Academics debate the positive and negative consequences of hosting sports mega-events, and although there is a general recognition that doing so cannot be a panacea for solving other social issues, who wins and who loses tends to be the same. This article considers why mega-events are not more regularly resisted given the routinisation of harm to local populations that they tend to invoke. It develops ideas derived from the late sociologist and criminologist Stanley Cohen concerning the relationships between, and the politics of, denial and acknowledgement, with specific attention to the role of academics, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and the media. The article illustrates the difficulties in exposing, contesting and transforming th...
The United States securities regulatory infrastructure requires disclosure of a wide array of inform...
Violence and insecurity are often read as totalising narratives of communities in parts of Latin Ame...
There are now more than 13 million users registered to the ResearchGate platform, which doubles as a...
CRUSER sponsored eventCommencing the 15th year of NPS Field Experimentation, JIFX 18-2 hosted 18 exp...
My thesis concerns the fate of the spiritual capacities of human beings in the time of digital media...
This chapter offers a philosophical response to the devastating and deadly wildfires that have been ...
Law and Justice maintained its position in power at the Polish general election in October, but the ...
In “Western” contexts school attendance is central for an ‘ideal’ childhood. However, many young peo...
ArticleThis is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.The potential impa...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
This paper examines the use of Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) and methodologies such as PDSAs,...
In May 2014, a group of scholars came together to discuss sharing and its meanings in the digital er...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
It has been a great year for the journal: our most successful ever. This edition marks three years ...
The United States securities regulatory infrastructure requires disclosure of a wide array of inform...
Violence and insecurity are often read as totalising narratives of communities in parts of Latin Ame...
There are now more than 13 million users registered to the ResearchGate platform, which doubles as a...
CRUSER sponsored eventCommencing the 15th year of NPS Field Experimentation, JIFX 18-2 hosted 18 exp...
My thesis concerns the fate of the spiritual capacities of human beings in the time of digital media...
This chapter offers a philosophical response to the devastating and deadly wildfires that have been ...
Law and Justice maintained its position in power at the Polish general election in October, but the ...
In “Western” contexts school attendance is central for an ‘ideal’ childhood. However, many young peo...
ArticleThis is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.The potential impa...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
This paper examines the use of Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) and methodologies such as PDSAs,...
In May 2014, a group of scholars came together to discuss sharing and its meanings in the digital er...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
It has been a great year for the journal: our most successful ever. This edition marks three years ...
The United States securities regulatory infrastructure requires disclosure of a wide array of inform...
Violence and insecurity are often read as totalising narratives of communities in parts of Latin Ame...
There are now more than 13 million users registered to the ResearchGate platform, which doubles as a...