3rd ISA Forum of Sociology

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Jul 10, 2016 - 114.1 Michel VILLETTE, AgroParisTech and Centre Maurice. Halbwachs ...... Columbia, Canada; Joseph KUGLER, School of Kinesiology, The.
3rd ISA Forum of

SOCIOLOGY THE FUTURES WE WANT: GLOBAL SOCIOLOGY AND THE STRUGGLES FOR A BETTER WORLD 10-14 JULY 2016, VIENNA, AUSTRIA WWW.ISA-SOCIOLOGY.ORG/FORUM-2016

International Sociological Association

CONGRESS EXHIBITORS Austrian Institutes of Sociology

Manchester University Press

Brill

Max Plank Institut for Social Law and Social Policy

Budrich Academic

Nomos

Combined Academic Publishers

Palgrave Macmillan

Edward Elgar Publishing

Policy Press

Emerald Group Publishing Fundamental Right Agency, European Union I.B. Tauris Publishers

Polity Routledge, part of Taylor and Francis Group SAGE Publications

ISA World Congress of Sociology, Toronto, Canada

UVK Verlagsgesellschaft Verbi Software Consult – Sozialforschung

Kongressbuchhandlung Buchkontext Bernd Köstner

Wiley

CONGRESS SPONSORS Star Alliance

Österreichisches LateinAmerika-Institut

Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy

Vienna Convention Bureau

3rd ISA Forum of Sociology - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World 10–14, July 2016, Vienna, Austria © 2016 International Sociological Association Program by: The Conference Exchange TM , www.confex.com Printed in Austria

Table of Contents Introduction

Venue site maps and floor plans................................................................................................... 5 Welcome Messages..................................................................................................................... 17 by Margaret Abraham, ISA President..................................................................................... 17

by Markus S. Schulz, ISA Vice-President for Research and President of the Forum ....... 20 by Barbara Weitgruber, Director General for Scientific Research and International Relations, Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy................ 24 by Heinz W. Engl, Rector of the University of Vienna........................................................... 27 by Ulrike Felt, Professor of Science and Technology Studies, Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Vienna..................................... 29 by Katharina Scherke, President of the Austrian Sociological Association....................... 31 by Rudolf Richter, Chair of the Local Organizing Committee.............................................. 34 ISA Forum Organization.............................................................................................................. 37 General Information................................................................................................................... 39

Program





Program Structure....................................................................................................................... 41 Timetable of Publisher’s Lounge............................................................................................. 41 Timetable Day by Day............................................................................................................... 42 Program - Session Details .............................................................................................................. 81 Plenary Sessions.................................................................................................................... 81 Common Sessions................................................................................................................. 83 Research Council................................................................................................................... 87 Research Committees........................................................................................................... 89 Working Groups.....................................................................................................................293 Thematic Groups...................................................................................................................305 Professional Development....................................................................................................315 Joint Session Details..............................................................................................................317 Program Coordinators.................................................................................................................339 Session Organizers......................................................................................................................343

Index

Person Index................................................................................................................................351

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Comparative Sociology Editor-in-Chief: David Weakliem, University of Connecticut Book Review Editors: Mehdi P. Amineh and Sander De Rijke • 2016: Volume 16 (in 6 issues) • ISSN 1569-1322 / E-ISSN 1569-1330 • Institutional subscription rates Electronic only: EUR 643 / US$ 846 Print only: EUR 707 / US$ 931 Electronic + Print: EUR 771 / US$ 1,015 • Individual subscription rates Electronic or Print only: EUR 198 / US$ 260 • More information / orders: brill.com/coso

Comparative Sociology is an international scholarly journal, published in six issues per year, dedicated to advancing comparative sociological analyses of societies and cultures, institutions and organizations, groups and collectivities, networks and interactions. All submissions for articles are peer-reviewed double-blind. The journal publishes book reviews and theoretical presentations, conceptual analyses and empirical findings at all levels of comparative sociological analysis, from global and cultural to ethnographic and interactionist. Submissions are welcome not only from sociologists but also political scientists, legal scholars, economists, anthropologists and others. Indeed, the journal is particularly keen to receive works of comparative political sociology, comparative legal sociology, comparative economic sociology and comparative cultural sociology.

Sociology of Islam Edited by Gary Wood, Virginia Tech and Tugrul Keskin, Maltepe University, Istanbul and Shanghai University • 2016: Volume 4 (in 4 issues) • ISSN 2213-140X / E-ISSN 2213-1418 • Institutional subscription rates Electronic only: EUR 270 / US$ 355 Print only: EUR 297 / US$ 391 Electronic + Print: EUR 324 / US$ 426 • Individual subscription rates Electronic or Print only: EUR 99 / US$ 131 • More information / orders: brill.com/soi

Sociology of Islam (SOI) provides an international scholarly forum for research related to the religion and culture of Islam, Muslim societies, and social issues related to Muslims in socio-political context. Decidedly rooted in the sociological perspective, SOI takes an expansive and global view of this broad subject matter. SOI publishes multiple issues per year containing original peer-reviewed articles and book reviews on the sociological, political, anthropological, historical and other aspects of Islam and Muslim societies across all times and places. By promoting an academic understanding of the richly variegated and complex nature of both majority Muslim societies and of the issues related to the minority status of Muslims in other social contexts, in both thought and practice, Sociology of Islam makes a distinctive contribution to current scholarship in the field of sociology. Orders can be placed through the journal’s web page or by e-mail: [email protected] (USA/Canada) or [email protected] (Rest of World)

MAPS Venue site maps and floor plans

Maps  1 Main Building [MB]

University of Vienna, Universitätsring 1, 1010 Vienna

 2 Neues Institutsgebäude [NIG]  3 Juridicum [ JUR]

Universitätsstrasse 7, 1010 Vienna

Faculty of Law, Schottenbastei 10-16, 1010 Vienna

[JUR] [NIG] [MB]

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MAPS

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 1 Main Building Lower Ground Floor Main Building Lower Ground Floor

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Reichsratsstraße

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Prominentenzimmer

PLENARY HALL AUDIMAX

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Access Access Elevator Elevator Wheelchair Lift Wheelchair Lift Food & Food &Beverages Beverages

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th Institutsgebäude Ground Floor 4[NIG Floor Neues Institutsgebäude [NIG EG] Neues Institutsgebäude [NIG 04] Neues [NIG EG] Neues Institutsgebäude 04]

Ground Floor Ground Floor

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Liebiggasse Liebiggasse

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ÜR 4A KS Universitätsstraße 7 Universitätsstraße 7

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Neues Institutsgebäude Neues Institutsgebäude [NIG 07] [NIG 07] University canteen University (Mensa) canteen (Mensa)

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Venue site maps and floor plans Basement -1

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Helferstorferstraße



Juridicum [JUR UG] Juridicum [JUR UG]

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Juridicum [JUR 03] Juridicum [JUR 03] rd

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3 Juridicum [ JUR 02] JUR Juridicum 02] [JUR 02] nd

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Special Issues – Journal of Family Research Zeitschrift für Familienforschung

Ulrike Zartler | Valerie Heintz-Martin | Oliver Arránz Becker (eds.)

Tanja Betz | Michael-Sebastian Honig | Ilona Ostner (eds.)

Family Dynamics after Separation

Parents in the Spotlight

A Life Course Perspective on Post-Divorce Families Special Issue ZfF, Volume 10 2015. 290 pp. Pb. 46,00 € (D), 47,30 € (A), GBP 43.95, US$69.00 ISBN 978-3-8474-0686-0 eISBN 978-3-8474-0827-7 In many Western societies, there has been a tremendous increase in family diversity over the course of the past few decades, resulting in a considerable prevalence of non-traditional family forms. The increased instability of marital and non-marital unions entails new challenges for both parents and children. In this special issue, family studies scholars examine from a life course perspective how re-partnering processes work and how family relationships are rearranged in order to adapt to the altered needs and requirements of post-separation family life.

Parenting Practices and Support from a Comparative Perspective

Special Issue ZfF, Volume 11 2016. Ca. 370 pp. Pb. Ca. 49,90 € (D), 51,30 € (A), GBP 46.95, US$75.95 ISBN 978-3-8474-0502-3 eISBN 978-3-8474-0924-3 Children and parents have become a focus of debates on ‘new social risks’ in European welfare states. Policymaking elites have converged in defining such risks, and they have outlined new forms of parenting support to better safeguard children and activate their potential. Increasingly, parents are suspected of falling short of public expectations. Contributors to this special issue scrutinize this shift towards parenting as performance and report recent forms of parenting support.

Order now! www.shop.budrich-academic.de

WELCOME

Welcome Welcome address by the President of the International Sociological Association Dear colleagues and friends,

Margaret Abraham

On behalf of the International Sociological Association it is my distinct pleasure to welcome you all to the Third ISA Forum of Sociology in Vienna! The ISA holds the Forum every four years between ISA World Congresses and is specially developed as a space for the Research Committees, Thematic Groups and Working Groups to hold their interim meetings. However the Forum also has a theme selected by the Vice-President Research in consultation with the Local Organizing Committee that provides the RCs, TGs and WGs an opportunity to come together and share their research, theories, perspectives and methodologies with the broader public in the context of the Forum theme. The Third ISA Forum theme, “The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World” provides a broad and timely framework. It is also pertinent that the Forum is held in Vienna at a time when the European Union has been undergoing its own major political crisis resulting in fragmented responses to the migrant and global humanitarian crisis. In the past year we have witnessed vast numbers of people forced to leave their homes due to war, conflict and destruction. We have witnessed the dislocation and displacement of individuals, families and children; the power of governments in Europe to shut borders; and people bravely making life threatening journeys across land and sea in search of safety and the possibility of a better future. We have also witnessed private individuals, informal groups and organizations at local, national, and transnational levels, bravely helping and mobilizing for social justice and the well-being of all. Thus this Third ISA Forum, with its strong program and more than 4,000 registrants, provides a vital platform for us as sociologists to interrogate, debate and dialogue on the “futures we want,” as well as build and strengthen a global sociology that can contextualize, envision and engage in the struggles for a better world. Much of the strength of this Forum is due to the scientific program developed by the participating ISA Research Committees and the Thematic and Working Groups. Credit also goes to ISA Vice-President for Research and President of the Forum, Markus Schulz, and the Research Coordinating Committee; Rudolf Richter, Chair of the Local Organizing Committee, together with Brigitte Aulenbacher, Vice-Chair LOC, Ida Seljeskog, LOC Coordinator, and members

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Margaret Abraham

Introduction

WELCOME

of the LOC. The ISA Secretariat team in Madrid led by its Executive Secretary, Izabela Barlinska has been crucial in all stages of preparation. Our special thanks to the University of Vienna for their generosity in providing a wonderful space to hold this immense sociological event. To each of you conference participants who have come from all over the world, I hope this Third ISA Forum provides an excellent opportunity to share your research,

learn from one another, enjoy the new intellectual challenges that emerge in international meetings and discussions, and connect with friends and even make new friendships, in the historic and beautiful city of Vienna. Once again a very warm welcome and I personally hope to meet many of you during this Third ISA Forum!

Margaret Abraham ISA President

Message de bienvenue de la Présidente de l’ISA Chers collègues, chers amis, Au nom de l’Association internationale de Sociologie, c’est pour moi un grand plaisir de vous souhaiter à tous et à toutes la bienvenue à Vienne pour cette troisième édition du Forum de Sociologie ! Le Forum est organisé tous les quatre ans, entre deux congrès mondiaux de l’ISA, avec pour objectif premier d’accueillir les réunions de mi-mandat des comités de recherche, groupes thématiques et groupes de travail de l’Association. Mais le Forum, dont le thème est sélectionné par le VicePrésident chargé de la Recherche en concertation avec le Comité local d’organisation, offre également aux comités de recherche et aux groupes thématiques et de travail l’occasion de conjuguer leurs efforts et de partager recherches, théories, perspectives et méthodologies avec un plus large public, en lien avec le thème du Forum. Le thème de cette troisième édition, « Les avenirs que nous voulons : La sociologie mondiale et les luttes pour un monde meilleur », propose un vaste cadre de réflexion qui résonne avec l’actualité. Le choix de Vienne est également fort bienvenu à un moment où l’Union européenne traverse une crise politique majeure qui se traduit par des réponses fragmentées face à la crise des migrants et humanitaire. Au fil des mois, nous avons vu un nombre considérable de personnes forcées d’abandonner leur foyer pour fuir la guerre, les conflits et la destruction. Nous avons vu le déplacement de personnes et de familles entières, et la capacité de gouvernements européens à fermer leurs frontières. Nous avons vu des personnes risquer leur vie en s’engageant dans de dangereuses traversées, sur terre comme sur mer, en quête d’un lieu sûr où vivre et pouvoir construire un avenir meilleur. Nous avons aussi vu de simples particuliers et des associations et collectifs informels, à l’échelle locale, nationale et internationale, prêter leur assistance et défendre courageusement la justice sociale et le bien-être de tous. En tant que sociologues, ce IIIe Forum de

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l’ISA, avec son programme très riche et ses plus de 4000 participants, nous fournit ainsi une occasion précieuse d’interroger, de débattre et de dialoguer sur les « avenirs que nous voulons », et aussi de développer et consolider une sociologie globale qui soit à même de contextualiser, d’imaginer et de jouer un rôle dans les luttes pour un monde meilleur. La force de ce Forum repose en grande partie sur le programme scientifique élaboré par les comités de recherche et groupes thématiques et de travail de l’ISA qui participent. Mais le mérite en revient également à Markus Schulz, Vice-Président de l’ISA chargé de la Recherche et Président du Forum, et au Comité de coordination de la Recherche ; à Rudolf Richter, Président du Comité local d’organisation, Brigitte Aulenbacher, Vice-Présidente, Ida Seljeskog, coordinatrice, et à l’ensemble des membres du Comité local d’organisation. Depuis Madrid, l’équipe du Secrétariat de l’ISA, conduite par sa Secrétaire Exécutive Izabela Barlinska, a également joué un rôle capital à toutes les étapes de préparation. Enfin, nous remercions tout particulièrement l’Université de Vienne d’avoir mis aussi généreusement à notre disposition ce formidable espace pour ce grand rendez-vous sociologique. À vous tous qui êtes venus des quatre coins du monde pour participer à cette conférence, je souhaite que ce IIIe Forum de l’ISA soit une formidable occasion de partager vos recherches, d’apprendre les uns des autres, d’apprécier les nouveaux défis intellectuels qui émergent lors de ces rencontres et débats internationaux, et de communiquer avec des amis et nouer de nouvelles amitiés dans cette si belle ville historique de Vienne. Encore une fois, je vous souhaite chaleureusement la bienvenue et j’espère avoir l’occasion de rencontrer personnellement beaucoup d’entre vous pendant le Forum !

Margaret Abraham Présidente de l’ISA

www.isa-sociology.org

Introduction

Margaret Abraham

Discurso de bienvenida de la Presidenta de la ISA Queridos colegas y amigos:

El Foro saca su principal fuerza del programa científico elaborado por los comités de investigación y grupos temáticos y de trabajo de la ISA que participan. Pero también quiero hacer extensivo mi agradecimiento a Markus Schulz, Vicepresidente de la ISA para la Investigación y Presidente del Foro, y el Comité de Coordinación de la Investigación; Rudolf Richter, Presidente del Comité Local de Organización, Brigitte Aulenbacher, Vicepresidenta, Ida Seljeskog, coordinadora, así como todos los miembros del Comité Local de Organización. Desde Madrid, el equipo del Secretariado de la ISA, dirigido por su Secretaria Ejecutiva Izabela Barlinska, también ha jugado un papel decisivo en todas las etapas preparativas. Y finalmente queremos transmitir un especial agradecimiento a la Universidad de Viena por haber tan generosamente puesto a nuestra disposición este fantástico espacio para este gran encuentro sociológico. A todos los participantes de esta conferencia que han venido de todo el mundo, espero que este Tercer Foro de la ISA les proporcione una excelente oportunidad para compartir sus investigaciones, aprender de los demás, disfrutar de los desafíos intelectuales que surgen en reuniones y diálogos internacionales, así como comunicar con sus amigos y forjar nuevas amistades en esta maravillosa ciudad histórica de Viena. Una vez más, les doy una cálida bienvenida y espero conocer personalmente a muchos de ustedes durante este Foro.

Margaret Abraham Presidenta de la ISA

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WELCOME

En nombre de la Asociación Internacional de Sociología es para mí un gran placer darles a todos y a todas la bienvenida al Tercer Foro de Sociología en Viena. La Asociación organiza el Foro cada cuatro años, entre dos congresos mundiales de la ISA, con el objetivo primero de reunir sus comités de investigación, grupos temáticos y grupos de trabajo. Pero el Foro, cuyo tema es seleccionado por el Vicepresidente para la Investigación en colaboración con el Comité Local de Organización, también ofrece a los comités de investigación y grupos temáticos y de trabajo una oportunidad para juntarse y compartir sus investigaciones, teorías, perspectivas y metodologías con un público más amplio, en relación con el tema del Foro. El tema de esta tercera edición del Foro, “Los futuros que deseamos: La sociología global y las luchas por un mundo mejor”, proporciona un amplio marco de reflexión de evidente actualidad. También resulta oportuno que se celebre en Viena en un momento en el que la Unión Europea está sufriendo una grave crisis política que se traduce en respuestas fragmentadas frente a la crisis de los migrantes y humanitaria. A lo largo de los meses, hemos sido testigos de cómo un gran número de personas se han visto obligadas a abandonar sus hogares, huyendo de la guerra, los conflictos y la destrucción. Hemos visto cómo personas y familias enteras han sido desplazadas, y cómo gobiernos europeos han cerrado sus fronteras. Hemos visto personas arriesgar su vida para viajar por tierra y por mar en busca de un lugar seguro donde vivir y poder construir un futuro mejor. Hemos visto también cómo ciudadanos de a pie así como asociaciones y colectivos informales, a nivel local, nacional e internacional, han prestado su ayuda y defendido con valentía la justicia social y el bienestar para todos. Como sociólogos y sociólogas, este Tercer Foro de la ISA, con su programa potente y sus más de

4000 participantes, nos brinda pues una oportunidad única de cuestionar, debatir y dialogar sobre los “futuros que deseamos”, y también desarrollar y consolidar una sociología global capaz de contextualizar, imaginar y participar en las luchas por un mundo mejor.

Markus S. Schulz

Introduction

WELCOME

Welcome and Introduction to the Forum Program by ISA Vice-President for Research and President of the Forum

Markus S. Schulz

Welcome to the Third ISA Forum of Sociology! Welcome to a festival of ideas in the splendid Austrian capital! Welcome to the hard intellectual work of pushing the boundaries of an academic discipline that is needed at this pivotal time more than ever. The Forum is convened under the motto “The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World.” This theme encourages a forward orientation in empirical, theoretical, and normative research. Protests around the globe have challenged inequality, oppression, and ecological destruction, and have insisted on the possibility of another, better world. They demonstrate the malleability of futures. Today’s intensifying uncertainties demand innovation in methods and theories. Tomorrow will no longer appear as pre-determined by inevitable trends but rather as a contingent outcome of complex, typically multi-scalar dynamics that vary in their intensity of contentiousness. Social actors aspire, desire, imagine, and struggle over futures. What can sociology contribute to these broader debates? How do assumptions about the future influence daily routines and long-term collective lives? How are risks identified, avoided, mitigated, transferred, or shared? What closes and opens the horizons of social imaginaries? How are different social actors and forces positioned to shape futures? How can the making of futures be democratized? What can be learned by comparing struggles in different countries and settings? How do emancipatory movements and everyday practices at the grassroots overcome discipline, exploitation, and misrecognition? What visions for alternative futures are imaginable, desirable, and achievable? What are viable roadmaps for social transformation? — These are just some of the key questions to be explored. The Forum is above all a meeting place of the ISA’s research units. Fifty-seven Research Committees Working Groups and Thematic Groups, are participating with an amazing array of sessions across the full spectrum of sociological approaches and topics, ranging from inquiries into tiny micro-settings to planetary macro-trends. Close to 4,000 social scientists from all around the world are expected to gather in Vienna for several days of intense debates at the cutting edge of social research. At the heart of the Forum are a series of Common Sessions that present distinguished speakers nominated by the ISA’s Research Committees, Working or Thematic Groups to address the common theme from the respective unit’s perspective. They provide opportunities to disseminate novel ideas to larger audiences, exchange state-of-the-art insights across specializations, and foster new, serendipitous connections among research units. Launched in preparation of the Vienna conference and jump-starting the intellectual debate on the Internet, the WebForum (http://futureswewant.net) has become a thriving space that features a trailblazing series of essays by prominent authors, along with audiovisual content related to the broadly conceived Forum theme. As any academic mega-event, the 2016 Forum is the product of joint efforts. Many thanks go to the dedicated Program Coordinators and Session Organizers for their enormous work, generous collegiality, and intellectual inspirations. Special thanks go to the Local Organizing Committee, led by Rudolf Richter, and our host institution, the University of Vienna, the many Austrian volunteers, as well as to the ISA Executive Committee, led by ISA President Margaret Abraham, the Research Coordinating Committee that formed the Program Committee, and the Executive Secretariat, led be Izabela Barlinska, without whom this Forum would not have been possible. Enjoy the Forum’s manifold opportunities to meet colleagues from a diversity of backgrounds, exchange new thoughts, and participate in debates that open new horizons! Let us create together a Forum that is transformative in sociology’s engagement with our time’s enormous challenges and chances!

