Wendy M. Grossman takes a closer look at Vikki Katz’s work on how children of immigrants ‘broker’ for their parents, focusing on Hispanic families in Los Angeles. In particular, she explores the impact of digital technology, and how this is helping or hindering in the brokering process. Wendy writes about the border wars between cyberspace and real life. She is the 2013 winner of the Enigma Award and she has released a number of books, articles, and music
Battling AIDS means challenging the power of rich nations over the world’s resources, argues LSE’s J...
Robots are already far more pervasive than most people realise, from smart TVs to self-driving cars....
Book review of Richard J. Bleiler. The Strange Case of “The Angels of Mons”: Arthur Machen’s World W...
It used to be ‘Big Brother is watching you’, and we worried about CCTV, but today’s children are bei...
Guest blogger Wendy M. Grossman discusses the Instagram trend of ‘baby role-playing’, how parents mi...
Guest blogger Wendy M. Grossman finds that it’s hard for parents and teachers to guide children to a...
Guest blogger Wendy M. Grossman wonders whether it is right to be optimistic about our digital futur...
Wendy M. Grossman reviews Sherry Turkle’s most recent book, Reclaiming conversation: The power of ta...
Wendy M. Grossman provides a non-lawyer’s first stab at thinking though what the UK can and cannot c...
Of course parents are often the most acute observers of emerging ‘digital’ practices in their famili...
Vikki Katz has studied the children of immigrants as they ‘broker’ for their parents. She outlines s...
With the holidays just around the corner, Alicia Blum-Ross speaks to Yalda T. Uhls about her new boo...
"Immerse yourself in the intellectual hive that is LSE & students life", Farid Hamka (BSc Government...
Today marks the last day of the week of Hour of Code, an international programme to give children an...
As part of our project studying the roots of financial resilience in childhood (funded by the Instit...
Battling AIDS means challenging the power of rich nations over the world’s resources, argues LSE’s J...
Robots are already far more pervasive than most people realise, from smart TVs to self-driving cars....
Book review of Richard J. Bleiler. The Strange Case of “The Angels of Mons”: Arthur Machen’s World W...
It used to be ‘Big Brother is watching you’, and we worried about CCTV, but today’s children are bei...
Guest blogger Wendy M. Grossman discusses the Instagram trend of ‘baby role-playing’, how parents mi...
Guest blogger Wendy M. Grossman finds that it’s hard for parents and teachers to guide children to a...
Guest blogger Wendy M. Grossman wonders whether it is right to be optimistic about our digital futur...
Wendy M. Grossman reviews Sherry Turkle’s most recent book, Reclaiming conversation: The power of ta...
Wendy M. Grossman provides a non-lawyer’s first stab at thinking though what the UK can and cannot c...
Of course parents are often the most acute observers of emerging ‘digital’ practices in their famili...
Vikki Katz has studied the children of immigrants as they ‘broker’ for their parents. She outlines s...
With the holidays just around the corner, Alicia Blum-Ross speaks to Yalda T. Uhls about her new boo...
"Immerse yourself in the intellectual hive that is LSE & students life", Farid Hamka (BSc Government...
Today marks the last day of the week of Hour of Code, an international programme to give children an...
As part of our project studying the roots of financial resilience in childhood (funded by the Instit...
Battling AIDS means challenging the power of rich nations over the world’s resources, argues LSE’s J...
Robots are already far more pervasive than most people realise, from smart TVs to self-driving cars....
Book review of Richard J. Bleiler. The Strange Case of “The Angels of Mons”: Arthur Machen’s World W...