This article is concerned with what happens to precarious community buildings in times of austerity. It responds to a landscape of capitalist realism, in which instrumental, economic forms of value are mobilised to justify the closure of ordinary buildings whose survival is not identified as a political priority. We focus on two London cases of a library and an elderly day centre under threat of closure, and trace how grammars of austerity rendered these buildings substitutable. Considering how abstract sociological conceptions of value/s can struggle to break into the embedded common sense of austerity, we explore how ethnographic practices of collaboration and attentiveness can help amplify alternative expressions of the meanings of these...
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Following the 2009 Community Plan’s (Graham et al, 2015) lack of impact in Leeds’ most deprived area...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
Many developments in national histories also mark watersheds in the personal lives of their citizens...
Lígia Teixeira highlights the need for better data and better use of evidence in tackling homelessne...
This article examines the ways in which popular culture stages and supplies resources for agency in ...
Joelle Grogan (Middlesex University) explains the law and governance put in place by the UK governme...
The roots of Brexit lie in Britain's broken growth model. This was acknowledged in the immediate aft...
Huddersfield in West Yorkshire, England, faces a particular set of circumstances which are represent...
In his recent testimony to the House of Lords, Sir Ivan Rogers criticised as premature and ill-prepa...
Anticipating the Unexpected Expanding on the festival theme ‘50:50, Looking Forward, Looking Back’,...
‘Tomorrow Belong to Us’: The British Far Right since 1967, edited by Nigel Copsey and Matthew Worley...
Ruth Patrick, Kayleigh Garthwaite, Maddy Power and Geoff Page write that recent political rhetoric i...
Since the 1970s, the world economy has been characterised by a process of financialisation. Britain ...
This thesis is an ethnographic examination of the social role that money plays in the lives of Ghana...
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Following the 2009 Community Plan’s (Graham et al, 2015) lack of impact in Leeds’ most deprived area...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
Many developments in national histories also mark watersheds in the personal lives of their citizens...
Lígia Teixeira highlights the need for better data and better use of evidence in tackling homelessne...
This article examines the ways in which popular culture stages and supplies resources for agency in ...
Joelle Grogan (Middlesex University) explains the law and governance put in place by the UK governme...
The roots of Brexit lie in Britain's broken growth model. This was acknowledged in the immediate aft...
Huddersfield in West Yorkshire, England, faces a particular set of circumstances which are represent...
In his recent testimony to the House of Lords, Sir Ivan Rogers criticised as premature and ill-prepa...
Anticipating the Unexpected Expanding on the festival theme ‘50:50, Looking Forward, Looking Back’,...
‘Tomorrow Belong to Us’: The British Far Right since 1967, edited by Nigel Copsey and Matthew Worley...
Ruth Patrick, Kayleigh Garthwaite, Maddy Power and Geoff Page write that recent political rhetoric i...
Since the 1970s, the world economy has been characterised by a process of financialisation. Britain ...
This thesis is an ethnographic examination of the social role that money plays in the lives of Ghana...
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Following the 2009 Community Plan’s (Graham et al, 2015) lack of impact in Leeds’ most deprived area...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...