Markus S. Schulz ISA Vice-President for Research and President of the Forum 20

www.isa-sociology.org

Introduction

Markus Schulz

Message de bienvenue et introduction au Programme du Forum du Vice-Président de l’ISA chargé de la Recherche, et Président du Forum

Le Forum est avant tout conçu comme un point de rencontre pour les unités de recherche de l’ISA. Cinquantesept comités de recherche, groupes de travail et groupes thématiques seront présents pour offrir un éventail impressionnant de sessions qui couvrent l’ensemble des approches et thématiques sociologiques et traitent aussi bien de micro-environnements et micro-situations que

de vastes macro-dynamiques qui affectent la planète entière. À l’occasion de ce Forum, ce sont près de 4000 sociologues du monde entier qui sont attendus pour plusieurs journées d’intenses débats aux avant-postes de la recherche sociale. Au cœur du Forum, on trouvera une série de sessions communes (Common Sessions) où des conférenciers de marque, désignés par les comités de recherche, groupes de travail ou thématiques de l’ISA, traiteront du thème commun du Forum du point de vue de leur unité de recherche respective. Ces sessions sont l’occasion de donner à connaître des idées innovantes à des publics plus vastes, d’échanger les connaissances les plus récentes d’un domaine de spécialité à l’autre, et d’encourager de nouveaux liens entre les unités de recherche. Le WebForum (http://futureswewant.net), qui a été créé en amont de la conférence de Vienne pour lancer le débat intellectuel sur Internet, s’est converti en un espace fécond où trouver toute une série d’articles innovants signés par des auteurs de premier plan ainsi que des contenus audiovisuels sur le thème général du Forum. Comme tout évènement de cette envergure, le Forum 2016 est le fruit d’un travail collectif. Je voudrais remercier les responsables du programme (Program Coordinators) et les organisateurs des sessions pour le travail considérable qu’ils ont accompli, pour leur esprit de collaboration, leur engagement et leur inspiration intellectuelle. Je tiens également à remercier tout particulièrement le Comité local d’Organisation dirigé par Rudolf Richter, l’Université de Vienne qui nous accueille et les nombreux bénévoles autrichiens, ainsi que le Comité exécutif de l’ISA conduit par la Présidente de l’ISA Margaret Abraham, le Comité de coordination de la Recherche qui a constitué le Comité du Programme, et le Secrétariat exécutif dirigé par Izabela Barlinska, sans lesquels ce Forum n’aurait pas été possible. Profitez des multiples possibilités qu’offre le Forum pour faire la connaissance de collègues venus d’horizons divers, échanger des idées nouvelles et participer à des débats qui ne manqueront pas d’ouvrir de nouvelles perspectives ! Faisons ensemble que ce Forum soit porteur de changement dans l’engagement de la sociologie, pour mieux faire face à notre monde contemporain avec ses énormes défis et opportunités !

Markus Schulz Vice-Président de l’ISA chargé de la Recherche, et Président du Forum

www.isa-sociology.org

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WELCOME

Bienvenue au IIIe Forum de Sociologie de l’ISA ! Bienvenue à Vienne, la magnifique capitale autrichienne où nous vous convions à un véritable festival d’idées en même temps qu’à un intense travail intellectuel afin de repousser les frontières d’une discipline universitaire dont nous avons, dans ces moments cruciaux, plus jamais besoin. Ce Forum est organisé autour du thème « Les avenirs que nous voulons : La sociologie mondiale et les luttes pour un monde meilleur », un thème qui se veut une invitation à une recherche empirique, théorique et normative tournée vers l’avenir. Partout dans le monde, des mouvements de protestation s’élèvent contre les inégalités, l’oppression et la destruction de l’environnement et affirment qu’un autre monde, meilleur, est possible. Par là-même, ils témoignent de la malléabilité des avenirs possibles. Aujourd’hui, l’augmentation des incertitudes exige d’innover sur le plan méthodique aussi bien que théorique. L’avenir n’apparaîtra plus comme prédéterminé par des évolutions inéluctables mais plutôt comme le résultat incertain de dynamiques complexes le plus souvent multiscalaires, où la contestation peut varier en intensité. Les acteurs sociaux poursuivent, souhaitent, imaginent, et combattent des avenirs possibles. Que peut apporter la sociologie à ces vastes débats ? Comment des postulats concernant l’avenir influent-ils sur les activités quotidiennes et le vécu collectif sur le long terme ? Comment les risques sont-ils identifiés, évités, atténués, transmis ou partagés ? Qu’est-ce qui réduit ou au contraire élargit l’horizon de nos imaginaires sociaux ? Comment les différents acteurs sociaux sont-ils positionnés pour influer sur les futurs possibles ? Comment la construction des avenirs peut-elle être démocratisée ? Quels enseignements peut-on tirer de la comparaison des luttes menées dans différents pays et dans différents contextes ? Comment les mouvements d’émancipation et les pratiques quotidiennes sur le terrain surmontent-ils les règles imposées, l’exploitation et le manque de reconnaissance ? Quelles visions alternatives de l’avenir sont de l’ordre de l’imaginable, du souhaitable et du réalisable ? Quelles sont les lignes directrices viables pour une transformation sociale ? Ce ne sont là que quelques-unes des questions essentielles à explorer.

Markus Schulz

Introduction

WELCOME

Message de bienvenue et introduction au Programme du Forum du Vice-Président de l’ISA chargé de la Recherche, et Président du Forum Bienvenue au IIIe Forum de Sociologie de l’ISA ! Bienvenue à Vienne, la magnifique capitale autrichienne où nous vous convions à un véritable festival d’idées en même temps qu’à un intense travail intellectuel afin de repousser les frontières d’une discipline universitaire dont nous avons, dans ces moments cruciaux, plus jamais besoin. Ce Forum est organisé autour du thème « Les avenirs que nous voulons : La sociologie mondiale et les luttes pour un monde meilleur », un thème qui se veut une invitation à une recherche empirique, théorique et normative tournée vers l’avenir. Partout dans le monde, des mouvements de protestation s’élèvent contre les inégalités, l’oppression et la destruction de l’environnement et affirment qu’un autre monde, meilleur, est possible. Par là-même, ils témoignent de la malléabilité des avenirs possibles. Aujourd’hui, l’augmentation des incertitudes exige d’innover sur le plan méthodique aussi bien que théorique. L’avenir n’apparaîtra plus comme prédéterminé par des évolutions inéluctables mais plutôt comme le résultat incertain de dynamiques complexes le plus souvent multiscalaires, où la contestation peut varier en intensité. Les acteurs sociaux poursuivent, souhaitent, imaginent, et combattent des avenirs possibles. Que peut apporter la sociologie à ces vastes débats ? Comment des postulats concernant l’avenir influent-ils sur les activités quotidiennes et le vécu collectif sur le long terme ? Comment les risques sont-ils identifiés, évités, atténués, transmis ou partagés ? Qu’est-ce qui réduit ou au contraire élargit l’horizon de nos imaginaires sociaux ? Comment les différents acteurs sociaux sont-ils positionnés pour influer sur les futurs possibles ? Comment la construction des avenirs peut-elle être démocratisée ? Quels enseignements peut-on tirer de la comparaison des luttes menées dans différents pays et dans différents contextes ? Comment les mouvements d’émancipation et les pratiques quotidiennes sur le terrain surmontent-ils les règles imposées, l’exploitation et le manque de reconnaissance ? Quelles visions alternatives de l’avenir sont de l’ordre de l’imaginable, du souhaitable et du réalisable ? Quelles sont les lignes directrices viables pour une transformation sociale ? Ce ne sont là que quelques-unes des questions essentielles à explorer. Le Forum est avant tout conçu comme un point de rencontre pour les unités de recherche de l’ISA. Cinquantesept comités de recherche, groupes de travail et groupes thématiques seront présents pour offrir un éventail impressionnant de sessions qui couvrent l’ensemble des approches et thématiques sociologiques et traitent aussi bien de micro-environnements et micro-situations que

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de vastes macro-dynamiques qui affectent la planète entière. À l’occasion de ce Forum, ce sont près de 4000 sociologues du monde entier qui sont attendus pour plusieurs journées d’intenses débats aux avant-postes de la recherche sociale. Au cœur du Forum, on trouvera une série de sessions communes (Common Sessions) où des conférenciers de marque, désignés par les comités de recherche, groupes de travail ou thématiques de l’ISA, traiteront du thème commun du Forum du point de vue de leur unité de recherche respective. Ces sessions sont l’occasion de donner à connaître des idées innovantes à des publics plus vastes, d’échanger les connaissances les plus récentes d’un domaine de spécialité à l’autre, et d’encourager de nouveaux liens entre les unités de recherche. Le WebForum (http://futureswewant.net), qui a été créé en amont de la conférence de Vienne pour lancer le débat intellectuel sur Internet, s’est converti en un espace fécond où trouver toute une série d’articles innovants signés par des auteurs de premier plan ainsi que des contenus audiovisuels sur le thème général du Forum. Comme tout évènement de cette envergure, le Forum 2016 est le fruit d’un travail collectif. Je voudrais remercier les responsables du programme (Program Coordinators) et les organisateurs des sessions pour le travail considérable qu’ils ont accompli, pour leur esprit de collaboration, leur engagement et leur inspiration intellectuelle. Je tiens également à remercier tout particulièrement le Comité local d’Organisation dirigé par Rudolf Richter, l’Université de Vienne qui nous accueille et les nombreux bénévoles autrichiens, ainsi que le Comité exécutif de l’ISA conduit par la Présidente de l’ISA Margaret Abraham, le Comité de coordination de la Recherche qui a constitué le Comité du Programme, et le Secrétariat exécutif dirigé par Izabela Barlinska, sans lesquels ce Forum n’aurait pas été possible. Profitez des multiples possibilités qu’offre le Forum pour faire la connaissance de collègues venus d’horizons divers, échanger des idées nouvelles et participer à des débats qui ne manqueront pas d’ouvrir de nouvelles perspectives ! Faisons ensemble que ce Forum soit porteur de changement dans l’engagement de la sociologie, pour mieux faire face à notre monde contemporain avec ses énormes défis et opportunités !

Markus Schulz Vice-Président de l’ISA chargé de la Recherche, et Président du Forum

www.isa-sociology.org

Introduction

Markus S. Schulz

Palabras de bienvenida e introducción al Programa del Foro por el Vicepresidente de la ISA para la Investigación y Presidente del Foro

El Foro está pensado en primer lugar como un punto de encuentro para las unidades de investigación de la ISA. Cincuenta y siete comités de investigación, grupos de trabajo y grupos temáticos participan a este Foro con un amplio abanico de sesiones que abarcan el conjunto de planteamientos y temáticas del área de la sociología, sea para tratar de micro-entornos y situaciones o de las amplias macro-dinámicas que afectan a todo el planeta. En esta ocasión, se esperan cerca de 4000 sociólogos y sociólogas de todo el mundo, reunidos para varias jornadas

de intensos debates a la vanguardia de la investigación social. En el centro de este Foro, está una serie de sesiones comunes (Common Sessions) presentadas por ponentes destacados que han sido nombrados por los comités de investigación, grupos de trabajo o temáticos de la ISA para tratar del tema común del Foro desde el punto de visto de su unidad de investigación respectiva. Estas sesiones son oportunidades para difundir ideas innovadoras a públicos más amplios, intercambiar los más recientes conocimientos de un área de especialización a la otra y fomentar nuevas conexiones entre las unidades de investigación. El WebForum (http://futureswewant.net), creado para preparar la conferencia de Viena y lanzar el debate intelectual en Internet, se ha convertido en un vibrante espacio donde encontrar artículos innovadores escritos por autores destacados así como contenidos audiovisuales relacionados con el tema general del Foro. Al igual que otros encuentros de esta envergadura, el Foro 2016 es fruto de un trabajo colectivo. Quisiera agradecer a los responsables del programa (Program Coordinators) y los organizadores de las sesiones por su tremendo trabajo, su espíritu de colaboración, su dedicación y su inspiración intelectual. También quiero expresar un agradecimiento especial al Comité Local de Organización dirigido por Rudolf Richter, a la Universidad de Viena que nos recibe y a los muchos voluntarios austríacos, así como el Comité Ejecutivo de la ISA presidido por Margaret Abraham, el Comité de Coordinación de la Investigación encargado de constituir el Comité del Programa, y el Secretariado Ejecutivo liderado por Izabela Barlinska – sin todos ellos, este Foro no hubiera sido posible. Les invito a disfrutar de la multitud de posibilidades que ofrece este Foro para conocer a colegas de orígenes muy diversos, intercambiar nuevas ideas y participar en unos debates que sin lugar a duda abrirán nuevas perspectivas. ¡Juntos, podemos hacer que este Foro sea un motor de cambio en el compromiso de la sociología frente a nuestro mundo contemporáneo con sus enormes retos y oportunidades!

Markus S. Schulz Vicepresidente de la ISA para la Investigación y Presidente del Foro

www.isa-sociology.org

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WELCOME

¡Bienvenidos al Tercer Foro de Sociología de la ISA! Bienvenidos a Viena, maravillosa capital de Austria en la que están invitados a un auténtico festival de ideas a la vez que a un intenso trabajo intelectual a fin de ampliar las fronteras de una disciplina universitaria que, en estos momentos decisivos, aparece más necesaria que nunca. Este Foro está organizado en torno al tema “Los futuros deseados: La sociología global y las luchas por un mundo mejor”, un tema pensado para propiciar una investigación empírica, teórica y normativa orientada hacia el futuro. En todo el mundo, hay movimientos de protesta que se alzan contra la desigualdad, la opresión y la destrucción del medioambiente, haciendo hincapié en que otro mundo mejor es posible. Las incertidumbres crecientes exigen innovar tanto a nivel metodológico como teórico. El futuro ya no aparecerá como predeterminado por tendencias inevitables sino como el resultado incierto de dinámicas complejas que suelen ser multiescalares y dan lugar a controversias más o menos intensas. Los actores sociales aspiran, desean, imaginan, y combaten futuros posibles. ¿Qué puede aportar la sociología a estos debates generales? ¿Cómo las hipótesis sobre el futuro influyen en las actividades cotidianas y la vida colectiva en el largo plazo? ¿Cómo se identifican, evitan, mitigan, transmiten o comparten los riesgos? ¿Qué es lo que abre, o cierra, el horizonte de nuestros imaginarios sociales? ¿Cómo distintos actores sociales se posicionan para influir sobre el futuro? ¿Cómo democratizar la construcción de posibles futuros? ¿Qué podemos aprender al comparar luchas que se han llevado en diferentes países y entornos? ¿Cómo los movimientos emancipatorios y las prácticas diarias de las bases consiguen superar las reglas impuestas, la explotación y la falta de reconocimiento? ¿Qué visiones alternativas para el futuro son imaginables, deseables y alcanzables? ¿Qué hojas de ruta son las viables para la transformación social? Éstas sólo son algunas de las muchas preguntas fundamentales por explorar.

Barbara Weitgruber

Introduction

Welcome address by the Director General for Scientific Research and International Relations of the Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy WELCOME

It is a great pleasure for me to extend a warm welcome to the delegates of the Third Forum of the International Sociological Association to be held in Vienna from July 10 – 14, 2016. Let me congratulate the ISA on the theme of the Forum “The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World.” It is of utmost importance for sociologists from across the world to contribute to evidence-based policy in our global efforts to find adequate solutions to overcome grand challenges such as demography, migration, climate change and many more.

Barbara Weitgruber

In the European Union, one of the priorities of Horizon 2020, the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation, concerning the societal challenges is therefore to achieve breakthrough solutions based on multidisciplinary collaboration, including social sciences and humanities to tackle major concerns of citizens and society. Besides, a number of pan-European socio-scientific infrastructure projects like the Consortium of European Social Science Data Archives (CESSDA), the European Social Survey (ESS) and the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) play an important role in these joint efforts. Austria takes an active part in these and other initiatives on the roadmap of the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI). Austria is also a member of the Joint Programming Initiative “More Years, Better Lives”, and has joined forces with other EU member states in supporting the scientific community by financing Joint Transnational Calls. We also support the European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research which is situated in Austria and provides expertise in the fields of welfare and social policy development in a broad sense across Europe. At the national level the Austrian Ministry of Science, Research and Economy has initiated jointly with the relevant stakeholders a process to develop an effective strategy for the humanities and the social sciences in the Austrian Research Area. A main part of this strategy is to strengthen the cooperation between universities and other research institutions. Besides, a national network-platform on “Demographic Change and Ageing in Austria” has been established by the Austrian Interdisciplinary Platform on Ageing. Let me end by thanking everyone involved in planning and organizing the Third ISA Forum as well as all the active participants which have made such an attractive program possible. I look forward to welcoming you all in Vienna for this Third ISA Forum, with more than 4,000 participants from 126 countries. I am convinced that all of you will contribute to a successful conference!

Barbara Weitgruber Director General for Scientific Research and International Relations, Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy

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www.isa-sociology.org

Introduction

Barbara Weitgruber

Message de bienvenue de la Directrice générale pour la Recherche scientifique et les Relations internationales du Ministère fédéral autrichien des Sciences, de la Recherche et de l’Économie

Permettez-moi de féliciter l’ISA pour le thème choisi pour ce Forum, « Les avenirs que nous voulons : La sociologie mondiale et les luttes pour un monde meilleur ». Pour les sociologues du monde entier, il est capital de pouvoir contribuer à ce que les politiques publiques soient fondées sur des données scientifiques, dans le cadre des efforts déployés pour trouver des solutions propres à relever d’importants défis, notamment en matière de démographie, de migration et de changement climatique. À l’échelle de l’Union européenne, l’une des priorités du Programme-cadre de Recherche et d’Innovation Horizon 2020, concernant les enjeux sociétaux, est ainsi de trouver des solutions innovantes grâce à une collaboration pluridisciplinaire qui inclue les sciences humaines et sociales pour examiner les principales questions qui intéressent les citoyens et la société. Par ailleurs, plusieurs projets paneuropéens d’infrastructure socio-scientifique, tels que le CESSDA (Consortium européen des archives de données en sciences sociales), l’ESS (Enquête sociale européenne) ou SHARE (Enquête sur la Santé, le Vieillissement et la Retraite en Europe), contribuent de manière significative à ces efforts conjugués. L’Autriche participe activement à de telles initiatives dans le cadre de la feuille de route élaborée par ESFRI, le Forum stratégique européen sur les infrastructures de recherche. L’Autriche participe également à l’initiative européenne de programmation conjointe More Years, Better Lives, et coopère avec d’autres États membres de l’UE pour

soutenir la communauté scientifique en finançant des appels à projets transnationaux conjoints. Nous soutenons également le Centre européen de Recherche en Politique sociale (European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research), établi en Autriche, qui offre son expertise dans les domaines du bien-être social et des politiques sociales pour l’ensemble de l’Europe. À l’échelle nationale, le Ministère autrichien des Sciences, de la Recherche et de l’Économie a lancé en association avec les acteurs concernés une initiative visant à développer une stratégie efficace en faveur des sciences humaines et sociales dans l’Espace autrichien de la Recherche. L’un des éléments importants de cette stratégie consiste à renforcer la coopération entre les universités et les autres établissements de recherche. Par ailleurs, une plateforme réseau nationale sur « l’évolution démographique et le vieillissement en Autriche » a été mise en place par la Plateforme interdisciplinaire autrichienne sur le Vieillissement. Permettez-moi de conclure ce message en remerciant tous ceux et celles qui ont participé à la conception et à l’organisation de cette IIIe édition du Forum de l’ISA, ainsi que tous les intervenants qui ont permis d’offrir un programme aussi riche. Je me réjouis à l’avance de vous accueillir tous à Vienne pour ce IIIe Forum où plus de 4000 personnes venues de 126 pays sont attendues. Tous ensemble, vous allez contribuer au succès de cette conférence !

Barbara Weitgruber Directrice générale pour la Recherche scientifique et les Relations internationales, Ministère fédéral autrichien des Sciences, de la Recherche et de l’Économie

www.isa-sociology.org

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WELCOME

C’est un grand plaisir pour moi de vous souhaiter la bienvenue à ce IIIe Forum de l’Association internationale de Sociologie (ISA) organisé à Vienne du 10 au 14 juillet 2016.

