Alexis Hieu Truong as they take a closer look at issues that touch us all, from privilege to paperwork and burnout to joy.

Concurrent with the launch of the third season of the Sociological Review Foundation’s flagship podcast, a fundraising campaign will give listeners the opportunity to support future Uncommon Sense episodes via one-off or regular donations.

Politics of Patents

Each month on our Instagram channel we present a selection of works from a visual artist that responds to our current theme.

“How have clothing inventors attempted to change the world stitch by stitch?” asks sociologist Kat Jungnickel, lead researcher of Politics of Patents, a research project exploring acts of citizenship and gendered resistance to sociopolitical norms via historical wearable inventions.

A collage of hand-drawn technical sketches showing wearable inventions on various bodies.

Patent illustrations of historic wearable tech.

Copyright 2024 Politics of Patents and the European Patent Office. All rights reserved.

Connected Sociologies

The Connected Sociologies Curriculum Project is a project of The Sociological Review. It is an educational platform that provides open-access resources for students, teachers and academics who are interested in decolonising school, college and university curricula.

Toussaint Louverture by Jeanne Menjoulet licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

The Seven Veils of Privacy by Kieron O’Hara

Reviewed by Kat Fuller
Kieron O’Hara
The Seven Veils of Privacy: How our Debates about Privacy Conceal its Nature
Manchester University Press,  2023

Throughout The Seven Veils of Privacy, computer scientist and philosopher Kieron O’Hara investigates a wide range of literature about privacy, searching for its definition. Academics, lawyers, politicians and laypeople have assumed the definition of privacy without ever explicitly questioning or stating its meaning, writes O’Hara.

Thanks for Typing

The Thanks for Typing Podcast is part of Ros Edwards’ and Val Gillies’ research journey uncovering the hidden impact of social researchers’ wives. In this six-episode podcast series, they explore how wives helped to shape classic works that set foundations for how modern sociology was thought of and carried out including investigations of communities, class and family life.

Spatial Delight

Spatial Delight is a ten-part podcast about space, society and power inspired by British geographer Doreen Massey. From a London laundromat to a public park in Berlin, from a contested waterfront in Kochi to the Egyptian desert, this series seeks to inspire listeners to think about space and place as full of power, and to imagine political alternatives to the current world order. Presented, written and produced by Dr Agata Lisiak, funded by the Volkswagen Foundation, and hosted by The Sociological Review.

Politics After the Pandemic

In Politics After the Pandemic, anthropologist Erica Lagalisse looks transnationally at cultural changes in the wake of the pandemic, its impact on capitalism and other structures of oppression, and considers how social movements, educators and researchers are responding. In a three-part mini-series, she speaks with Elżbieta Drążkiewicz about “conspiracy theory” as social critique.

Discover Society

Discover Society is a free online magazine of social research, analysis, and commentary.

Remembering Ranajit Guha Volume 4, Issue 1

Edited by John Holmwood, Discover Society’s first issue of 2024 remembers Ranajit Guha (1923–2023), the Indian historian, scholar and founding spirit of subaltern studies who led a long life of political engagement and scholarly reflection. Contributors: Alice Corble, Adi Cooper, Sanjay Seth, Gurminder K. Bhambra, Maya Unnithan, Jane Cowan and Moushumi Bhowmik.

Image: Professor Ranajit Guha

The Sociological Review is the home for critical sociological thinking and research in the UK and internationally. We are committed to a sociological imagination that is rigorous, critical, engaged and accountable. We hope that our website will be a source of inspiration for academics, students, policy-makers and the general public, in line with the charitable objects of the Sociological Review Foundation, whose purpose is to advance public understandings of the subject of sociology.

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