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Showing 1 to 15 of 78 results Save | Export
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Fabien Accominotti; Freda Lynn; Michael Sauder – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2022
We argue that the properties of status hierarchies, independent of the positions actors occupy within them, have important effects on the degree of inequality in material rewards generated by status processes. We first discuss how a focus on status hierarchies differs from, complements, and extends the traditional focus on individual-level status…
Descriptors: Social Status, Power Structure, Social Differences, Case Studies
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Poulomi Chakrabarti – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2022
Although social status has been shown to be a fundamental motive for individuals, theories of development have largely overlooked the role of status in shaping economic and social outcomes. In tracing the historical roots of social hierarchy through the cases of race, colonialism, and caste, this article outlines the specific mechanisms through…
Descriptors: Social Status, Power Structure, Well Being, Barriers
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Gabriela M. Höhns – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2024
This article explores change possibilities towards status improvement in vocational education's social construction. Following other researchers, it assumes that higher-status vocational education should give vocational learners perspectives that would accord with their identities and desires, broadly ranging between working in a particular…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Social Status, Foreign Countries, Experiential Learning
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Cuevas-Parra, Patricio – Global Studies of Childhood, 2023
This article explores how privileges, identities and worldviews influence every stage of childhood research processes. By using the 'windows and mirrors' and 'the danger of the single story' metaphors, I seek to deconstruct reflexivity and positionality in order to include different lenses of analysis for exploring how power and privileges inform…
Descriptors: Advantaged, Self Concept, Children, Research
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Saltmarsh, Sue; Ayre, Kay; Tualaulelei, Eseta – Critical Studies in Education, 2022
This paper considers how complex family circumstances such as parental separation, custody disputes and family violence intersect with the organisational cultures and everyday practices of schools. In particular, we are concerned with the ways that coercive control -- a strategy used predominantly by men to dominate, control and oppress women in…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Child Custody, Family Violence, Gender Bias
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Williams, Kate – Research Evaluation, 2020
How research is assessed affects what types of knowledge are valued, incentivized, and rewarded. An increasingly important element of contemporary research evaluation is the measurement of the wider impact of research (e.g. benefit to society, culture or economy). Although the measurement of impact has been highly contested, the area is…
Descriptors: Research, Evaluation, Research Utilization, Power Structure
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Howard A. Doughty – International Journal of Adult Education and Technology, 2023
This article concerns the problematic connection between Marxism and Andragogy. The former is generally regarded as an unpopular, discredited and, in some political circles, a dangerously revolutionary political doctrine, mainly of historical interest. The latter is a conventional, contemporary, and pragmatic approach to adult education that…
Descriptors: Andragogy, Political Attitudes, Critical Theory, Cultural Context
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Hang Thu Nguyen-Phung; Nahashon Nzioka Nthenya – Education Economics, 2024
This paper investigated the impacts of education on women's empowerment in Kenya using six waves of nationally-representative KDHS data. Our study utilizes the change in educational structure in 1985 as an instrument and finds that women under the new system enhanced their schooling by approximately two years. One year of education prolongs…
Descriptors: Females, Foreign Countries, Empowerment, Educational History
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Beck, Eevi E. – Ethics and Education, 2022
Activists and writers on injustice have highlighted as a structural problem that injustice is experienced differentially. What injustices of privilege lie hidden in my daily academic life? Three deeply discomforting moments relating to Class, climate, and Whiteness privilege, form the core of an account of gradually admitting to my passive…
Descriptors: Social Status, Power Structure, Whites, College Faculty
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Mulcahy, Dianne; Martinussen, Maree – Critical Studies in Education, 2023
This article explores the role of affect in addressing the advantage conventionally accorded to high socio-economic status (SES) in higher education (HE) and how this advantage plays out for students from low SES backgrounds. Positioned as the 'other' to an assumed norm, the capacities of these students can be considered the 'wrong' capacities,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Socioeconomic Status, Low Income Students
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Jane Fenton – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
This paper uses a modest finding from a research study as a window into the world of social work education in Scotland. The study demonstrated that students believed by their classmates to be most dominant (white, straight men) were in fact the most reluctant to speak out. This finding is woven into an examination of a social work pedagogy…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Counselor Training, Social Work, Social Status
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Paula Stone; Adele Phillips; Kerry Jordan-Daus – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2023
This collaborative autoethnography (Bochner and Ellis, 2016) has created a space for three women academics from working-class heritage, navigating the liminal and temporal space of the COVID-19 pandemic within a post-1992 Higher Education Institution, to explore the social relations of one Higher Education Institution and confront their lived…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Colleges, Women Faculty
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Sheena J. Vachhani; Emma Bell – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
In this paper we move from considering the chair as an (inanimate) object, to exploring its vitality through a more vibrant and active reading of this inescapable everyday item. We are inspired by feminist new materialism and how affect shapes our understanding of matter. Reading matter in this way surfaces our orientations toward everyday items…
Descriptors: Department Heads, Foreign Countries, Status, Professional Recognition
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Li, He – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
This paper explores how English language has gradually become a linguistic form of cultural capital in China's zigzag journey to modernization. It situates English's status in flux in historical context, with an analysis at both the international and intra-national level. It showcases the necessity to embed cultural capital within Bourdieu's full…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Foreign Countries, Cultural Capital
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Duruel Erkiliç, Senem; Budak, Goncagül – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2021
The act of laughing, which is thought to be related with the body rather than the mind and identified with rudeness, has been attributed to outcast segments of society, such as women, children, slaves, or the common-people, while humor requiring supremacy of the mind is believed to be associated with the ruling elite class of society, and mostly…
Descriptors: Females, Humor, Gender Differences, Power Structure
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