Barbara Weitgruber

Introduction

WELCOME

Discurso de bienvenida de la Directora General de Investigación Científica y Relaciones Internacionales, Ministerio Federal austríaco de Ciencias, Investigación y Economía Es un gran placer para mí darles la bienvenida al Tercer Foro de la Asociación Internacional de Sociología que se celebrará en Viena del 10 al 14 de julio 2016. Quisiera felicitar a la ISA por el tema escogido para este Foro, “Los futuros que deseamos: La sociología global y las luchas por un mundo mejor”. Para los sociólogos alrededor del mundo, es fundamental contribuir a que las políticas sean basadas en datos científicos dentro de nuestros esfuerzos globales para encontrar soluciones adecuadas para hacer frente a grandes problemáticas como son la demografía, la migración, el cambio climático y otras muchas más. Asimismo, a nivel de la Unión Europea, una de las prioridades del Programa-marco de Investigación e Innovación “Horizonte 2020” en relación con los retos sociales actuales, es buscar soluciones innovadoras mediante una colaboración multidisciplinaria que incluya las ciencias sociales y las humanidades para tratar los principales problemas de los ciudadanos y la sociedad. Además, diversos proyectos paneuropeos de infraestructura socio-científica, como por ejemplo el CESSDA (Consorcio europeo de bases de datos en ciencias sociales), la ESS (Encuesta Social Europea) o SHARE (Encuesta de Salud, Envejecimiento y Jubilación en Europa), contribuyen de manera significativa a estas y otras iniciativas en el marco de la hoja de ruta elaborada por el ESFRI, el Foro Estratégico Europeo sobre Infraestructuras de Investigación. Austria también forma parte de la iniciativa europea de programación conjunta “More Years, Better Lives” y coopera con otros Estados miembros de la UE para apoyar la comunidad científica financiando convocatorias de proyectos transnacionales conjuntas.

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También apoyamos el Centro Europeo de Investigación en Política Social (European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research), que está establecido en Austria y aporta su experiencia en el campo del bienestar social y el desarrollo de las políticas sociales en todos los países de Europa. A nivel nacional, el Ministerio austríaco de Ciencias, Investigación y Economía ha iniciado junto con las partes interesadas un proceso con el fin de desarrollar una estrategia efectiva para las humanidades y las ciencias sociales en el Ámbito austríaco de la Investigación. Uno de los elementos principales de esta estrategia es reforzar la cooperación entre las universidades y los demás centros de investigación. Por otra parte, la Plataforma Interdisciplinaria austríaca sobre el Envejecimiento ha puesto en marcha una plataforma-red nacional sobre “cambio demográfico y envejecimiento en Austria”. Quisiera terminar agradeciendo a todos aquellos que han participado en la concepción y organización de esta tercera edición del Foro de la ISA, así como todos los ponentes quienes han permitido ofrecer un programa tan atractivo. Me alegro darles la bienvenida en Viena para este Tercer Foro en el que se esperan más de 4000 participantes de 126 países. ¡Sin duda alguna van, entre todos, a hacer de esta conferencia un gran éxito!

Barbara Weitgruber Directora General de Investigación Científica y Relaciones Internacionales, Ministerio Federal austríaco de Ciencias, Investigación y Economía

www.isa-sociology.org

Introduction

Heinz W. Engl

Welcome address by the Rector of the University of Vienna As Rector of the University of Vienna I am delighted to welcome the 3rd ISA Forum of Sociology in Vienna under the overall theme “The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World”.

Heinz W. Engl

This year’s 3rd ISA Forum of Sociology in Vienna will be organized by Markus Schulz, current ISA Vice-President Research, in collaboration with the ISA Research Coordinating Committee and the Austrian Local Organizing Committee chaired by Rudolf Richter, University of Vienna. On this occasion, I would like to thank Markus Schulz and Rudolf Richter for their commitment and effort. The Forum, with more than 4,000 participants from over 126 countries, will offer panel discussions between about 60 research groups on such social relevant themes like aging, education, economy, family, health, or migration. These topics are extremely relevant from a scientific and academic but also social point of view. The Department of Sociology is among the best-ranked departments of the University of Vienna (QS World University Ranking by Subject 2016). The Forum shows that the University of Vienna is a very global university with interdisciplinary character but also focuses on its regional impact. As a global university, the University of Vienna wants to secure its positive impact on society and respond to global societal and economic challenges. As an example for such a response to societal challenges, the Forum will lead to a broader public discussion and innovation in the field of Global Sociology and as Rector I am pleased that the University of Vienna is hosting this event.

Heinz W. Engl Rector of the University of Vienna

Message de bienvenue du Président de l’Université de Vienne En tant que Président de l’Université de Vienne, j’ai l’immense plaisir de vous accueillir à ce IIIe Forum de Sociologie de l’ISA qui est organisé à Vienne sur le thème « Les avenirs que nous voulons : La sociologie mondiale et les luttes pour un monde meilleur ».

pour la Recherche, en collaboration avec la Comité de Coordination de la Recherche de l’ISA et le Comité local d’organisation autrichien présidé par Rudolf Richter (Université de Vienne). Je voudrais profiter de cette occasion pour tous deux les remercier de leur mobilisation.

Le Forum de Sociologie est organisé par l’Association internationale de Sociologie (ISA) pour permettre à ses comités de recherche, groupes de travail et groupes thématiques ainsi qu’à son Conseil de la Recherche de se réunir entre deux Congrès mondiaux. L’ISA est une association à but non lucratif constituée à des fins scientifiques dans le domaine de la sociologie et des sciences sociales.

Le Forum, auquel vont participer plus de 4000 sociologues venus de plus de 126 pays, sera l’occasion de panels entre quelque 60 groupes de recherche sur tous les grands sujets de société actuels, tels que le vieillissement démographique, l’éducation, l’économie, la famille, la santé ou les migrations. Ces sujets n’ont pas seulement une importance capitale d’un point de scientifique mais aussi d’un point de vue social.

Cette IIIe édition du Forum de Sociologie est organisée à Vienne par Markus Schulz, Vice-Président de l’ISA

Le Département de Sociologie figure parmi les mieux classés de l’Université de Vienne (Classement mondial

www.isa-sociology.org

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WELCOME

The Forum of Sociology is organized by the International Sociological Association and designed as a mid-term meeting of Research Committees, Working Groups and Thematic Groups combined with the Business Meeting of the ISA Research Council. The International Sociology Association is a non-profit association for scientific purposes in the field of sociology and social sciences.

WELCOME

Heinz W. Engl

Introduction

des universités par thème QS 2016). En accueillant ce Forum, notre Université témoigne de sa vocation interdisciplinaire ainsi que de sa portée à la fois internationale et régionale. En véritable université de l’ère globale, l’Université de Vienne entend avoir une influence positive sur la société et répondre aux défis socio-économiques mondiaux.

À ce titre, je me réjouis de vous accueillir à l’Université de Vienne à l’occasion de ce Forum conçu pour élargir le débat public et favoriser l’innovation dans le domaine de la sociologie globale.

Heinz W. Engl Président de l’Université de Vienne

Discurso de bienvenida del Rector de la Universidad de Viena En mi calidad de rector de la Universidad de Viena, me complace darles la bienvenida a este Tercer Foro de Sociología de la ISA que se celebra en Viena bajo el lema “Los futuros que deseamos: La sociología global y las luchas por un mundo mejor”.  El Foro de Sociología, organizado por la Asociación Internacional de Sociología (ISA), está pensado como la reunión intermedia de los comités de investigación, grupos de trabajo y grupos temáticos de la Asociación junto con la reunión de trabajo del Consejo de Investigación de la ISA. La ISA es una asociación sin ánimo de lucro dedicada a objetivos científicos en el área de la sociología y de las ciencias sociales. Esta tercera edición del Foro de Sociología está organizada en Viena por Markus Schulz, Vice-Presidente de la ISA para la Investigación, en colaboración con el Comité de Coordinación de la Investigación de la ISA y el Comité Local de Organización austríaco presidido por Rudolf Richter (Universidad de Viena). Quisiera aprovechar esta oportunidad para agradecer a Markus Schulz y Rudolf Richter su tarea y su compromiso.

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El Foro, que cuenta con la participación de más de 4000 sociólogos y sociólogas de más de 126 países de todo el mundo, ofrecerá mesas redondas entre unos 60 grupos de investigación sobre los grandes temas de sociedad de hoy en día, como el envejecimiento de la población, la educación, la familia, la salud y la migración. Estos temas son de suma importancia no sólo desde un punto de vista científico y académico sino también social. El Departamento de Sociología figura entre los mejores de la Universidad de Viena, según la clasificación mundial por tema de universidades QS 2016. Al acoger este Foro, la Universidad de Viena demuestra su vocación interdisciplinar así como su alcance tanto internacional como regional. Como universidad global, la Universidad de Viena pretende influir positivamente sobre la sociedad y responder a los desafíos sociales y económicos globales. Asimismo, confío en que este Foro dé lugar a un amplio debate público y la innovación en el ámbito de la sociología global, y como Rector, me alegro de poder recibiros aquí en la Universidad de Viena.

Heinz W. Engl Rector de la Universidad de Viena

www.isa-sociology.org

Introduction

Ulrike Felt

Welcome address by the Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Vienna

Ulrike Felt

The Vienna Department of Sociology has been very proactively engaged in this transformation process, always reminding us that as social scientists we should not only excel in research on the international level but also try to impact the world we live in. Therefore I congratulate you for the topic of your meeting “The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World.” It could not be more timely. I am convinced there will be many debates questioning what the “we” in the title might mean and who will be able to participate in this future “better world.” Some 4,000 sociologists from 126 countries around the world are expected to join us in Vienna. The Forum will be a point of integration: for researchers from different institutional backgrounds, at different stages of their career, from different corners of the world. Some 200 volunteers, most of them students, and 32 liaison persons taking care of the Research Committees, will participate in turning this event into a success. Thanks to all of them. Let me end by thanking all those who have made this event possible and welcoming you to a meeting that hopefully will become a memorable moment of reflection, exchange and engagement.

Ulrike Felt Professor of Science and Technology Studies Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Vienna

Message de bienvenue de la Doyenne de la Faculté de Sciences sociales de l’Université de Vienne C’est à la fois un honneur et un plaisir pour moi de vous accueillir à l’Université de Vienne pour ce IIIe Forum de l’Association internationale de Sociologie. Le Forum est organisé par notre Département de Sociologie, qui fait partie de la Faculté de Sciences Sociales dont j’ai le privilège d’être la doyenne. La Faculté, qui couvre les principaux domaines des sciences sociales, offre quatre formations de licence, sept formations de master et six spécialités de doctorat et compte près de 13.000 étudiants. Elle fait actuellement l’objet d’importantes transformations : un grand nombre de nouveaux enseignants ont été recrutés ces dernières années, de nouveaux axes de recherche ont émergé, et nous avons renforcé notre orientation internationale et réussi à incorporer de nombreux jeunes chercheurs prometteurs.

Le Département de Sociologie de l’Université de Vienne a participé activement à ce processus de transformation en nous rappelant qu’en tant que spécialistes des sciences sociales, il nous faut non seulement poursuivre l’excellence dans nos recherches au niveau international, mais aussi chercher à avoir une influence sur le monde dans lequel nous vivons. C’est pourquoi je vous félicite pour le choix du thème de cette rencontre, « Les avenirs que nous voulons : La sociologie mondiale et les luttes pour un monde meilleur », un thème éminemment d’actualité. Ce titre ne manquera pas de soulever de nombreux débats concernant l’identité de ce « nous », en nous appelant à nous interroger sur qui sera en mesure de participer à ce « monde meilleur » à venir.

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WELCOME

It is an honour and a pleasure for me to welcome you warmly to the 3rd ISA Forum at the University of Vienna. It has been organized by the Department of Sociology, which is part of the Social Science Faculty which I have the privilege to care for as a Dean. This large Faculty, which is covering the major fields in the social sciences, is going through a process of important transformation: a lot of new faculty members have joined over the last few years, new research foci have emerged, our international orientation has been strengthened, and we have succeeded in integrating many young promising scholars. And we host nearly 13,000 students in four BA programs, seven MA programs and six PhD specialisations.

WELCOME

Ulrike Felt

Introduction

Quelques 4000 sociologues venus de 126 pays du monde entier sont attendus à Vienne. Pour ces chercheurs en provenance de différents types d’institutions, originaires de différentes régions du monde, et qui se trouvent à différents stades de leur carrière, le Forum se veut un lieu d’intégration. Je tiens à remercier les quelque 200 bénévoles, pour la plupart des étudiants, ainsi que les 32 personnes chargées d’assurer la liaison avec les comités de recherche, qui sont ici présentes pour que ce rendez-vous soit un succès.

Je voudrais enfin remercier tous ceux qui ont fait que ce Forum soit possible, et vous souhaiter la bienvenue pour ce qui j’espère constituera un moment mémorable de réflexion, d’échange et d’engagement.

Ulrike Felt Professeure en Sciences et Technologies Doyenne de la Faculté de Sciences sociales, Université de Vienne

Discurso de bienvenida de la Decana de la Facultad de Ciencias Sociales de la Universidad de Viena Para mí es un honor y un verdadero placer darles la bienvenida al Tercer Foro de la Asociación Internacional de Sociología celebrado en la Universidad de Viena. El Foro está organizado por nuestro Departamento de Sociología, que forma parte de la Facultad de Ciencias Sociales que tengo el privilegio de dirigir. La Facultad, que abarca todos los grandes campos de las ciencias sociales y ofrece cuatro programas de licenciatura, siete de máster y seis especializaciones de doctorado, cuenta con cerca de 13.000 estudiantes. En la actualidad se encuentra en pleno proceso de transformación: muchos nuevos docentes se han incorporado en los últimos años, se han incluido nuevas líneas de investigación, se ha reforzado nuestra orientación internacional y se ha logrado integrar numerosos jóvenes investigadores prometedores. El Departamento de Sociología de la Universidad de Viena ha participado activamente a este proceso de transformación recordándonos que, como sociólogos, no sólo hemos de perseguir la excelencia en nuestro trabajo de investigación a nivel internacional sino también hemos de procurar influir sobre el mundo en el que vivimos. Asimismo, les felicito por haber elegido un tema tan oportuno para este Foro: “Los futuros que deseamos: La sociología global y las luchas por un mundo mejor”. Sin

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duda este título abrirá muchos debates para intentar determinar quién es este “nosotros” incluido en “los futuros que deseamos” y quiénes podrán participar a ese futuro “mundo mejor”. Unos 4000 sociólogos procedentes de 126 países de todo el mundo se esperan para este Foro en Viena. Para todos aquellos investigadores de distintas procedencias institucionales, originarios de diferentes regiones del mundo y que se encuentran en diferentes etapas de su carrera, el Foro será un punto de integración. Quisiera dar las gracias a los 200 voluntarios, en su mayoría estudiantes, y a las 32 personas de contacto encargadas de asistir los comités de investigación, que estarán presentes para que este encuentro sea todo un éxito. Para terminar, quisiera expresar mi agradecimiento a todos los que han hecho posible este Foro y darles la bienvenida para lo que sin duda será un momento memorable de reflexión, intercambio y compromiso.

Ulrike Felt Profesora de Ciencia y Tecnología Decana de la Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de Viena

www.isa-sociology.org

Introduction

Katharina Scherke

Welcome address by the President of the Austrian Sociological Association Dear Colleagues,

Katharina Scherke

The motto of the Forum, “struggles for a better world,” reflects an idea that has attracted sociologists for a long time. From outside the discipline, political authorities as well as a wider public have often demanded from sociology to come up with ideas for controlling and developing society in accordance with the aims of social justice, inclusion and a better life for everyone. And many sociologists have indeed tried very hard to challenge this request. Today the question still remains open: Shall we as sociologists just describe society – or shall we also strive for a change to the better? And how shall we decide on what is a better world? Each generation of sociologists has to find a new answer, taking into account the most pressing societal challenges of their respective time. Under this perspective, the topic of the ISA Forum couldn’t be more timely as societies are currently undergoing entirely new forms of crises. Societal models of the “living together” are being contested all over the world not only due to economic and social alterations but also because the natural environment is going through fundamental changes. All this influences sociology’s attitudes towards the aim of improving societies. Austria is a place where the question of how to develop sociology has been discussed for more than 100 years. Austria and the Central European region have a long tradition of sociological reasoning. Already at the beginning of the twentieth century, theoretical approaches such as Phenomenological Sociology (Alfred Schütz) or Conflict Theory (Ludwig Gumplowicz) were discussed here. Empirical research methods were developed early on, as in the “Marienthal Study” conducted by Marie Jahoda, Paul Felix Lazarsfeld and Hans Zeisel. Under the Nazi period, a heavy brain drain prevented sociology from being further established. It only recovered during the 1960s as a discipline taught at universities. Nowadays in Austria sociology can be studied at five universities as a major subject, and more universities offer it on an elective basis. Sociological research is performed not only at universities but also within different research centers. Currently, the Austrian Sociological Association has more than 500 members and runs twenty sections, covering various special fields of sociological interest. We hope all participants will enjoy their stay in Vienna and Austria and will take interesting insights on how to reach the “Futures We Want”, a basic challenge for sociology closely connected to the history of our discipline, and a major issue that has provided many starting points for sociological research.

Katharina Scherke President of the Austrian Sociological Association

www.isa-sociology.org

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WELCOME

The 3rd ISA Forum is going to take place in Vienna, which is a great honor for the Austrian sociological community. We would like to thank the Local Organizing Committee, foremost its chair Rudolf Richter (University of Vienna) and Brigitte Aulenbacher (University of Linz), for bringing the conference to Austria and for all the manifold activities and the work done over the past months to prepare for a successful event.

Katharina Scherke

Introduction

Message de bienvenue de la Présidente de l’Association autrichienne de Sociologie

WELCOME

Chers collègues, C’est un grand honneur pour la communauté des sociologues d’Autriche d’accueillir le IIIe Forum de l’ISA à Vienne. Nous souhaitons remercier le Comité local d’organisation, et en premier lieu son Président Rudolf Richter (Université de Vienne) ainsi que Brigitte Aulenbacher (Université de Linz), pour avoir fait en sorte que cette rencontre se célèbre en Autriche, et pour les multiples activités et tous les efforts déployés tout au long de ces derniers mois pour en assurer le succès. La devise de ce Forum, « les luttes pour un monde meilleur », illustre une idée à laquelle les sociologues sont depuis longtemps attachés. Par delà notre discipline, les autorités politiques tout comme de nombreux citoyens attendent souvent de la sociologie qu’elle avance des idées pour orienter et développer la société en accord avec les objectifs de justice sociale, d’inclusion et d’une vie meilleure pour tous. Et nombreux sont les sociologues qui se sont en effet appliqué à répondre à cette attente. Aujourd’hui la question reste ouverte : en tant que sociologues, notre rôle se limite-t-il à décrire la société, ou nous faut-il également chercher à changer les choses pour l’améliorer ? Et comment déterminer ce qui va dans le sens d’un monde meilleur ? Chaque génération de sociologues se doit de trouver une réponse nouvelle, en prenant en considération les grands défis sociétaux du moment. Dans cette perspective, le thème du Forum de l’ISA ne saurait être mieux choisi, les sociétés actuelles connaissant des crises aux formes entièrement nouvelles. Partout dans le monde, les modèles sociétaux du « vivre-ensemble » sont remis en cause, non pas seulement en raison de changements économiques et sociaux mais aussi parce que notre environnement naturel est sujet à de profondes transformations. Tout cela influe sur

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la manière dont la sociologie aborde l’objectif d’améliorer les sociétés. En Autriche, cela fait plus d’un siècle que la question de savoir comment développer la sociologie fait débat. L’Autriche et plus généralement l’Europe centrale ont une longue tradition de réflexion sociologique. Déjà, au début du XXe siècle, on s’y entretenait d’approches théoriques novatrices telles que la sociologie phénoménologique (Alfred Schütz) ou la théorie du conflit (Ludwig Gumplowicz). C’est là aussi que des méthodes de recherche empiriques sont nées, comme ce fut le cas avec « l’étude de Marienthal » menée par Marie Jahoda, Paul Felix Lazarsfeld et Hans Zeisel. La période nazie s’est traduite par une fuite massive des cerveaux, interrompant le développement de la sociologie comme discipline à part entière, et il faudra attendre les années 60 pour que la discipline soit rétablie dans les universités. Aujourd’hui en Autriche, cinq universités proposent une spécialisation en sociologie et bien d’autres l’offrent en matière secondaire. La recherche en sociologie s’effectue dans les universités mais aussi dans différents centres de recherche. À l’heure actuelle, l’Association autrichienne de Sociologie compte plus de 500 membres, et 20 sections couvrant divers champs de spécialisation dans le domaine de la sociologie. À tous les participants à ce Forum, nous souhaitons de passer un agréable séjour à Vienne et en Autriche et d’y trouver des pistes intéressantes en vue des « avenirs que nous voulons ». Il s’agit là d’un défi essentiel pour la sociologie, un défi étroitement lié à l’histoire de notre discipline et qui a souvent fourni des points de départ pour la recherche en sociologie.

Katharina Scherke Présidente de l’Association autrichienne de Sociologie

www.isa-sociology.org

Introduction

Katharina Scherke

Discurso de bienvenida de la Presidenta de la Asociación Austríaca de Sociología Queridos amigos,

El lema del Foro, “las luchas por un mundo mejor”, ilustra una idea que interesa a los sociólogos desde hace mucho. Desde fuera de nuestra disciplina, las autoridades políticas así como muchos ciudadanos esperan a menudo de la sociología que proponga ideas para orientar y desarrollar la sociedad de acuerdo con los objetivos de justicia social, inclusión y una vida mejor para todos. Y muchos son los sociólogos quienes se han esforzado en responder a estas expectativas. A día de hoy la pregunta sigue abierta: Como sociólogos, ¿se limita nuestro papel a describir la sociedad, o hemos también de buscar cambiar las cosas para mejorarla? Cada nueva generación de sociólogos ha de buscar una nueva respuesta, teniendo en cuenta los grandes desafíos sociales del momento. Desde esta perspectiva, el tema del Foro de la ISA no podría ser más oportuno, sabiendo que las crisis que conocen las sociedades actuales tienen formas completamente nuevas. En todo el mundo, los modelos sociales de convivencia son cuestionados, no sólo debido a cambios económicos y sociales sino también porque nuestro entorno natural está sufriendo profundos cambios. Todo ello influye en la manera en que la sociología trata el objetivo de mejorar las sociedades.

Deseamos a todos los participantes a este Foro que disfruten de una agradable estancia en Viena y en Austria y que este encuentro sea una oportunidad para hallar perspectivas interesantes en la búsqueda de “los futuros que deseamos”. Se trata de un reto fundamental íntimamente vinculado con la historia de nuestra disciplina, que a menudo ha aportado puntos de partida para la investigación sociológica.

Katharina Scherke Presidenta de la Asociación Austríaca de Sociología

www.isa-sociology.org

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WELCOME

Es un gran honor para la comunidad de sociólogos y sociólogas de Austria saber que el Tercer Foro de la ISA se va a celebrar en Viena. Queremos dar las gracias al Comité Local de Organización, y en primer lugar a Rudolf Richter (Universidad de Viena) y Brigitte Aulenbacher (Universidad de Linz) por haber traído esta conferencia a Austria y por la multitud de actividades y todo el trabajo llevado a cabo estos últimos meses para asegurar que este Foro sea un éxito.

En Austria, hace más de un siglo que el modo de desarrollar la sociología es objeto de debate. Austria y, más generalmente, Europa Central, tienen una larga tradición de reflexión sociológica. A inicios del siglo XX, ya se trataba de planteamientos teóricos novedosos tales como la sociología fenomenológica (Alfred Schütz) o la teoría del conflicto (Ludwig Gumplowicz). Fue también en Austria que se elaboraron métodos de investigación empíricos, como fue el caso con el estudio de Marienthal dirigido por Marie Jahoda, Paul Felix Lazarsfeld y Hans Zeisel. El período nazi se tradujo en una masiva fuga de cerebros, produciendo un parón en la consolidación de la sociología, de tal manera que hay que esperar hasta los años 60 para que vuelva a ser enseñada en las universidades austríacas. Hoy en día en Austria, cinco universidades ofrecen una especialización en sociología, y se propone como asignatura secundaria en muchas más universidades del país. La investigación sociológica se lleva a cabo en universidades pero también en centros de investigación de diferente tipo. La Asociación Austríaca de Sociología cuenta en la actualidad con más de 500 miembros, y 20 secciones que abarcan diversos campos de especialización dentro del área de la sociología.

Rudolf Richter

Introduction

Welcome address by the Chair of the Local Organizing Committee

WELCOME

Welcome to the ISA Forum 2016 at the University of Vienna. The Local Organizing Committee, consisting of representatives from all the departments of sociology at the universities in Austria and research institutes, has prepared an infrastructure for the interim meeting of the Research Committees, Working Groups and Thematic Groups of the ISA to discuss, present and reflect their scientific research under the general theme “The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World.” Not foreseen at the time Vienna won the bid to host the Forum was the refugee problem which has divided Europe between a welcome culture and the closing of boundaries. We are in the middle of a struggle for a better world and sociological answers for reaching solutions are highly welcome.

Rudolf Richter

You are welcome to experience the social science flair of Vienna. Whilst at the conference you might have time between the sessions to take a walk through the arcades of the university buildings and look at the busts of earlier professors known for their research in human and natural sciences. Although among those busts, you will not find any sociologists, as sociology as a study program was not established at the University of Vienna until 1966. But the city offers many places of sociological interest. Take a city tour and visit the KarlMarx Hof, the socialist answer to the imperial palace of the monarch. Visit the coffee house where Leon Trotsky played chess, where novelists and intellectuals discussed the contents of the 250 newspapers and 22 languages displayed for the visitors (and look at how many papers and languages are offered nowadays). Visit the Naschmarkt, the biggest market in Vienna, and you will experience the international flair Vienna has with its 30% migrant population. Go to the place where Karl Polanyi lived with his family from 1924 to 1933 before he fled from the Nazis. On your way through Vienna you might find the street recently named after Dr. Otto Neurath, commemorating the founder of pictorial statistics. On this occasion you might get an impression of a newly built urban neighborhood off the touristic paths. If you join us on one of the offered tours to the wine gardens it is very possible you might sit in the garden where Max Weber relaxed after lectures during his short stay at the University of Vienna and from the not-so-rational bureaucracy of the university, as he noted in one of his letters. A ten-minute walk from the university will bring you to the place where Sigmund Freud met his patients and collected his antiques. On the offered tour to the Grammatneusiedl you can visit the research site of the Marienthal study, documented in a museum there. I hope the ISA Forum in Vienna will inspire you to continue to struggle for a better world. We welcome you here to see, discuss and reflect.

Rudolf Richter Chair of the Local Organizing Committee

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www.isa-sociology.org

Introduction

Rudolf Richter

Message de bienvenue du Président du Comité local d’organisation

Nous vous invitons à découvrir l’étroite relation qui lie la ville de Vienne aux sciences sociales. Pendant la durée du Forum, peut-être trouverez-vous le temps entre deux sessions de vous promener sous les arcades de l’université et de découvrir les bustes d’anciens professeurs qui se sont illustrés pour leurs recherches dans le domaine des sciences humaines et naturelles. Parmi ces sculptures, vous ne trouverez cependant aucun sociologue, car ce n’est pas avant 1966 que les études de sociologie ont été introduites à l’Université de Vienne. Mais la ville offre de nombreux lieux d’intérêt sociologique. Visitez le Karl-Max-Hof, qui fut la réponse socialiste au palais impérial. Visitez le café où Léon Trotski jouait aux échecs, où romanciers et intellectuels débattaient du contenu de

pas moins de 250 journaux disponibles pour les clients dans 22 langues (et comparez l’offre de journaux et de langues aujourd’hui disponible). Visitez le Naschmarkt, le plus grand marché de Vienne, pour saisir l’atmosphère internationale d’une ville qui compte 30% de population immigrée. Découvrez là où Karl Polanyi habitait avec sa famille de 1924 à 1933, année où il a fui le nazisme. En marchant dans la ville, il se peut que vous tombiez sur la rue qui porte depuis peu le nom du Dr. Otto Neurath, en hommage au fondateur des statistiques picturales. Vous pourrez à cette occasion découvrir un nouveau quartier, situé hors des sentiers battus. Et si vous vous joignez à nous pour l’une des visites proposées dans les guinguettes au milieu des vignobles, il se peut que vous vous retrouviez assis dans le jardin même où Max Weber, lors de son court séjour à l’Université de Vienne, venait se détendre après ses cours, à l’écart de la bureaucratie universitaire qu’il qualifia de « pas si rationnelle que cela » dans l’une de ses lettres. À dix minutes à pied de l’Université, vous vous retrouverez là où Sigmund Freud recevait ses patients et collectionnait des antiquités. Et si vous vous joignez à la visite proposée de Grammatneusiedl, vous pourrez visiter le site de recherche de l’étude de Marienthal, documentée dans le musée qui s’y trouve. Je souhaite que le Forum de l’ISA à Vienne vous serve d’inspiration pour continuer à lutter pour un monde meilleur. Nous vous invitons ici à voir, à discuter, et à réfléchir.

Rudolf Richter Président du Comité local d’organisation

Discurso de bienvenida del Presidente del Comité Local de Organización Bienvenidos al Foro 2016 de la ISA en la Universidad de Viena. El Comité Local de Organización, integrado por representantes de todos los departamentos de sociología de las universidades y centros de investigación en Austria, se ha encargado de preparar las infraestructuras necesarias para esta reunión intermedia de los comités de investigación, grupos de trabajo y grupos temáticos de la ISA, en la cual podrán presentar, analizar y debatir de sus investigaciones científicas en torno al tema general del Foro “Los futuros que deseamos: La sociología global y las luchas por un mundo mejor”. Cuando Viena fue seleccionada para acoger esta tercera edición del Foro, no se preveía la crisis de los refugiados que ahora divide Europa entre cultura de acogida y cierre de fronteras. En este momento, en el que nos encontramos

en medio de una lucha por un mundo mejor, respuestas sociológicas en busca de soluciones son sumamente bienvenidas. Les invitamos a descubrir la estrecha relación que une la ciudad de Viena con las ciencias sociales. Durante el Foro, tal vez entre dos sesiones tendrán la oportunidad de pasear por las pórticos de la universidad y descubrir los bustos de antiguos profesores renombrados por su trabajo en el campo de las humanidades o las ciencias naturales. Entre estos bustos no obstante, no encontrarán ningún sociólogo: los estudios en sociología no fueron establecidos en la Universidad de Viena hasta el año 1966. La ciudad ofrece sin embargo numerosos lugares de interés sociológico. Pueden acercarse al

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WELCOME

Bienvenue à l’Université de Vienne pour l’édition 2016 du Forum de l’ISA. Le Comité local d’organisation, constitué de représentants de tous les départements de sociologie des universités autrichiennes et d’instituts de recherche en Autriche, a préparé une infrastructure pour cette rencontre à mi-parcours des comités de recherche, groupes de travail et groupes thématiques de l’ISA pour débattre, présenter et analyser leurs recherches autour du thème général « Les Avenirs que nous voulons : La sociologie mondiale et les luttes pour un monde meilleur ». Lorsque Vienne a été sélectionnée pour accueillir le Forum, on n’avait pas prévu le problème des réfugiés qui divise aujourd›hui l’Europe entre culture de l’accueil et fermeture des frontières. Aujourd’hui, alors que nous nous trouvons à l’épicentre d’une lutte pour un monde meilleur, des réponses sociologiques pour trouver des solutions sont fort bienvenues.

WELCOME

Rudolf Richter

Introduction

Karl-Max-Hof, que fue la respuesta socialista al palacio imperial. Pueden visitar el café donde León Trotski jugaba al ajedrez y novelistas e intelectuales debatían acerca del contenido de nada menos que 250 periódicos publicados en 22 idiomas diferentes (y podrán comparar con la oferta actual de periódicos e idiomas). Pueden ir al Naschmarkt, el mercado más grande de Viena, para conocer el carácter internacional de una ciudad que cuenta con 30% de inmigrantes. Podrán descubrir dónde vivía Karl Polanyi con su familia de 1924 a 1933, año en el que huyó del nazismo. Paseando por la ciudad, puede que encuentren la calle que hace poco recibió el nombre del Dr. Otto Neurath, en homenaje al fundador de las estadísticas pictográficas. Puede ser una oportunidad para descubrir un barrio nuevo, lejos de las rutas turísticas. Si nos acompañan en una de las salidas que proponemos en los bares de vinos ubicados entre

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viñedos, puede que se sienten en el mismo jardín donde, durante su corta estancia en la Universidad de Viena, Max Weber venía a relajarse después de dar clase, lejos de la burocracia universitaria que describió en una des sus cartas como “no tan racional como lo parece”. A diez minutos andando desde la Universidad, encontrarán el lugar donde Sigmund Freud recibía sus pacientes y coleccionaba antigüedades. En la salida que proponemos a Grammatneusiedl, podrán visitar el lugar de investigación del estudio de Marienthal, así como el museo en el que está documentado. Espero que el Foro de la ISA en Viena les sirva de inspiración para seguir luchando por un mundo mejor. Les esperamos aquí para ver, debatir, y reflexionar.

Rudolf Richter Presidente del Comité Local de Organización

www.isa-sociology.org

FORUM

Forum Organization ISA Forum of Sociology

Executive Committee 2014-2018

Guillermina Jasso, New York University, USA Kalpana Kannabiran, Council for Social Development, Hyderabad, India Marina Kurkchiyan, University of Oxford, United Kingdom

PRESIDENT

Simon Mapadimeng, North-West University, South Africa

Margaret Abraham Hofstra University, New York, USA

Abdul-Mumin Sa’ad, Federal College of Education Yola, Nigeria

VICE-PRESIDENT RESEARCH COUNCIL Markus Schulz New School for Social Research, New York, USA

Ayse Saktanber, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey Celi Scalon, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Sawako Shirahase, University of Tokyo, Japan

VICE-PRESIDENT NATIONAL ASSOCIATIONS Sari Hanafi

Grazyna Skapska, Jagiellonian University, Poland

American University of Beirut, Lebanon

Evangelia Tastsoglou, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, Canada Chin-Chun Yi, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan

VICE-PRESIDENT PUBLICATIONS

Elena Zdravomyslova, European University St. Petersburg, Russia

Vineeta Sinha National University of Singapore, Singapore

Programme Committee

VICE-PRESIDENT FINANCE AND MEMBERSHIP Benjamin Tejerina Montana

FORUM PRESIDENT AND CHAIR

University of the Basque Country, Spain

Markus S. Schulz, ISA Vice-President Research New School for Social Research, New York, USA

Members of the Executive Committee Rosemary Barberet, City University of New York, USA Dilek Cindoglu, Abdullah Gul University, Kayseri, Turkey Filomin Gutierrez, University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines John Holmwood, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom

FORUM VICE-PRESIDENTS Margaret Abraham, ISA President, Hofstra University, USA Rudolf Richter, Chair, Local Organizing Committee, University of Vienna, Austria

www.isa-sociology.org

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ISA Forum of Sociology

International Sociological Association

Forum Organization

Introduction

MEMBERS OF ISA RESEARCH COORDINATING COMMITTEE

Roland Verwiebe, University of Vienna

Rosemary Barberet, City University of New York, USA Dilek Cindoglu, Abdullah Gul University, Kayseri, Turkey Guillermina Jasso, New York University, USA Kalpana Kannabiran, Council for Social Development, Hyderabad, India Marina Kurkchiyan, University of Oxford, UK Abdul-Mumin Sa’ad, Federal College of Education Yola, Nigeria Celi Scalon, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

FORUM

Sawako Shirahase, University of Tokyo, Japan Evangelia Tastsoglou, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, Canada Chin-Chun Yi, Academia Sinica, Taiwan

ISA Secretariat

Frank Welz, University of Innsbruck Ulrike Zartler, University of Vienna

Local Hosts RC04

Vera Gallistl, University of Vienna

RC05

Julia Edthofer, University of Vienna

RC06

Eva-Maria Schmidt, University of Vienna

RC07

Claudia Schwarz-Plaschg, University of Vienna

RC09 Marietta Mayrhofer-Deak, University of Vienna RC10 Oliver Koenig, University of Vienna RC11

Anna Wanka, University of Vienna

RC14

Maria Schlechter, University of Vienna

RC17 Christian Rogler, University of Vienna

Izabela Barlinska, Executive Secretary

RC18 Monika Mühlböck, University of Vienna

Juan Lejarrag, Membership Officer ISA Forum of Sociology

Martin Weichbold, Paris Lodron University of Salzburg

Program and Registration Management The Conference Exchange TM www.confex.com

Local Organizing Committee

RC19

Roland Atzmüller, Johannes Kepler University Linz

RC20

Kristina Eisfeld, University of Vienna

RC23

Phillip Schörpf, University of Vienna

RC24

Elisabeth Huber, University of Vienna

RC25

Danièle Lipp, University of Vienna

RC30 Annika Schönauer, University of Vienna

CHAIR Rudolf Richter, University of Vienna VICE CHAIR Brigitte Aulenbacher, Johannes Keppler University Linz PROJECT COORDINATOR Ida Seljeskog, University of Vienna

RC31

Eszther Balogh, University of Vienna

RC32

Laura Wiesböck, University of Vienna

RC33

Susanne Vogl, University of Vienna

RC35

Glenda Hannibal Møller¸ University of Vienna

RC38

Juli Székely, Central European University Budapest, Hungary

RC42

Julia Günther, University of Vienna

RC44 Saskja Schindler, University of Vienna

ASSISTANT COORDINATOR Hannah Quinz, University of Vienna

RC47

Verena Stern, University of Vienna

RC48

Mirjam Pot, University of Vienna

RC53 Theresa Fibich, University of Vienna RC54

Ryan Jepson, University of Vienna

Dieter Bögenhold, Alpen Adria University Klagenfurt

RC55

Gerhard Paulinger, University of Vienna

Alexander Bogner, Austrian Sociological Association, Austrian Academy of Sciences

TG04 Heiko Kirschner, University of Vienna

Jörg Flecker, University of Vienna

WG01 Deniz Seebacher, University of Vienna

Max Haller, University of Graz

WG03 Faime Alpagu, University of Vienna

MEMBERS

TG06 Petra Neuhold, University of Vienna

Josef Hochgerner, Centre for Social Innovation

Student Organizing Committee

Beate Littig, Institute of Advanced Studies Falk Pastner, Congress Services and Event Management, University of Vienna Gergö Prazsák, Hungarian Sociological Association, Eötvös Loránd University Budapest Gerry Schneider, Congress Services, University of Vienna

Verena Bauer, Georg Bayerl, Johanna Berger, Mario Burian, Virginia Connolly, Fabian Elbaky, Denise Glaesser, Stefan Haschke, Swantje Höft, Constantin Holmer, Gilles Johann, Constanze Leeb, Barbara Mayer, Philipp Mendoza, Philipp Molitor , Michaela Neumann, Cagri Özyörek, Marianna Palcic, Pamina Reichmann, Tobias Schubert, Simon Schweitzer

Sylvia Trnka, LOC Consultant, University of Vienna 38

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General Information Registration, Venue and Local Information and the following opening plenary session will be broadcast in the Arcaded Courtyard and the Ceremonial Chambers of the Main Building.

Registration The registration desk is located just inside the main entrance of the Main Building of the University of Vienna (address: Universitätsring 1, 1010 Vienna).

Sunday, 10 July 2016

8:00 – 20:00

Monday, 11 July 2016 to Wednesday, 13 July 2016:

8:00 – 18:00

Thursday, 14 July 2016:

8:00 – 15:00

Farewell Party, Thursday, 14 July 2016 The farewell party hosted by the Austrian Local Organising Committee will be held in the Main Building on Thursday, 14 July 2016 from 19:30 onwards. There will be live music, food and drinks as well as surprise acts on different floors.

Exhibition The exhibition area is located on the 1st floor of the Main Building. The book exhibition takes place in the Main Ceremonial Chamber, and the publishers lounge can be found in the adjacent Senate Chamber.

Name Badge Each delegate will receive a name badge upon registration. For security reasons, all participants are required to wear their name badge during all activities related to the ISA Forum. Admission to sessions, the exhibition and official functions included in the registration fee will not be granted without the relevant name badge.

Opening Ceremony and Reception The opening ceremony will take place on Sunday 10, July 2016 from 16:00 to 17:30 in the Auditorium Maximum located in the Main Building. A live stream of the ceremony

Monday, 11 July 2016 to Wednesday, 13 July 2016:

10:30 – 19:30

Thursday, 14 July 2016:

10:30 – 17:30

Sightseeing and social programme In addition to a variety of sightseeing tours, we offer sociological tours and social activities organised by the Austrian Student Organising Committee. The programme and tickets are available online.

Venue Information Venue

Information desks

The ISA Forum takes place in three buildings of the University of Vienna. The registration, plenary sessions, book exhibition and several RC/WG/TG sessions take place in the Main Building of the University (address: Universitätsring 1, 1010 Vienna). The remaining sessions will be held in the NIG (address: Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Vienna) and the Juridicum (address: Schottenbastei 10-16, 1010 Vienna). These two buildings are located within 5 minutes walking distance of the Main Building.

At each of the three locations, there will be an information desk staffed by student volunteers.

Volunteers Students working as volunteer staff members will be there to assist you during the congress. You can easily recognise them by their matching T-shirts. Please feel free to ask them for help.

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Registration, Venue and Local Information

On-site registration starts on Sunday, 10 July 2016 at 8:00. The opening hours of the registration desk are as follows:

The reception will be held from 19:30 to 21:30 in the Arcaded Courtyard. Snacks and drinks will be served.

GENERAL

Registration Information

General Information

Introduction

Venue Information, continued

Message boards

Internet access

The message boards facilitate contact between the participants, and they keep you up-to-date about messages from the organisers.

Wi-Fi access is available in all rooms throughout the entire venue. You will find the voucher with the required password on the back of your name badge. The Wi-Fi network is called “eduroam”.

Business centre The business centre is located on the 1st floor (staircase 2) of the Main Building. Sunday, 10 July 2016:

8:00 – 14:30

Monday, 11 July 2016 to Thursday, 14 July 2016:

8:00 – 16:00

GENERAL

Registration, Venue and Local Information

Copying and printing Copying and printing services are available in the business centre.

Computer labs

Technical information for presenters All session rooms are equipped with a computer, Wi-Fi, a projector and a screen. Speakers are requested to bring their own USB device so that they can easily upload their presentations onto a single computer. This should be done during the break preceding the session at the latest in order to save time between the presentations. Speakers will operate the slides themselves. If speakers want to use their own Mac, they need to bring a suitable VGA connector. We recommend using either PowerPoint or Adobe PDF presentation files saved on a USB device that is compatible with Microsoft Windows 7. The expected format of the presentation file is Microsoft Windows PowerPoint (version 2013 or previous versions). For roundtable sessions the presenters must bring their own laptops.

You can use the computer labs in the NIG and the Juridicum.

•• ••• • ••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••• ••••• ••••• •• ••••

NIG (ground-floor):

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Sunday, 10 July 2016:

8:00 – 16:00

Monday, 11 July 2016 to Thursday, 14 July 2016:

8:00 – 19:30

-.....

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Juridicum (5th floor, SEM 54): Sunday, 10 July 2016:

9:00 – 16:00

Monday, 11 July 2016 to Thursday, 14 July 2016:

9:00 – 16:00

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Local Information About Vienna

Currency exchange

Language:

German

Population:

1.8 million

Telephone prefix:

+43 (1)

Currency:

Euro (€)

Regular shops and restaurants generally accept euros (€) only. Banks are normally open on weekdays from 9:00 to 15:00.

Credit cards

Vienna is Austria’s capital and its largest city. The city is host to many international organisations including OPEC and one of the four official headquarters of the United Nations. In 2012 Vienna was announced to be one of the most liveable cities in the world in the EIU’s Global Liveability Report. The historic centre of the city was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Vienna is known for its classical music. The masterpieces composed in Vienna by Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn and Schubert are performed in the opera houses and concert halls today.

Calling for help

Shopping Shops are generally open from Monday to Friday 9:0018:00, Saturday 9:00-17:00 and closed on Sunday.

Tipping The standard tip in Austria for waiters, taxi drivers, etc. is 5 to 10 % of the total bill.

Public transport

Fire service: 122, Police: 133, Ambulance: 144 For hearing-impaired persons: text message to 0800 133 133 or e-mail to [email protected]

Electricity 230 V AC, 50 Hz, two-wire plugs (plug types: C & F)

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VISA, MasterCard, Diners Club and American Express credit cards are widely accepted at hotels, shops, restaurants and nightclubs.

Forum guests can purchase reduced public transport tickets online (10 % congress reduction). You can also easily purchase public transport tickets from the ticket machines in Vienna. Vienna has an efficient public transport system. Within the city limits, all public transport tickets are valid for buses, trams and the underground. The underground/tram station closest to the University is called “Schottentor” or “Schottentor Universität”.

www.isa-sociology.org

Program Structure Timetable of Publisher’s Lounge

12:30-16:00

14:15-15:45

Monday 11 July

Edward Elgar Publishing

Plenary Session Livestream

Brill

Tuesday 12 July

European Union

Plenary Session Livestream

Manchester University Press

SAGE Publications

Polity

Austrian Institutes of Sociology

Plenary Session Livestream

Combined Academic Publishers

Max Planck

Beltz

European Union

Bundesministerium für fsenschaft, Forschung und Wirtschaft (German)

Routledge (Taylor and Francis)

Buchkontext (Campus, VSA, Westphälisches Dampfboot)

Thursday 14 July

17:45-19:15 Nomos

TIMETABLE

Wednesday 13 July

16:00-17:30



 

www.isa-sociology.org

Timetable of Publisher’s Lounge

10:45-12:15

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Sunday 10 July

09:00 - 10:30

Program Structure

Timetable Day by Day Program

No.

Session Title

Room

Sunday 10 July 09:00 - 10:30 RC33, RC20, WG02 JS-3

Contextualizing Cases and Types through Qualitative Multi-Level-Analysis

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC42, RC04

JS-5

Gender Stereotypes and STEM Education: Global and Local Perspectives

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC18, RC07

JS-2

Elites, the Poor and the Welfare State in Unequal Democracies Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC06, RC32

JS-1

Family-Friendly Policies and Gender (In)Equality in Paid and Unpaid Work

RC48, RC47

JS-6

Opening Session with Saskia Sassen, Donatella Della Porta and Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Maha Abdelrahman

RC38, WG03

JS-4

Visual Biographies in Media Communication

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

TIMETABLE

Timetable Day by Day

Joint Sessions

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC02

24

Author Meets Critics: Capitalism’s Crises in South Africa and the World: Class Struggle and Left Responses by V. Satgar, A. Bieler, H. Wainwright

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC05

59

Early Career Researchers Career Development Session

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC09

103

Futures of Individualization in Local, Regional and Global Contexts

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC11

128

Ageing and the Body: Twenty Years on

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC15

184

On Social Plasticity: The Transformative Power of Pharmaceuticals on Health, Nature and Identity

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC19

231

Open Session III

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC24

290

Natural Resources Conservation for Future and Civil Society.

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC25

306

Neutrality in Language Policy

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC31

350

Migration and Sexuality

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC34

390

Uncertainty and Precarity in Youth Employment: Public Policies, Institutional Mediations and Subjective Strategies. Part I

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC52

590

Professions in the Age of Austerity, Labour Market and Education

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Economy and Society

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Sociology of Aging Sociology of Health Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Environment and Society Language and Society Sociology of Migration Sociology of Youth

Sociology of Professional Groups

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Sunday 10 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

10:45 – 12:15 Room

10:45 – 12:15 RC11, RC15

JS-9

RC23, RC02

Aging Society and New Welfare Policies

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

JS-10

Sociology of Innovation: The Social and Cultural Structure of Innovative Societies

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC06, RC32

JS-7

Intersectionality and Intergenerational Family Relationships

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC07, WG02

JS-8

Looking at Past and Present Inequalities for a Less Unequal Future

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC33, RC20

JS-11

Comparison in Ethnographic Research

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

Competition, Competence and Educational Reinstitutionalization in Confucian Cultural Countries

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC05

60

Anti-Jewish and Anti-Muslim Racisms

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC09

104

The Battle of Ideas in NGO’s: How Development Specialists Change Their Minds About Changing the World

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC19

232

Open Session I

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC22

259

Welfare and Civil Society: The Role of Religion

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC24

291

There’s No Planet B: Exploring Strategies for Changing Hörsaal 41 (Main Attitudes and Promoting Sustainable Behaviour at Every Level Building)

RC25

307

Classifications of Otherness I

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC31

351

Making Global Society

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC34

391

The Localization and Globalization of Youth Cultures: New Styles, Fandoms and Consumption Patterns

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC47

537

Social Movements As Sites of Social Development

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC48

552

The Transnationality of Transnational Movements

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC52

591

Professions and Professionals in Times of Change and Complexity. Part I

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

WG03

649

WG03 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Sociology of Religion Environment and Society Language and Society Sociology of Migration Sociology of Youth Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Sociology of Professional Groups Visual Sociology

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TIMETABLE

42

Sociology of Education

Timetable Day by Day

RC04

Sunday 10 July

14:15 – 15:45 Program

No.

Session Title

Program Structure Room

12:30 – 14:00 RC33, RC20

JS-15

The Complex Discursivity of Global Futures in the Making: Analyzing Transnational Orders of Discourse 2

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

WG03, RC24

JS-16

Framing Discourses, Action and Collective Imaginaries about Environmental Issues

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC15, RC11

JS-12

Aging, Health and Life Course: Theoretical Issues and Methodological Problems. Joint Special Session of the Global Health Sociology Network: ISA RC15, ESA RN16 and ESHMS

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC23, RC07

JS-13

The Future of University Research and the National Innovation Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Systems

RC32, RC48

JS-14

Women’s Activism in the Most Recent Cycle of Global Protests

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC02

25

Corporate Power and Carboniferous Capitalism

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

43

Mass Participation to Higher Education and Social Justice: Issues Revisited

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC05

61

Racial Urbanities: A Global Cartography

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

72

Reflections on Qualitative Research Methods Used in Family Sociology

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC09

105

Crafting Insurgent Urbanism and Democratic Spaces:Transforming Citizenship and Governance Systems in Cities

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC19

233

Changing Care Diamonds in Europe and Asia: Is Europe Becoming Asia?

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC22

260

Negotiating Religion and Citzenship in Global Context

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC25

308

Ethnic Minority Mobilization: Intersections of Distribution and Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Recognition

RC31

352

The Arts of Migration: Dancing and Signing (to) the World

RC34

392

Muslim Youth, Contemporary Challenges and Future Prospects Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC47

538

Social Movements, Sociology and Climate Change

RC52

592

Challenging Times Across Southern Europe and Latin America: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Policies, Publics and Professions

Economy and Society Sociology of Education

TIMETABLE

Timetable Day by Day

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Sociology of Religion Language and Society Sociology of Migration Sociology of Youth Social Classes and Social Movements Sociology of Professional Groups

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

14:15 – 15:45 RC15, RC49, RC42

JS-19

Drug Use and Local and Global Public Policies of Health: New Tensions, Complementation or Changes for Not Change?

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC09, RC07

JS-18

Alternative Futures of the South

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC05, RC32

JS-17

Racial, Ethnic and National Marginalization of Female Labor: Hörsaal I (Neues Intersecting Inequalities at Work /La marginalisation raciale, Institutsgebäude (NIG)) ethnique et nationale de travailleures : des inégalités en intersection au travail

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

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www.isa-sociology.org

Sunday 10 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

19:30 – 21:00 Room

RC24, WG01

JS-20

What Do Global Interventions Look like at Ground Level? the Everyday Implementation of International Environmental Schemes

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

Joint Sessions

JS-22

Perspectives and Challenges of Working with Images and New Media

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC52, RC17

JS-21

Professional Occupations and Organizations. Part I

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Joint Sessions

Joint Sessions

Climate Change, Capitalism, Geoengineering

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

44

National Educational Systems for the Global Market: Professional and Educational Trajectories for Youth

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC06

73

Author Meets Critics: “Fathers on Leave Alone” Edited By Hörsaal 41 (Main Margaret O’Brien and Karin Wall & “Fathering, Masculinity and Building) the Embodiment of Care” By Gillian Ranson

RC11

129

Wellbeing, Health, and Later Life Work from a Cross-National Comparative Perspective

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC19

234

Open Session II

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC20

246

Biographies - Figurations - Discourses: The Dialectic of Individuals & Society in the (Empirical) Study of Individual & Collective Hi/Stories

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC22

261

Presidential Session: Where Do We Go from Here? an Agenda for the Sociology of Religion

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC25

309

Language Diversity and Social Cohesion I

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC31

353

Social Actions Against Ethnic and Cultural Conflicts in Diversified Communities

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC34

393

Youth and Social Justice in the Global South: Building Hörsaal 50 (Main Alternative Strategies to Entrenched Social Inequalities. Part I Building)

RC47

539

Social Movements in Latin America: Contributing to a NorthSouth Dialogue

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC48

553

Targets in the Field: Relational Perspectives on Social Movement Objects

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

1

Opening Ceremony

Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

2

Opening Plenary Session on the Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

Sociology of Education Family Research

Sociology of Aging Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Comparative Sociology

Sociology of Religion Language and Society Sociology of Migration Sociology of Youth Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

16:00 – 17:30 Plenary Sessions

17:45 – 19:15 Plenary Sessions

19:30 – 21:00 Reception

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TIMETABLE

26

Economy and Society

Timetable Day by Day

RC02

Monday 11 July

09:00 - 10:30 Program

No.

Session Title

Program Structure Room

Monday 11 July 09:00 - 10:30 Research Council

JS-23

The Social Reproductive Worlds of Migrants

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC10, RC26

JS-25

Social Enterprises and Empowerment. Part I

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC49, RC38

JS-28

Biography and Mental Health

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC25, RC53

JS-27

Language in Children’s Socialization

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC07, RC09

JS-24

Contested Futures of the South

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC15, RC52

JS-26

The Future Heath Workforce We Need: Professions, Policy and Planning. Part I

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC02

27

RC02 Business Meeting

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC03

40

Understanding Urban Unrest

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

45

The Sociology of the Educational System - a Reappraisal

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC07

89

Class, Consumption and Wealth Distribution: Trends and Perspectives for the Future

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC11

130

Ageing and the Economic Crisis

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC12

142

Migrant Women in Distress and the Intersectionality of Law and Jurisprudence

Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

RC13

157

The Meaning and Purpose of Leisure

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

171

Contemporary Communication Issues. Part A

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC16

197

Methodological and Philosophical Foundations of the Theory of Action

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC17

211

Advances in Organization Theory

Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

RC18

219

Citizenship: Dynamics of Choice, Duties and Participation

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC19

235

Transnational Migration of Care Workers: Policy Challenges and Outcomes

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC20

247

Current Research in the Comparative Study of Institutions

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC22

262

Roundtables I: Dialogue, Peace & Violence, Africa/Diaspora, Identities, Radicalization

Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

RC24

292

Mitigating Global Emissions: Networks of Political Mobilization Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) and International Cooperation

RC29

328

Culture of Violence: social representations and images

Economy and Society Timetable Day by Day

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC06, RC31 Joint Sessions

Community Research

Sociology of Education Futures Research

TIMETABLE

Research Council Meeting 1

Sociology of Aging Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociological Theory Sociology of Organization Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Comparative Sociology Sociology of Religion Environment and Society Deviance and Social Control

46

www.isa-sociology.org

Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

Monday 11 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

09:00 - 10:30 Room

Local Expression of the Work Process Internationalisation

Hörsaal 24 (Main Building)

RC31

354

Forced Migration and Trafficking in Persons in the Contemporary World: The Variables of Gender, Man-Made Disaster and Economic Liberalization

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

367

Roundtable 1: Gender Knowledge, Theory and Practice

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC33

383

Social Theory and Its Methods

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC34

394

Understanding Youth Activism in Local, National and Transnational Contexts: Innovative Methodological Approaches

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC35

405

Mass, Crowd and Individuality As Challenging Classical and Contemporary Concepts

Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

RC36

417

From Alienation to Critical Theory, Past, Present and Future.

Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

RC37

427

Art and Public Space

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC39

454

Local Social Services in Times of Disasters and Crisis

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC40

467

Social Innovation in Agriculture and Food: Old Wine in New Bottles?. Part I: Values in Social Innovations

Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

RC41

478

The Socio-Demographic World System

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC42

493

Transition, Social Justice and Identity: Social Psychological Insights

Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC44

503

Using Global Comparisons to Understand 21st Century Labor Movements Among Informal Workers.

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC45

515

Micro Macro Link in Action and Relation Systems

Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

RC46

525

Clinical Sociology and Social Change

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC47

540

Social Movements in the Global Age. Part I

Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC48

554

Methodological Challenges in Social Movements Research

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC51

576

Modern Sociological Systems Theory in Practice – Applications Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum) to Societal Problems

RC54

611

Embodiment and Social Synchronism in the Storytelling Era. Opening Session

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

RC55

620

State of Happiness Policy and Public Safety

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG01

631

Religious Tolerance As a Precondition of a Good Local - Global Relations

Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

WG02

637

Socio-Ecological Violences, Resistances, and Struggles: Historical-Comparative Analyses

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

Sociology of Migration

Women in Society Logic and Methodology in Sociology Sociology of Youth

Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Social Psychology Labor Movements Rational Choice Clinical Sociology Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Sociocybernetics The Body in the Social Sciences Social Indicators Sociology of Local-Global Relations Historical and Comparative Sociology

www.isa-sociology.org

47

TIMETABLE

338

Sociology of Work

Timetable Day by Day

RC30

Monday 11 July

10:45 – 12:15 Program

No.

Session Title

Program Structure Room

WG03

650

Visual Narratives of Faith: Religion, Ritual and Identity

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

WG05

661

Role of the Informal Sector in Job Creation and Reduction in Inequality

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

TG03

670

An Ecosystemic Approach to the Development and Evaluation of Public Policies, Research and Teaching Programmes

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

TG04

674

Theorizing Risk and Uncertainty

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

TG06

688

Institutional Ethnography in Education: Participating in the ‘struggle for a Better World’

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

698

City Scents: Food, Sensory Knowledge and Transnationalism in Seminar 33 (Juridicum) the Urban Everyday. Part I

Visual Sociology Famine and Society

Human Rights and Global Justice Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography Senses and Society

10:45 – 12:15 RC42, RC18

JS-30

Economic Inequality, Distributive Preferences and Political Outcomes. Part I

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC52, RC15

JS-31

The Future Heath Workforce We Need: Professions, Policy and Planning. Part II

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC26, RC10

JS-29

Social Enterprises and Empowerment. Part II

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TIMETABLE

Timetable Day by Day

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC01

20

Irregular Wars - Conflict Studies I

Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC02

28

Author Meets Critics: Crisis by Sylvia Walby

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC04

46

Educational Achievement and Provision of Opportunity, of Secondary Education

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC06

74

Contemporary Families in Urban Asia

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC07

90

Scenarios and Future Societies

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC09

106

Futures of Development

Arcade Courtyard (Main Building)

RC11

131

Work, Aging, and Health

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC12

143

Lawyers in Society – Comparative Perspectives

Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

RC13

158

How to Become a Leisure Agent

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

172

Contemporary Power, Symbolisms and Narratives By the Media

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC16

198

Ontologies of Time and Human-Nonhuman Relations

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC17

212

Increasing Permeability of Organizational Boundaries?

Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

RC20

248

Declining Middle Classes: Challenging Classical Theories of Social Distinction through Consumption

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

Armed Forces and Conflict Resolution Economy and Society Sociology of Education Family Research Futures Research Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Sociology of Aging Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociological Theory Sociology of Organization Comparative Sociology

48

www.isa-sociology.org

Monday 11 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

10:45 – 12:15 Room

RC22

263

Roundtables II: Europe, Communities, Multiple Secularities, Individuals & Power

RC23

277

Globalization of Science and Technologies: Present Challenges, Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Future Acceptance

RC24

293

New Research in the Sociology of Climate Change

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC25

310

Language Diversity and Social Cohesion II

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC29

329

Sociology of Punishment: rehabilitation and social control

Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

RC30

339

Globalisation and Forms of Worker Protection.

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC31

355

The Migration Industry: Global Presence, Local Arrangements

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

368

Author Meets Critic

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC32

369

Roundtable 2: Gender Issues Across the Globe

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC33

384

The Futures We Expect: Time and Future Concepts As a Methodological Challenge in Qualitative and Mixed Methods Research

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC34

395

Young Cybogs: Interrogating Technology’s Paradox with, for and By Youth

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC35

406

Time and Society: Cultural, Personal and Institutional Ways to Hörsaal 45 (Main Building) Relate Past, Present and Future

RC36

418

Alienation in a Neo-Liberal Age

Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

RC37

428

Creativity and Innovation: Perspectives from the Sociology of Art

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC39

455

Climate Change, Preparedness, Reponse, and Mitgation

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC40

468

Social Innovation in Agriculture and Food: Old Wine in New Bottles? Part II: Framing Institutions

Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

RC41

479

Population Problems in India: Challenges and Solutions

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC44

504

Labour, Nature and Corporate Strategy: Resolving Core Contradictions.

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC45

516

Fairness Concerns and Social Preferences in Rational Choice Models

Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

RC46

526

Clinical Sociology and Community Intervention

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC47

541

Social Movements in the Global Age. Part II

Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC48

555

Social Movements As Memory Communities: Collective Remembrance Actions in Contested Contexts

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC51

577

Critical Assessment of Systems Approach in Sociology: To Update the Theory of Society

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology Environment and Society Language and Society Deviance and Social Control Sociology of Work Sociology of Migration Women in Society Women in Society

Sociology of Youth

Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Labor Movements Rational Choice Clinical Sociology Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Sociocybernetics

www.isa-sociology.org

49

TIMETABLE

Conceptual and Terminological Analysis

Timetable Day by Day

Logic and Methodology in Sociology

Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

Monday 11 July

14:15 – 15:45 Program

Room

602

Interdisciplinary Childhood Studies

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC54

612

Emergence of Society Described from the Standpoint of Corporealism

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

RC55

621

Well-Being and the Conception and Measurement of Poverty

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG01

632

Citizens Participation in the Social Economy of the Polis. Establishing Conditions for Participation for Inclusive Recovery.

Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

WG02

638

Between Nation and Empire. Liminal Modernities and Collective Imaginaries of Security and Insecurity

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG03

651

Visual Narratives of Faith: Spirituality, Materiality and Identity

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

WG05

662

Economic Transformation and Urbanisation: The Future of Pluriactive Small Farmers and Rural Workers in South Asia?

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

TG03

671

Integrating Human Rights Education in the Secondary Schools and Higher Institutions’ Curriculums in Africa and Asia

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

TG04

675

Comparative Perspectives on Risk

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

TG06

689

“Worlds of Paper”: Bureaucracies and Everyday Life within Public and Private Institutions - “Mundos De Papel”: Burocracias y Cotidianeidad En Instituciones Públicas y Privadas

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

699

City Scents: Food, Sensory Knowledge and Transnationalism in Seminar 33 (Juridicum) the Urban Everyday. Part II

The Body in the Social Sciences Social Indicators Sociology of Local-Global Relations Historical and Comparative Sociology Visual Sociology Famine and Society

Human Rights and Global Justice Timetable Day by Day

Session Title

RC53

Sociology of Childhood

TIMETABLE

No.

Program Structure

Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography

Senses and Society

12:30 – 14:00 Plenary Sessions

3

Facing the Multiple Crises in Europe and Beyond

Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

14:15 – 15:45 RC09, RC32

JS-32

Gender-Technology Interface: Implications for Social Transformation and Development

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC52, RC17

JS-34

Professional Occupations and Organizations. Part II

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC25, RC15

JS-33

Language on Health and Disease

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC01

21

The Future and Challenges of Professional Military Education

Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC02

29

Reconsidering debt, assets, money, and other relationships: Panel II

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

47

Life-Long Learning ‘Aspirations’ and Labour Market(s) ‘Realities’

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC05

62

Far-Right Anti-Immigrant Movements and Counter Actions in Europe

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

75

The Social Reproductive Worlds of Migrants II

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

Armed Forces and Conflict Resolution Economy and Society Sociology of Education Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research

50

www.isa-sociology.org

Monday 11 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

14:15 – 15:45 Room

New Directions on Social Movements, Contentious Politics, and Futures Research

Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

RC10

117

Participation and Democracy in the Futures We Want: Social Actors and New Demands

Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC11

132

Aging, Identity, and the Body

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC12

144

Studying Law and Society in the Context of Transdisciplinarity Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) and Transnationality

RC13

159

The Sociology of Video Gaming

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

173

Pouvoirs Contemporains, Mises En Scène, Symbolismes Et Récits

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC16

199

New Ontologies and the Theoretical Heritage

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC18

220

Futures and Pasts in the Future of Political Sociology

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC19

236

Global and Transnational Social Policy: Contexts, Policies and Processes

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC22

264

Religion and Human Rights

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC23

278

A Sociological View for Science and Technologies

Arcade Courtyard (Main Building)

RC24

294

Environmental Risks, Disaster Prevention and Resilient Community from Perspectives of Environmental Sociology

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC29

330

Security and Penal State-Making: The Politics, Institutionalization and Effects of Security As a Category of Public Intervention

Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

RC30

340

The Third World Migrant Labour to First World Countries and the Implications to the Work.

Hörsaal 24 (Main Building)

RC31

356

Social Integration and Wellbeing Among Transnational Migrants in Family and Community Contexts: The Role of Social Relationships

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

370

Human Trafficking: The Labour and Sexual Exploitation of Women and Children

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC33

385

Sociological Hermeneutics – Methods and Methodology

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC34

396

Youth and Social Justice in the Global South: Building Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Alternative Strategies to Entrenched Social Inequalities. Part II Building)

RC35

407

Reconceptualizing Memory and Post-Traumatic Growth from a Hörsaal 45 (Main Building) Crosscultural Perspective

RC36

419

Anomie and Alienation Theories Revisited

Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

RC37

429

Analyzing Art Works As a Way to Social Knowledge

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

441

In-Mobilities: Migration and Social Mobility in the Age of Globalization. Part I

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Aging Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociological Theory Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology Environment and Society Deviance and Social Control

Sociology of Work Sociology of Migration

Women in Society Logic and Methodology in Sociology Sociology of Youth Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

www.isa-sociology.org

51

TIMETABLE

91

Futures Research

Timetable Day by Day

RC07

Monday 11 July

14:15 – 15:45 Program

Room

456

Disasters and Health: Response, Recovery and Vulnerability in Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) the Global North and South

RC40

469

Social Innovation in Agriculture and Food: Old Wine in New Bottles? Part III: Transformative Social Innovation?

Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

RC41

480

RC41 Business Meeting

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC42

494

Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology

Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC44

505

European Labour and the Struggle Against Austerity

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC45

517

Experimental Approaches to the Study of the Emergence of Social Norms

Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

RC46

527

Clinical Sociology, Cultural Diversity and Immigration

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC47

542

What’s Left of 2011? Continuities and Outcomes of the 2011 Protests

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC48

556

Mobilization in the Social Media Worlds

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC49

566

The Sociology of Diagnostic Systems and Its Emerging Trends

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

578

Sociocybernetics, Simulation and Anticipation: Paradigms and Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum) Challenges

RC53

603

Challenges to the Sociology of Childhood - Marginal and Interdisciplinary Knowledge on Childhood

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC54

613

Embodiment and the Relation Time-Space in the Late Capitalism

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

RC55

622

Quality of Life, Inequality and Vulnerability. Lessons of the Crisis

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG01

633

Global Culture and Aesthetic Cosmopolitanism

Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

WG02

639

Modernity: One and Many, Enduring and Changing

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG03

652

Visual Sociology and Conflicts: From Social Responsibility to Agency.

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

WG05

663

Globalization of Slums, Houselessness and Urban Poverty: Emerging Issues and Options

Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building)

TG04

676

Researching Risk. Methodologies and Methods

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

TG06

690

Under New Public Management

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

700

Beyond the Material Turn? Sensory Interrogations in Religion and Spirituality

Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Social Psychology Labor Movements Rational Choice Clinical Sociology Social Classes and Social Movements

Timetable Day by Day

Session Title

RC39

Sociology of Disasters

TIMETABLE

No.

Program Structure

Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Mental Health and Illness Sociocybernetics Sociology of Childhood

The Body in the Social Sciences Social Indicators Sociology of Local-Global Relations Historical and Comparative Sociology Visual Sociology Famine and Society Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography Senses and Society

52

www.isa-sociology.org

Monday 11 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

16:00 – 17:30 Room

16:00 – 17:30 WG03, RC24

JS-37

The Visual Construction of Nature and Environment

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC07, RC47

JS-35

Social Movements and the Future They Want

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC34, RC32

JS-36

Creating Safety for Youth in a Gendered World

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

30

Reconsidering debt, assets, money, and other relationships: Panel I

RC04

48

Postcolonial Studies and Education: Understanding the Past to Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Inform the Future

RC05

63

Racismo y blanquitud en América Latina: Metodologías y formas de análisis

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

76

Convergence or Divergence of Asian Family Values and Practices: Comparative Studies Based on Cross-National Datasets in Asia

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC09

107

Development, Social Transformations and New Gender Relations: Africa and the World

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC10

118

Sociology of the Future: Braiding Theory-Making and Policy/ Practice Change

Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC11

133

Digital Technologies, Ageing and Everyday Life

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC12

145

Legal Ethology

Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

RC13

160

Leisure, Community and Identity

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

174

Globalization, Communication and Social Transformation: Towards a Global Sociology of Communication

Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

RC15

185

Towards a Comparative Perspective on Citizens’ and Civil Society Organizations’ Participation in Healthcare

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC16

200

RC16 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC19

237

A Worldwide Decline of Universalism? Welfare Reform in Comparative Perspective

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC20

249

Comparative Capitalism: Trajectories of Social and Economic Hörsaal 30 (Main Change in the Countries of the Former Soviet Union Since 1991 Building)

RC22

265

Business Meeting and Distinguished Lecture

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC23

279

The Knowledge Society and the Brics: Economic and Social Implications

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC25

311

Classifications of Otherness II

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Economy and Society Sociology of Education Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research

Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Aging

Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociology of Health Sociological Theory Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Comparative Sociology Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology Language and Society

www.isa-sociology.org

TIMETABLE

Sociology of Law

Timetable Day by Day

RC02

53

Monday 11 July

16:00 – 17:30 Program

Room

319

Social Change and New Forms of Government and Political Participation

Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC29

331

Drugs: from crime to legalization

Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

RC30

341

Transformation of Work in Bureaucratic Organizations

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC31

357

RC31 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

371

Twenty Years after Beijing: A Cross-National Approach to Feminist Movements and the Implementation of the Platform for Action

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC35

408

Challenges for a Global Sociology I: Extending the Postcolonial Hörsaal 45 (Main Building) Critique

RC36

420

Alienated Bodies, Selves, and Social Interaction

Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

RC37

430

Global Perspectives on Music and Migration

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

442

In-Mobilities: Migration and Social Mobility in the Age of Globalization. Part II

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

457

Compensation and Culpability: Regulatory and Legal Challenges of Disasters

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC41

481

Demographic Trends and Consequences of Labor Migration

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC42

495

Emotion and Inequalities. Part I

Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC44

506

Economic Crisis and New Forms of Worker Organizing

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC45

518

Rational Choice and Inequalities in the Life Course

Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

RC46

528

Clinical Sociology, Health and Social Policy

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC47

543

Moving Refugees? Mobilisation and Outcomes of Refugee Movements, Solidarity Groups, and Anti-Asylum Activities

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC48

557

RC48 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC49

567

‘Styles of Reasoning’: The Relationship Between Aetiology, Diagnosis and Drug Treatment in the Mental Health Field

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

579

Sociocybernetic Understandings of the Human Condition

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

Deviance and Social Control Sociology of Work Sociology of Migration Women in Society

Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Timetable Day by Day

Session Title

RC26

Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice

TIMETABLE

No.

Program Structure

Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Population Social Psychology Labor Movements Rational Choice Clinical Sociology Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Mental Health and Illness Sociocybernetics

54

www.isa-sociology.org

Monday 11 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

19:30 – 21:00 Room

Professions and Professionals in Times of Change and Complexity. Part II

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC53

604

Sociological Aspects of Children’s Play Activity

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC54

614

Assisted Bodies on the Move: The Social Meaning of Mobility Augmentations

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

RC55

623

New Challenges in Measuring Quality of Life Domains and Indicators

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG01

634

WG01 Business Meeting

Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

WG02

640

Sociocultural Evolution in the Long Run

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG05

664

Poverty and Vulnerabilities in Urban Spaces: Causes and Consequences

Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building)

TG03

672

TG03 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

TG04

677

The Life Course and Risk

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

TG06

691

TG06 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

701

Psychonautism in Contemporary Arts and Societies: A SocioHistory of a Sensory Experience

Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

Common Sessions

7

Common Session 1A - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Common Sessions

8

Common Session 1B - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Common Sessions

9

Common Session 1C - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

Common Sessions

10

Common Session 1D - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

Common Sessions

11

Common Session 1E - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

ISA Print Publications

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

Sociology of Childhood

The Body in the Social Sciences Social Indicators Sociology of Local-Global Relations Historical and Comparative Sociology Famine and Society Human Rights and Global Justice Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography Senses and Society

17:45 – 19:15

19:30 – 21:00 Professional Development

708

Monday 11 July

www.isa-sociology.org

55

TIMETABLE

593

Sociology of Professional Groups

Timetable Day by Day

RC52

Tuesday 12 July

09:00 - 10:30 Program

Program Structure

No.

Session Title

Room

RC32, RC34

JS-38

Gender, Youth, and Migration: Modalities and Trajectories for Development

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC48, RC47

JS-39

The Sociology of Social Movements As a General Sociology. Around and with Alain Touraine

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

WG05, RC10

JS-40

Climate Change, Famines and Conflicts in Globalised World: Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

Tuesday 12 July 09:00 - 10:30 Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC02

31

Global Think Tanks

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC03

41

RC03 Business Meeting

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

49

Education of Refugee Children

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC05

64

Ethno-Political Battles of Middle Eastern Diasporas

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

77

Family Change in Western and Non-Western Global Contexts: New Gender Models and Praxis

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC07

92

Commemorating John Urry’s Work

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC09

108

Political and Economic Developments in Postsocialist Countries

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC11

134

The Future of Older Persons in Global Perspective

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC12

146

Working Group on Civil Justice and Dispute Resolution

Hörsaal 24 (Main Building)

RC13

161

Leisure and Unemployment: Struggles for a Better World

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC15

186

E-Health (Electronic Health) and Informaticization of Medicine Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC16

201

Filling the Gap(s). Turn 1: The Potential of Diversity for the Future of Sociological Theory

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC17

213

The Unintended Consequences of Innovation. Organizational Dilemmas in Innovation Societies

Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

RC18

221

Is Political Inequality Rising, Falling or Staying the Same?

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC19

238

Struggling for Better Social Potection: How Are DecisionMaking Processes Evolving?

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC20

250

World Values on a Comparative Prespective

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC22

266

World Religions and Axial Civilizations. Part I

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC23

280

Roundtable for the Early Career Researchers

Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

RC24

295

Core Concepts in Environmental Sociology

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

Economy and Society Community Research

Sociology of Education

TIMETABLE

Timetable Day by Day

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research Futures Research Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Sociology of Aging Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Health Sociological Theory Sociology of Organization Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Comparative Sociology Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology Environment and Society

56

www.isa-sociology.org

Tuesday 12 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

09:00 - 10:30 Room

Representation, Agency and Identities in Media Arenas

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC26

320

Socio-political change in times of crisis

Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC29

332

Keynote Session: The Social Control and Deviance. the State of Seminar 32 (Juridicum) the Art

RC30

342

Digital Working Spaces. New Geographies Evolving Shaped By Digitalization and Virtualization of Work.

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC31

358

Conceptualizing Suffering Among Migrant Returnees

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

372

Global Sociology and Feminist Perspectives on Care, Care Work Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) and the Struggle for a Careful World

RC33

386

Generalizing Results from Experimental Research

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC35

409

Subject or Subjectivation?

Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

RC36

421

RC36 Roundtable Session

Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC37

431

Art Autonomy, Ethics and the Freedom of Speech

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

443

Practices in Biographical Research in the Context of Globalization

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

458

Lessons Learned: Success, Failures, and Government Accountability in Disaster Mitigation and Response

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC40

470

Contested Sustainability Discourses: From Food Sovereignty to Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Sustainable Intensification. Part I

RC41

482

Current Challenges in Population Health

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC42

496

Group Processes and Structural Social Psychology

Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC44

507

Movements on the Job: Theorizing Strikes and Workplace Protest in Comparative Context

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC45

519

Individual Interest and the Future “We” Want: Rational Choice Hörsaal 27 (Main Building) Mechanisms of Modernity and Anti-Modernity

RC46

529

Individual Certification and Program Accreditation in Clinical Sociology.

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC49

568

Theoretical concepts on the role of social relationships in mental health

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

580

Sociocybernetics and Complex Problems. Part I

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC52

594

Globalization, Social Transformation and Profession: Emerging Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Trends in Global Sociology

RC54

615

The Body in Society: Embodied Action and Embodied Theory

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

RC55

624

Constructing and Synthesising Indicators in the Era of Big Data. Part I

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice Deviance and Social Control Sociology of Work Sociology of Migration Women in Society Logic and Methodology in Sociology Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Social Psychology Labor Movements Rational Choice Clinical Sociology Mental Health and Illness Sociocybernetics Sociology of Professional Groups The Body in the Social Sciences Social Indicators

www.isa-sociology.org

57

TIMETABLE

312

Language and Society

Timetable Day by Day

RC25

Tuesday 12 July

10:45 – 12:15 Program

No.

Session Title

Program Structure Room

WG01

635

Public Impressions and Expectations for the Future of the Local Communities

Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

WG02

641

Rethinking the “Global” in Global and Transnational Approaches in Historical Sociology

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG03

653

Visualizing Spaces of the Everyday

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

TG04

678

Terrorism, Risk and Regulation

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

TG06

692

Institutional Ethnographies of Coordination: Embodying the Actual in the Institutional

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

702

Exploring Sensescapes of Home: Smell, Touch and Taste

Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

JS-41

Gendered Human Rights, Human Dignity, and Intersecting Inequalities

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC02

32

Changes in the Global Class Structure. The Precariat in the North and South. Part II

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC04

50

Space, Education and Inequalities. Lessons Learned and Ways to Move Forward

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC05

65

Everyday Bordering in the Metropolis

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

78

Family Change in Western and Non-Western Global Contexts: New Gender Models and Praxis II

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC07

93

Diagnosis of the Times: Tendencies in Education and Society

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC09

109

Socio-Economic Development in Postsocialist Countries: Comparative Perspectives

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC10

119

The Role of Participation, Organizational Democracy and SelfManagement in the Futures We Want. Part II

Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

RC11

135

New Social Roles of Older People

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC12

147

The Futures We Want in Numbers: Searching Legal Indicators for a Better World

Hörsaal 24 (Main Building)

RC13

162

Leisure, Liquidity and Virtuality - Ocio, Liquidez y Virtualidad

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

175

Fiction of Worlds and Struggles/Fictions des Mondes et de Leurs Luttes

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC15

187

Migration of Physicians and Nurses: Global Health (Non) Governance?

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC16

202

Materialities and Politics

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC17

214

The Global Financial Class: Global Class Formation at the Juncture of Organizations, Places and Markets

Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

Sociology of Local-Global Relations Historical and Comparative Sociology Visual Sociology Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography Senses and Society

10:45 – 12:15 RC32, TG03

TIMETABLE

Timetable Day by Day

Joint Sessions

Economy and Society Sociology of Education Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research Futures Research Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Aging Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociology of Health Sociological Theory Sociology of Organization

58

www.isa-sociology.org

Tuesday 12 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

10:45 – 12:15 Room

222

Parties As Membership Organizations : A Longitudinal Perspective

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC20

251

Political Representation in Comparative Perpective

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC22

267

The Categories of Religion and the Secular in the Post-Secular Discourse

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC23

281

Science and Technology for the Better World

Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

RC24

296

Emerging Research in Environmental Sociology. Part I

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC24

297

Environmental Attitudes, Opinions and Perceptions in Comparative Context

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC25

313

Sociological Studies of Language: Theory & Method

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC26

321

Challenging Hegemonies and Emerging Alternatives in Times of Crisis

Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC29

333

Social Control in Urban Criminology – Understanding Deviance Seminar 32 (Juridicum) and Public Order in Urban Space

RC30

343

Repensar El Trabajo y La Sociología Laboral Desde El Sur Global Seminarsaal 10 : La Experiencia De América Latina / Rethinking the Work and (Juridicum) the Sociology of Work from the Global South the Experience of Latin America.

RC31

359

Immigration and Integration Policies from Comparative Perspectives

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

373

Precarity and Gender in the Era of Neoliberal Globalization

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC33

387

The New Data “Revolution” in Sociology: Methodological and Epistemological Issues

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC34

397

Uncertainty and Precarity in Youth Employment: Public Policies, Institutional Mediations and Subjective Strategies. Part II

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC35

410

Social Exclusion and Power

Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

RC36

422

Alienation in a Mediated World

Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

RC37

432

Sociological Problems Regarding Construction of the Artistic Value

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

444

On the Uses of the Reconstructive Analysis of Autobiographical and Work Narratives for Professional Discourse and Self-Reflection

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC40

471

Contested Sustainability Discourses: From Food Sovereignty to Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Sustainable Intensification. Part II

RC41

483

Poster Session: Addressing Population Change through Sound Policy to Build a Better Future

Arcade Courtyard (Main Building)

RC42

497

Keynote Address By Karen A. Hegtvedt: Doing Justice Beyond Social Psychology

Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC44

508

Authors Meet Critics

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

Political Sociology Comparative Sociology Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology Environment and Society Environment and Society Language and Society Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice Deviance and Social Control Sociology of Work

Sociology of Migration

Logic and Methodology in Sociology Sociology of Youth

Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Social Psychology Labor Movements

www.isa-sociology.org

59

TIMETABLE

Women in Society

Timetable Day by Day

RC18

Tuesday 12 July

12:30 – 14:00 Program

No.

Session Title

RC45

520

Analytical and Rational-Choice-Oriented Sociology: Friends or Foes?

Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

RC46

530

Epistemology, Theories, Research Methods and/or Research Ethics in Clinical Sociology

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC47

544

Environmental Movements in the Age of Climate Change

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC48

558

Confession, Testimony and Insurgency As Repertoires of Contention in Conflict Zones: The Middle East

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC49

569

Social relationships of people with mental disorders

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

581

Sociocybernetics and Complex Problems. Part II

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC52

595

Uncertainties, Reflexivity and Rigidities in Professional Work

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC53

605

The Futures They Want: Bringing Children into Global Sociology.

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC54

616

Embodiment, and Technology – Contemporary Challenges

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

RC55

625

Constructing and Synthesising Indicators in the Era of Big Data. Part II

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG01

636

Social Processes at Sub Regional Levels: Prospects and Problems of Integration

Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

WG02

642

Critical and Normative Visions of Nation Building, Euroscepticism and Transnationalism

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG03

654

Visual Culture and the (Re-)Creation of Everyday Life

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

TG04

679

Voluntary Risk Taking and Edgework

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

TG06

693

Visual and Other Practices of Governance and Expertise

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

703

Artistic Practices and the Senses

Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

Overcoming Boundaries and Polarizations Between Centers and Peripheries

Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

Rational Choice Clinical Sociology Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Mental Health and Illness Sociocybernetics Sociology of Professional Groups

Timetable Day by Day

Sociology of Childhood

TIMETABLE

Program Structure

The Body in the Social Sciences Social Indicators Sociology of Local-Global Relations Historical and Comparative Sociology Visual Sociology Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography Senses and Society

Room

12:30 – 14:00 Plenary Sessions

4

Professional Development

709

ISA and Human Rights

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Professional Development

710

ISA Publications in Digital Worlds

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

60

www.isa-sociology.org

Tuesday 12 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

14:15 – 15:45 Room

14:15 – 15:45 RC34, RC31

JS-43

Young Skilled Migrants: Hopes and Struggles in New Global Trends

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC30, RC40

JS-42

Farm Work Issues within Globalization.

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

WG03, RC07

JS-45

Imagining Futures through the Visual

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC48, RC47

JS-44

Democracy in the Squares: Global Resistence Movements and Women

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

Irregular Wars - Conflict Studies II

Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC02

33

Changes in the Global Class Structure: The Precariat in the North and South. Part I

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC04

51

Educating Emotions and Bodies: A Sociological Perspective

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC05

66

Families and Racialized Boundaries

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

79

Gender (In)Equality and Labour Markets

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC09

110

Changing Development-Scape and Unchanging Development Theories

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC10

120

The Role of Participation, Organizational Democracy and SelfManagement in the Futures We Want. Part I

Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC11

136

Social Epidemiology of Aging

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC12

148

Resisting Oppression, Fighting Violence and Transforming the Law and Politics: Women’s Action Across the World

Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

RC13

163

The Environmental Implications of Leisure

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

176

Media Activism, Emergent Journalism Practices, Participative Media and Struggles for Better Worlds.

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC15

188

Constrained Choice and Health Disparities

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC16

203

Ontologies of Difference and Identity

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC17

215

Celebrity and Organizations

Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

RC18

223

The Regulation and Funding of Political Parties in Comparative Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Perspective

RC20

252

Urban Neighbourhoods and Culture-Led Revitalization: Comparative Processes, Entanglements, and (Un)Intended Effects

Armed Forces and Conflict Resolution Economy and Society Sociology of Education Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Aging Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociology of Health Sociological Theory Sociology of Organization Political Sociology Comparative Sociology

www.isa-sociology.org

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

61

TIMETABLE

22

Timetable Day by Day

RC01

Tuesday 12 July

14:15 – 15:45 Program

Room

268

The Politics of Religious Heritage: Memory, Identity and Place. Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Part I

RC23

282

Global Science and International Collaboration: A Gender Perspective from the South

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC24

298

Emerging Research in Environmental Sociology. Part II

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC25

314

RC25 Roundtable I. Language and Representation: Struggles in Hörsaal 24 (Main Building) the Global Age

RC26

322

Reshaping Democracy? Decision Making, Power and Participation in Times of Crisis

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC29

334

Policing Crisis, Community Policing and New Experiences

Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

RC31

360

Futures of Migration Research: Methodological Innovations and ‘Post-Migrant’ Societies

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

374

Knowledge Production: Feminist Perspectives in the 21st Century

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC33

388

Datalinkage. Beyond Asking for Consent

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC35

411

Challenges for Global Sociology II: Colonialism, Modernity, and Hörsaal 45 (Main Building) Eurocentrism

RC36

423

The Impact of the Use of Digital Media in Social Life

Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

RC37

433

Literature and Sociological Knowledge

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

445

Biographies of Outsiders and Outsider Groupings

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

459

Gender and Disasters: The Importance of Incorporating Feminist and Masculinities Lenses

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC41

484

Fertility of Ethnic Minorities

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC42

498

RC42 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC44

509

RC44 Roundtables Session

Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

RC45

521

Rational Action Theory and Applications

Arcade Courtyard (Main Building)

RC46

531

Collaboration and Support within Diverse Sociological Contexts

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC49

570

Social Relationships and Mental Health and Illness

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

582

Data and Society

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC52

596

New Professional Projects? on the Opportunities and Limits of Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum) a Professionalization of Occupational Fields Today.

RC53

606

RC53 Business Meeting

Sociology of Science and Technology Environment and Society Language and Society Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice Deviance and Social Control Sociology of Migration Women in Society

Timetable Day by Day

Session Title

RC22

Sociology of Religion

TIMETABLE

No.

Program Structure

Logic and Methodology in Sociology Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Population Social Psychology Labor Movements Rational Choice Clinical Sociology Mental Health and Illness Sociocybernetics Sociology of Professional Groups Sociology of Childhood

62

www.isa-sociology.org

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Tuesday 12 July

Program Structure Program

16:00 – 17:30

No.

Session Title

Room

RC55

626

Wellbeing Research and Indicators in Global and Comparative Perspective

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG02

643

Twenty-Five Years after Fajnzylber’s “Empty Box”: A New Matrix in Latin America?

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG05

665

Human Dimension of Hydro Based Development: SocioPsychological Perspective

Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building)

TG03

673

The Contestation for Resource Capture and Struggle for Socio- Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Economic Justice and Development

TG04

680

Safe(r) Cities? Risk, Security and Resilience

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

TG06

694

Institutional Ethnography: Global and Local Applications Across Educational Contexts

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

704

Pleasing Possibilities: New Perspectives on Pleasure. Part I

Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

Social Indicators Historical and Comparative Sociology Famine and Society Human Rights and Global Justice Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography Senses and Society

16:00 – 17:30 JS-47

Expertise and Interests: For a Sociology of Think Tanks

RC02, RC44

JS-46

Careworkers Organizing Challenges, Strategies and Successes. Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Part I

RC19, RC31

JS-48

Global Social Protection and Migration: Reproduction of Inequalities or Safety Net?

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

52

Education, Youth and Labor Market in the Modern and Future World

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC05

67

Cultures of Violence and Contemporary Racism

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

80

Future Perspectives on Work and Family Dynamics in Southern Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Europe: The Importance of Culture and Regional Contexts

RC07

94

Identity and the Future

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC09

111

Recent Breakthroughs in Development Sociology

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC10

121

Democratic Decentralisation and Justice Delivery

Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC11

137

Public Policies and Responsible Innovation in Response to the Population Aging Challenge /Políticas Públicas e Innovación Responsable como Respuesta al Desafío del Envejecimiento Poblacional

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC12

149

The Living Legacy of Leon Petrażycki’s Legal Realism for Sociology of Law and Other Social Sciences

Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

RC13

164

Leisure and/in the Cyberspace

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC15

189

RC15 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC16

204

Re-Thinking Democracy 1: The Hidden Political Agenda of Modern Sociology

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

Sociology of Education Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research Futures Research Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Aging

Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Health Sociological Theory

www.isa-sociology.org

TIMETABLE

RC04

Timetable Day by Day

RC14, RC18

63

Tuesday 12 July

16:00 – 17:30 Program

Room

216

RC17 Business Meeting

Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

RC20

253

RC20 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC22

269

Religion in the Public Sphere. Part I

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC23

283

Governance in Science and Technology: Research, Innovation and Knowledge Sharing

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC24

299

RC24 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC25

315

RC25 Roundtable II. Language and Representation: Struggles in the Global Age

Hörsaal 24 (Main Building)

RC26

323

RC26 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC29

335

RC29 Business Meeting

Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

RC30

344

Current Transformation Processes on the German Labour Market - Empirical Evidences and Theoretical Explanations

Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC31

361

Migrant “Illegality” and Non-Citizen Precarious Status in the Americas

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

375

RC32 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC34

398

The Futures We Want, the Pasts Left behind

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC35

412

RC35 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

RC36

424

Alienation and the Intersection of Science and Fiction: Imagining Dis/Utopias

Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

RC37

434

Arts in Dialogue. Part I

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

446

Children and Juveniles in an Outsider Position

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

460

RC39 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC40

472

Globalized Agrarian Economy and Women Labour: Analysing Situations in Asia

Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

RC41

485

L’institut National D’études Démographiques (Paris). Research Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) and Survey

RC42

499

Facets of Inequality

Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

RC45

522

Rational Foundation of Social Capital and Trust

Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

Comparative Sociology Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology Environment and Society Language and Society Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice Deviance and Social Control Sociology of Work Timetable Day by Day

Session Title

RC17

Sociology of Organization

TIMETABLE

No.

Program Structure

Sociology of Migration Women in Society Sociology of Youth Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Social Psychology Rational Choice

64

www.isa-sociology.org

Tuesday 12 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

19:30 – 21:00 Room

International Policymaking and Clinical Sociology

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC47

545

From Indymedia to #Occupywallstreet and Anti-Austerity Protests in Europe: Three Generations of Digital Activism Logics

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC48

559

RC48 Roundtable Session 1

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC49

571

Social Inclusion of Mentally Ill Persons

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

583

Sociocybernetics, Transitional Justice and Other Issues

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC52

597

Professionalism in Education and Work

Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

RC55

627

RC55 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG02

644

Author Meets Their Critics: Manuela Boatca’s Global Inequalities Beyond Occidentalism

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG03

655

Empowering Methods? Critiquing Participatory Visual and Arts Based Methods with Migrant Sex Worker and Migrant Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans, Queer and Intersex (LGBTQI) Communities

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

WG05

666

Encountering Marginalisation and Exclusion in Globalising Nations – Gender Issues and Concerns

Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building)

TG04

681

Food and the Risk Society

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

TG06

695

The Social Organization of Knowledge

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

705

Pleasing Possibilities: New Perspectives on Pleasure. Part II

Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

Common Sessions

12

Common Session 2A - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Common Sessions

13

Common Session 2B - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Common Sessions

14

Common Session 2C - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

Common Sessions

15

Common Session 2D - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

Publishing for Publics

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Mental Health and Illness Sociocybernetics Sociology of Professional Groups Social Indicators Historical and Comparative Sociology Visual Sociology

Famine and Society Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography Senses and Society

17:45 – 19:15

19:30 – 21:00 Professional Development

711

Tuesday 12 July

www.isa-sociology.org

65

TIMETABLE

532

Clinical Sociology

Timetable Day by Day

RC46

Wednesday 13 July

09:00 - 10:30 Program

No.

Session Title

Program Structure Room

Wednesday 13 July 09:00 - 10:30 RC25, RC32

JS-50

Re-Imagining Gendered & Raced Representations in the Public Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Sphere

RC02, RC44

JS-49

Careworkers Organizing Challenges, Strategies and Successes. Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Part II

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC04

53

Education Dialogues with/in the Global South

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC05

68

Anti-Racist Feminism - Is Anything New Happening?

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

81

Stages and Transitions in the Family Life Cycle in an International Comparative Perspective

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC07

95

The Politics of Conflict, Reconciliation, Memory, and Trauma: Paving a Path for the Present and Future

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC09

112

Development and its Theories

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC10

122

The Future of Organizational and Workplace Participation: Capacities, Capabilities, Innovations

Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC11

138

The Work of Care: Ageing, Inequalities and Supply of Care Workers

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC12

150

Social and Legal Systems II

Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

RC13

165

Let’s Talk about Who We Are: Envisioning Reflexive Global Leisure Scholarship

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

177

A Return to the People? Popular Democracies and/or Populism Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) in the 2.0 Public Sphere

RC15

190

Exploring the Nexus of Health, Religion/Spirituality and Healing

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC16

205

Morality and Freedom

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC17

217

Organizing at a Global Level: Contributions from Ethnography

Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

RC18

224

The Political Consequences of Precarious Employment

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC19

239

The Challenges of Innovating Social Policies

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC20

254

Analysing the Global/Regional/National/Local Divide. Comparative Perspectives on a “Blurred” Relationship

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC22

270

World Religions and Axial Civilizations. Part II

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC23

284

Challenges and Opportunities of Nanotechnology and Other Technological Advances for the Health and Environment.

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC24

300

Environmental Issues in Asia and Developing Countries: New Contexts for Environmental Sociology

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

Sociology of Education Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research Futures Research

TIMETABLE

Timetable Day by Day

Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Aging Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociology of Health Sociological Theory Sociology of Organization Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Comparative Sociology Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology Environment and Society

66

www.isa-sociology.org

Wednesday 13 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

09:00 - 10:30 Room

Nature, Culture and Development. Part I

Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC29

336

Juvenile Delinquency Across Europe: Empirical and Comparative Perspectives

Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

RC30

345

Moving Towards a Decent Work in a Multi-Active Society: Utopia or Reality? Part I

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC31

362

The Mediterannean Refugee Desaster and the EU

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

376

Gender, Law, and the Courts: Local and Global Struggles Against Violence

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC34

399

The Future Is Not What It Used to be: Young People’s Future Visions in Youth Styles and Spaces of Engagement

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC35

413

Modernity at New Crossroads I: Rethinking Classic Modernity

Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

RC37

435

Arts in Dialogue. Part II

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

447

Embodied Biographies, Virtual Bodies

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

461

Indigenous, Rural and Traditional Forms of Knowledge: Incorporating Cultural Difference into Discussions of Climate Change, Adaptation, Mitigation, and Cultural Diversity

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC40

473

Food Security, Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainable Agriculture. Part I

Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

RC41

486

Max Planck Studies in Demography

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC42

500

Emotion and Inequalities. Part II

Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC45

523

Rational Choice and Social Psychology: Theory and Applications

Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

RC46

533

Livelihood Vulnerability in Cities: Interrogating the Intersections of Culture, Disaster Risk and Power

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC47

546

Far Right Movements and Social Research

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC48

560

RC48 Roundtable Session 2

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC49

572

Critical Theories of Mental Health

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

584

La Investigación Interdisciplinaria desde la Sociocibernética y Sistemas Sociales Complejos

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC52

598

Changing Patterns of Professional Regulation

Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

RC53

607

Transnational Migration, Families, and Children: A Theoretical Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude and Methodological Approach. Part I (NIG))

RC54

617

Embodiment and Tourism.

Deviance and Social Control Sociology of Work Sociology of Migration Women in Society Sociology of Youth Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters

Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Social Psychology Rational Choice Clinical Sociology Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Mental Health and Illness Sociocybernetics Sociology of Professional Groups Sociology of Childhood

The Body in the Social Sciences

www.isa-sociology.org

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

67

TIMETABLE

324

Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice

Timetable Day by Day

RC26

Wednesday 13 July

10:45 – 12:15 Program

No.

Session Title

Program Structure Room

RC55

628

Measurement of Social Isolation

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG02

645

In What Ways Can Comparative–Historical Sociology Help to Improve the Workings of the Modern World?

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG03

656

Critical Rethinking of Visual Methodologies

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

WG05

667

Poverty and Inequality: Can Conditional Cash Transfers Programmes Alliviate Them?

Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building)

TG04

682

Emotions, Trust, Hope and Other Approaches to Coping with Vulnerability amidst Uncertainty

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

TG06

696

New Directions in Institutional Ethnography Research

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

706

Senses, Society, and Struggles for a Better World

Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

Social Indicators Historical and Comparative Sociology Visual Sociology Famine and Society Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography Senses and Society

10:45 – 12:15 RC44, RC02

JS-52

Migrant Labor and Development in Comparative Perspective: Lessons from the Chinese Case

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC48, RC36

JS-53

Emotions and Social Movements

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC12, RC32

JS-51

Women’s Migrant Worker : Have They Protected?

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TIMETABLE

Timetable Day by Day

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC01

23

Tourism and Conflict Resolution

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

RC05

69

Racism and Public Sociology

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

82

Transition to Adulthood: Longitudinal Data Analyses

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC07

96

Care and Careworkers: Intersectional and Comparative Perspectives. Exploring the Future of Social Inequalities

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC09

113

RC09 Business Meeting

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC10

123

The Impacts of the Debt Crisis on the World of Work in Southern Europe

Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC11

139

The Fourth Age: “Real” Old Age?

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC13

166

Leisure, Gender, Sexuality and the Body

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

178

Visibility and Social Orders. on the Construction of Boundaries Hörsaal 23 (Main and Knowledge in the Contemporary Technological Condition Building)

RC15

191

Gender, Health and Migration in Transnational Context. Rights, Policies, Accessibility

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC15

192

RC15 Roundtable session 2

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

Armed Forces and Conflict Resolution Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research Futures Research Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Aging Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociology of Health Sociology of Health

68

www.isa-sociology.org

Wednesday 13 July

Program Structure Program

10:45 – 12:15

RC16

206

Global Sociology and the Strong Program in Cultural Sociology

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC17

218

How Responsible Are Nonprofits? Investigating the Relation Between Nonprofits and Their Stakeholders

Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

RC18

225

The Right in the Southern Cone: Power Dynamics within Political Parties in Brazil, Chile and Argentina

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC19

240

Welfare Regimes and Social Policy after the Convention on the Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Rights of Persons with Disabilities

RC20

255

Current Research in Comparative Sociology (qualitative methodology)

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC22

271

In-Depth Studies on Religion and Society

Arcade Courtyard (Main Building)

RC23

285

The Politics of Science and Techology: Authority, Expertise and Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Democratic Participation

RC24

301

How Does Society Change? Theories and Research in the Field of Social Change, Transformation and Transition

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC29

337

Valuing Diversity Instead of Constructing Deviance: A Future Perspective for Sociological Research?

Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

RC30

346

Moving Towards a Decent Work in a Multiactive Society : Utopia or Reality ? Part II

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC31

363

Migrations in the 2020. Trends and Policies

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

377

Intersectionalities of Power in Research: Strategies for Action and Justice

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC34

400

Connecting with and Confronting Inequality - the Role of Youth Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Work

RC35

414

Modernity at New Crossroads II: Diversifiying Western Modernity

Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

RC37

436

Art and Power

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

448

New Directions in Biographical Research

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

462

Words Matter: The Impact of Different Stakeholder Understandings of Disaster Concepts on Policy Creation, Enactment, and Local Communities

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC40

474

Food Security, Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainable Agriculture. Part II

Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

RC41

487

Families and Households: Implications for Men, Women and Children’s Health

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC42

501

Economic Inequality, Distributive Preferences and Political Outcomes. Part II

Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC45

524

RC45 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

RC46

534

Service Learning Strategies: Connecting Students to Global Issues

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC47

547

Popular Dissent in Sub-Saharan Africa

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

Sociological Theory Sociology of Organization Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Comparative Sociology Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology Environment and Society Deviance and Social Control Sociology of Work Sociology of Migration Women in Society Sociology of Youth Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters

Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Social Psychology Rational Choice Clinical Sociology Social Classes and Social Movements

www.isa-sociology.org

Room

69

TIMETABLE

Session Title

Timetable Day by Day

No.

Wednesday 13 July

14:15 – 15:45 Program

Room

573

Mental Health and Risk

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

585

Science Its Power, Responsibility and the Limits of Human Knowing

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC52

599

Theorizing Professional Changes and Futures

Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

RC53

608

Transnational migration, families and children: A theoretical and methodological approach. Part II

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC55

629

Changes in Levels of Wellbeing during Education to Work Transitions

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG02

646

Modernity, Contingency and Development in Contemporary Sociology. Should We Carry on Theorizing?

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG03

657

Look What I Found out! Research on Teaching and Learning Using Visual Methods

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

WG05

668

Towards Sustainable and Inclusive Futures: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building)

TG04

683

Risk Work: Experiences and Challenges within Organisational, Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Professional and Policy Contexts

TG06

697

Institutional Ethnographic Contributions to Justice and Change

Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

TG07

707

TG07 Business Meeting

Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

Sociological Thought and the Struggle for a Better World

Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

Sociocybernetics Sociology of Professional Groups Sociology of Childhood

Social Indicators Historical and Comparative Sociology Visual Sociology Famine and Society

Timetable Day by Day

Session Title

RC49

Mental Health and Illness

TIMETABLE

No.

Program Structure

Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Institutional Ethnography Senses and Society

12:30 – 14:00 Plenary Sessions

5

14:15 – 15:45 RC30, RC25

JS-55

Innovation in Discourse: Promotion, Defensiveness, Reflexivity and Hidden Fears

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC47, RC34

JS-56

Young Activists, Subjectivity and “the Future They Want”

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC11, RC31

JS-54

Ageing in Place in a Mobile World: New Media and Older People’s Support Networks

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC02

34

Gender Regimes or Gendered Institutions?

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

54

Access, Sustainability and Success in Higher Education Continues to be a Global Struggle – Interrogating the Disjuncture Between Policy and Practice.

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC05

70

Diversity in Organisations: Policies and Practices

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

83

Global Family Issues

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC07

97

Future of Education

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC09

114

Globalization, New Forms of Work and Inequality

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Economy and Society Sociology of Education

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research Futures Research Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

70

www.isa-sociology.org

Wednesday 13 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

14:15 – 15:45 Room

RC10

124

Rediscovering Latin America Democracy, Social Actors and New Demands

RC12

151

Studying Law and Society in the Context of Transdisciplinarity Arcade Courtyard (Main Building) and Transnationality II

RC13

167

Leisure in the Multi-dimensional World of Existence. Presidential session

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

179

RC14 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC15

193

RC15 Roundtable session 1

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC16

207

Rethinking Youth: Brics Perspectives, Conceptualizations, and Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Theories

RC18

226

Transnational Social Movements and European Democratization

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC19

241

Sustainable Welfare: Perspectives, Policies and Emerging Practices

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC22

272

The Politics of Religious Heritage, Memory, Identity, and Place. Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Part II

RC23

286

RC23 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC24

302

New Frontiers and Recent Developments in Environmental Sociology

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC26

325

Civic and political participation in the context of local political Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) and socio-cultural process

RC32

378

Gender, Culture and Technologies in the Knowledge Economy

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC33

389

RC33 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC35

415

Social Ontology in Social Theory

Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

RC36

425

Populist Movements and the Media

Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

RC37

437

Art Scenes As Trading Zones

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

449

Women and Violent Action

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

463

Political Economy of Disasters

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC41

488

Regional Demographic Decline and Immigration

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC42

502

Cooperation, Trust, and Group Processes

Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC44

510

Transformations in Labor Politics in the Global South

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociology of Health Sociological Theory Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy

Sociology of Science and Technology

Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice Women in Society Logic and Methodology in Sociology Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Population Social Psychology Labor Movements

www.isa-sociology.org

71

TIMETABLE

Environment and Society

Timetable Day by Day

Sociology of Religion

Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Wednesday 13 July

16:00 – 17:30 Program

Room

535

Social Determinants of Health and Policy Implications in Transitional Societies

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC48

561

Reimagining Human Rights in India

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC49

574

A World without Aids: eliminating the Pandemic through Improved Global Access to HIV/AIDS Prevention,Treatment,Care and Stigma Reduction Programs

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

586

Social Forces behind Our Backs - Searching for Points of Intervention

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC52

600

Controlling Professional Power: Is the Pendulum Swinging Too Far?

Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

RC53

609

Intersectionality, Discrimination and Children

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

WG02

647

Author Meets Their Readers: Robert Van Krieken’s Celebrity Society

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG03

658

Critical Perspectives on Visual Methodologies

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

WG05

669

WG05 Business Meeting

Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building)

TG04

684

Health, Illness, Medicine and Risk

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

RC55, RC31

JS-60

Migration and Well-Being. Part III

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC30, TG04

JS-58

Les Carrières Créatives: Modèles Contemporains D’organisation Du Travail / Creative Careers: Contemporary Models of Work Organization

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC15, RC20

JS-57

Health Inequalities in Comparative Perspective

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC32, RC38

JS-59

Migrant Women’s Biographies within the Economic Crisis: Transnationalism As a Coping Strategy Reconsidered

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Mental Health and Illness

Sociocybernetics Sociology of Professional Groups Sociology of Childhood

Historical and Comparative Sociology

Timetable Day by Day

Session Title

RC46

Clinical Sociology

TIMETABLE

No.

Program Structure

Visual Sociology Famine and Society Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

16:00 – 17:30 Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC02

35

Endangered Democracies and the Fate of Feminisms

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

55

RC04 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC05

71

RC05 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC06

84

RC06 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC07

98

RC07 Business Meeting

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC09

115

Development, Social Transformations and New Gender Relations: Asia and Both Sides of the Pacific

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Economy and Society Sociology of Education Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Family Research Futures Research Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

72

www.isa-sociology.org

Wednesday 13 July

Program Structure Program

16:00 – 17:30 Room

RC10

125

Civic Participation in Globalising World. Inequalities, Patterns and Determinants

Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC11

140

Older Men

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC12

152

Is There a “Quality of Justice” Standing Worldwide? Rights and Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Standards Across Cultural and National Borders

RC13

168

RC13 Business Meeting

Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

RC14

180

Are Mobility and Hybridization Possibilities for a Better World?

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC18

227

RC18 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC19

242

RC19 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC22

273

Religion in the Public Sphere. Part II

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC24

303

Environmental Practices and Social Changes

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC25

316

RC25 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC26

326

Life after the City: De-Urbanization and Social Capital in NonUrban Areas

Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC31

364

How Can the Insights from Other Disciplines Enhance Sociological Research on Migration

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC34

401

Youth Justice - a Mirror of Social Justice? Young People at the Edge of the Law in Times of Inequality

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC35

416

Modernity Re-Visited: The Role of Technology and Engineering

Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

RC36

426

RC36 Business Meeting

Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

RC37

438

RC37 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

450

RC38 Business Meeting

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC40

475

Cultural Approaches to Food and Agriculture

Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

RC41

489

Demographic Issues in East Asia

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC44

511

RC44 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC46

536

RC46 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Aging Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Sociology of Religion Environment and Society Language and Society Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice Sociology of Migration Sociology of Youth Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Alienation Theory and Research Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Labor Movements Clinical Sociology

www.isa-sociology.org

TIMETABLE

Session Title

Timetable Day by Day

No.

73

Wednesday 13 July

19:30 – 21:00 Program

Room

548

RC47 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

RC48

562

Beyond Stated Goals: Unanticipated and Unintended Outcomes of Social Movements.

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC49

575

RC49 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC51

587

RC51 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC52

601

RC52 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

RC53

610

Gender and violence in sociology of childhood

Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC54

618

RC54 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

WG02

648

WG02 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

WG03

659

Studying Public Events Visually: Capturing and Analyzing Visual Moments

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Mental Health and Illness Sociocybernetics Sociology of Professional Groups Sociology of Childhood

The Body in the Social Sciences

Timetable Day by Day

Session Title

RC47

Social Classes and Social Movements

TIMETABLE

No.

Program Structure

Historical and Comparative Sociology Visual Sociology

17:45 – 19:15 Common Sessions

16

Common Session 3A - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Common Sessions

17

Common Session 3B - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Common Sessions

18

Common Session 3C - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

Common Sessions

19

Common Session 3D - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

International Academic Publication

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

19:30 – 21:00 Professional Development

74

712

www.isa-sociology.org

Thursday 14 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

09:00 - 10:30 Room

Thursday 14 July 09:00 - 10:30 RC04, RC42

Social Psychology

JS-61

Justice and Inequality in Education

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC33, WG02, RC20 JS-63

Contextualizing Inter- & Multinational Survey Research. Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Discussing Regional Perspectives on Effects & Outcomes of Global Trends / Linear & Non-Linear (Multi-Level-)Modelling with Aggregate or Regional Data for Policy Analysis & Evidence Based Councelling

RC09, RC24

How Did Environment Call Development Pathways out?

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Joint Sessions

Joint Sessions

JS-62

Comparative Political Responses to Neoliberalization and Austerity

RC06

85

The Families We (Do Not) Want: Constructing the Past, Present Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) and Future Families through Rituals

RC07

99

Paths to Social Justice in the BRICS Countries

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC10

126

Self-Management As Simultaneous Goal and Means of Overcoming Systemic Accumulation of Capital Crisis

Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC12

153

Legal Professions and Legal Education

Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

RC13

169

Happiness, Well-Being and Health

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC14

181

Contemporary Communication Issues. Part B

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC15

194

Missing in Action? Sociological Analysis and the Provision of Public/Private Healthcare

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC16

208

Expanding (On) the Ontological Turn

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC18

228

The Poli-Tics/Tricks of Development and the Plight of Marginal Hörsaal 16 (Main Building) Communities in the 21st Century South Asia

RC19

243

Open Session IV

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC22

274

From New Age and Spiritualities to Different World Views: Individualized Religious Beliefs, Autonomy Values and Individualized Morality

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC23

287

New Challenges of Science in Underdeveloped and Emerging Economies

Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC25

317

Discourse in Practice: Microsociology of Social Exclusion and Control

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC26

327

Socio-Economic Crisis, Info-Communication Culture and Social Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Media Power

RC30

347

Informal Employment and Excluded Workers Part I

Family Research Futures Research Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociology of Health Sociological Theory Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Sociology of Religion

Sociology of Science and Technology Language and Society Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice Sociology of Work

www.isa-sociology.org

TIMETABLE

36

Economy and Society

Timetable Day by Day

RC02

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

75

Thursday 14 July

10:45 – 12:15 Program

Room

365

Well-Being Outcomes for Migrants: Fulfilment Vs. Disappointment

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

379

Muslim Women’s Struggles for a Better World through Promoting Gender Equality

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC34

402

Austrian Youth in Transition

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC37

439

Artistic Production and Neoliberalism: Challenges and Opportunities

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

451

Making Individual Memory Visible in the Public Space

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

464

Rural and Community Ties

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC40

476

Food Security, Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainable Agriculture. Part III

Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

RC41

490

Population Aging: Opportunities and Challenges Ahead.

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC44

512

Economic Crises, Labour Movements and Resistance in Central Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) and Eastern Europe

RC47

549

Cultural Signification: Making Sense of Action in Social Movements

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC48

563

The Occupy Protests: Visual Iconology and Image Events

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC51

588

Inclusive Innovation for Inclusive Growth

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC55

630

Imputation and Social Indicators: The Use of Factor Analysis for Imputing Missing Data

Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

WG03

660

Art in the Cities: Visual Cross-Cultural Research on the Strategies of Aesthetic Upgrading of Urban Environment

Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

TG04

685

Education, Policies, and the Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

Women in Society Sociology of Youth Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Labor Movements Timetable Day by Day

Session Title

RC31

Sociology of Migration

TIMETABLE

No.

Program Structure

Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Sociocybernetics Social Indicators Visual Sociology Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

10:45 – 12:15 RC49, RC34

JS-66

Youth Mental Health: Intersections and Directions

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC15, RC19

JS-64

Welfare States and Health Care Systems: In Search for Solutions to Social Inequalities in Health

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC33, RC14, WG02, RC14

JS-65

The Complex Discursivity of Global Futures in the Making: Analyzing Transnational Orders of Discourse 1

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

Joint Sessions

RC02

37

The Regulation of Cross-Border Labor Mobility

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

56

Will Educational Accountability, Standards, and High-Stakes Testing Give Us the Futures We Want?

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC06

86

Troubling ‘families’? Global Futures for Family Discourses and Practices.

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC07

100

Futures of Inequality and Collective Action

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

Economy and Society Sociology of Education Family Research Futures Research

76

www.isa-sociology.org

Thursday 14 July

Program Structure Program

No.

Session Title

10:45 – 12:15 Room

116

Monetary Practices in the Global South

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC10

127

RC10 Business Meeting

Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC11

141

RC11 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC12

154

Social and Legal Systems I

Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

RC13

170

Spirituality and Faith in and through Leisure

Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

RC16

209

Theoretical Contours of Global Social Change

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC20

256

Recent Quantitative Research in Comparative Sociology, I

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC22

275

Religion, Gender, and the Internet

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC23

288

Recent Technological Developments and Its Implications for (better) Employment

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

RC24

304

The Institutionalisation of Expertise in Environmental Governance

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC25

318

Discourses on Risk

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC30

348

Informal Employment and Excluded Workers Part II

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC31

366

Migration in Asia

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC32

380

Fights, Strategies and Projects for Women in Latin America and the Caribbean for a Fairer and More Equitable World.

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC37

440

Changing Modes of Production and the Arts

Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC38

452

Transnational Migrations and Biographical Narratives

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

465

The Impact of Disasters on Cultural and Livelihood Survival and Material Goods

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC40

477

RC40 Business Meeting

Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

RC41

491

Human Capital and Global Population Dynamics

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC44

513

Gender, Precarious Work, and Labor Organizing

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC47

550

Social Movements in the Arab World

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC48

564

Mass Violence in the 20th/21th Century and Emotions

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Sociology of Aging Sociology of Law Sociology of Leisure Sociological Theory Comparative Sociology Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology Environment and Society Language and Society

Sociology of Migration Women in Society Sociology of Arts Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Agriculture and Food Sociology of Population Labor Movements Social Classes and Social Movements Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

www.isa-sociology.org

77

TIMETABLE

Sociology of Work

Timetable Day by Day

RC09

Thursday 14 July

14:15 – 15:45 Program

No.

Session Title

Program Structure Room

RC51

589

Epistemic Uncertainty and Complexity Theories

Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

RC54

619

Author Meets Their Critics

Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

TG04

686

Crime, Deviance and Risk

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

Professional Development

713

In Conversation with Senior Sociologists: Making Connections, Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Bridging Generations I

Professional Development

714

In Conversation with Senior Sociologists: Making Connections, Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum) Bridging Generations II

Sociocybernetics The Body in the Social Sciences Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

12:30 – 14:00

14:15 – 15:45 RC30, RC52

JS-68

Professional Work in a Globalized World: Migration, CrossBordering and Globalization of Knowledge Workers / El Trabajo Profesional En Un Mundo Globalizado: Migración, Transnacionalización y Globalización De Los Trabajadores Del Conocimiento.

Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

RC55, RC31

JS-69

Migration and Well-Being. Part I

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC05, RC25

JS-67

The Use of Language and Silences in Coping with Everyday Nationalism, Racism and Sexism

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

TIMETABLE

Timetable Day by Day

Joint Sessions

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC02

38

In Search of the Global Labour Market – Actors, Institutions, and Policies

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

57

Ethics of Social and Educational Research

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC06

87

Social Policy, Feminism and the Decline of Patriarchal Fatherhood

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC07

101

Socio-Ecological Struggles and Emergent Innovations in the Sociogenesis of Democratic Futures

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC12

155

Legal Education and Legal Professions

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC14

182

Aportaciones de la Investigación en Comunicación al Desarrollo Social

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC15

195

Families and Health: An Emphasis on Same Sex Families

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

RC18

229

Political Sociology and the War on Terror. Part I

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC19

244

Global Health Policy: From the MDGs to the Sdgs

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC20

257

Recent Quantitative Research in Comparative Sociology II

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC22

276

Religious Engagement and Spiritual Empowerment in Asian Countries: Quest for Human Security and Self-Fulfilment

Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

RC23

289

Understanding the Shaping of Socio-Technical Futures

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

Economy and Society Sociology of Education Family Research Futures Research Sociology of Law Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociology of Health Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Comparative Sociology Sociology of Religion Sociology of Science and Technology

78

www.isa-sociology.org

Thursday 14 July

Program Structure Program

16:00 – 17:30

No.

Session Title

RC24

305

Time Cultures and Sustainable Futures: Theoretical Concepts and Practical Tools

RC32

381

Empowering Women for a Better World. Activism and Hörsaal 33 (Main Leadership in the Global Movements to Fight Violence Against Building) Women

RC34

403

Youth and Climate Change / Youth in the Global South (2 Themes)

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC38

453

Social and Political Participation of Refugees: Transnational and Biographical Perspectives

Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

RC39

466

Urban Vulnerabilities and Resilience

Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC41

492

Demography of Sexuality in a Changing Social and Legal Landscape

Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

RC44

514

Mining, Labour and the Contemporary Struggles for a Better World

Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

RC47

551

Genesis of the New Social Movements in the Global South

Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

RC48

565

Homogeneous, Homologous, or Interconnected? What Constitutes Global Waves of Contention?

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

TG04

687

TG04 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

Environment and Society Women in Society

Sociology of Youth Biography and Society

Sociology of Disasters Sociology of Population Labor Movements Social Classes and Social Movements

Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

Timetable Day by Day

Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

Room

RC54, RC22

JS-73

Rhythms and Rituals

Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

RC23, RC24

JS-71

How Are Science and Technology Engaged in Eco-Innovations?

Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

RC05, WG03

JS-70

Exploring the Role of Seeing in Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Relations

RC55, RC31

JS-74

Migration and Well-Being. Part II

Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC44, RC47

JS-72

Silos or Synergies? Can Labor Build Effective Alliances with Other Global Social Movements

Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions Joint Sessions

RC02

39

In Search of the Global Labor Market - Actors, Strategies and Successes: Panel II

Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC04

58

Social Inequality Despite or Due to Educational Expansion?

Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

RC06

88

Connecting Families? Family Life and Communication Technologies

Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC07

102

The Cultural Dimension of Innovation Processes

Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

RC12

156

RC12 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC14

183

Aportaciones de la Comunicación a los Procesos de Participación Social

Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

RC15

196

Integrating Complementary and Alternative Medicine in Healthcare

Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

Economy and Society Sociology of Education Family Research Futures Research Sociology of Law Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Sociology of Health

www.isa-sociology.org

79

TIMETABLE

16:00 – 17:30

Thursday 14 July

09:00 - 12:30 Program

No.

Session Title

Program Structure Room

RC16

210

Re-Thinking Democracy 2

Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

RC18

230

Political Sociology and the War on Terror. Part II

Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

RC19

245

Obstacles to Immigrants’ Successful Labour Market Integration

Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC20

258

Civilization, Decivilization, and International Relations Current Trends

Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

RC30

349

RC30 Business Meeting

Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC32

382

The Cities We Want: Using Visionary Methodologies to Create Feminist Alternatives to Urban Planning

Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

RC34

404

RC34 Business Meeting

Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Closing Plenary Session on The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

Sociological Theory Political Sociology Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Comparative Sociology Sociology of Work Women in Society Sociology of Youth

17:45 – 19:15

TIMETABLE

Timetable Day by Day

Plenary Sessions

Program

6

No.

Session Title

Room

Friday 15 July 09:00 - 12:30 Research Council

80

Research Council Meeting 2

www.isa-sociology.org

Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

Plenary Sessions Sunday 10 July

17:45 - 19:15 2

16:00 - 17:30 1

Opening Ceremony

Location: Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

Location: Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Markus S. SCHULZ, New School for Social Research, New York, USA

Chair: Ulrike ZARTLER, University of Vienna, Austria WELCOME ADDRESSES BY: 1.1 Ulrike FELT, Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Vienna, Austria; Barbara WEITGRUBER, Director General, Austrian Ministry of Science, Austria; Katharina SCHERKE, President of the Austrian Sociological Association, Austria and Rudolf RICHTER, University of Vienna, Austria Welcome Addresses 1.2 Margaret ABRAHAM, Hofstra University, USA ISA Presidential Address

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 2.1 Markus S. SCHULZ, New School for Social Research, New York, USA The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World (Forum President’s Address) 2.2 Saskia SASSEN, Columbia University, USA Relocalizing the National and Horizontalizing the Global 2.3 Jan P. NEDERVEEN PIETERSE, University of California at Santa Barbara, USA 21C Global and Transnational Futures 2.4 Stephan LESSENICH, Ludwig Maximilians University Munich, Department of Sociology, Germany The “Open Society” and Its Contradictions: Towards a Critical Sociology of Global Inequalities 2.5 Nora GARITA BONILLA, ALAS, Costa Rica Pueblos in Movement: Feminist and Indigenous Perspectives

19:30 - 21:00 RECEPTION

www.isa-sociology.org

81

Plenary

Cultural performance O.I.T. Schrammel Quartet

Chair: Michel WIEVIORKA, Maison des sciences de l’homme, France



1.3 Patrizia ALBANESE, Ryerson University, Canadian Sociological Association, Canada 2018 ISA World Congress of Sociology, Toronto, Canada MUSIC PERFORMANCE:

Opening Plenary Session on the Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

No. 3

Program–Session Details

Monday 11 July

Wednesday 13 July

12:30 - 14:00

5

3

Location: Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

Facing the Multiple Crises in Europe and Beyond

Plenary

Sociological Thought and the Struggle for a Better World

Location: Auditorium Maximum (Main Building)

Session Organizers: Josef HOCHGERNER, Center for Social Innovation, Austria and Frank WELZ, Innsbruck University, Austria

Session Organizer: Brigitte AULENBACHER, Johannes Kepler University, Austria

Chair: Frank WELZ, Innsbruck University, Austria

Chair: Brigitte AULENBACHER, Department of Theoretical Sociology and Social Analyse, Austria

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 5.1 Margareta BERTILSSON, University of Copenhagen, Denmark The Ever Expanding Social Field and the (in)Capacity of Sociology to Respond to New Challenges

Panelists: Klaus DOERRE, University of Jena, Germany; Beate LITTIG, Institute for Advanced Studies Vienna, Austria; Maria MARKANTONATOU, University of the Aegean, Greece; Annamaria SIMONAZZI, University of Roma, Italy; Josef WEIDENHOLZER, European Parlament, Austria and Michael BURAWOY, University of California, Berkeley, USA

5.2 Dieter BOEGENHOLD, Alpen-Adria-University Klagenfurt, Austria Towards a Universal Social Science. Sociology in Dialogue with Neighboring Disciplines 5.3 Gertraude MIKL-HORKE, Vienna University of Economy and Business, Austria Sociology Between Historicity and Present-Day Relevance: The Case of Early Austrian Social Thinking

Tuesday 12 July 4

Overcoming Boundaries and Polarizations Between Centers and Peripheries

5.4 Celi SCALON, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Sociology in Times of Global Changes: How to Address a New Agenda for Transnational Studies?

Location: Auditorium Maximum (Main Building) Session Organizers: Joerg FLECKER, University of Vienna, Austria and Max HALLER, University of Graz, Austria Chair: Max HALLER, University of Graz, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 4.1 Alcinda HONWANA, Open University, United Kingdom Youth in Waithood: Political Protest and Social Change 4.2 Ursula HOLTGREWE, FORBA, Austria Social polarisation

17:45 - 19:15 6

Closing Plenary Session on The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Auditorium Maximum (Main Building) Chair: Markus S. SCHULZ, New School for Social Research, New York, USA



4.3 Manuela BOATCA, University of Freiburg, Germany Exclusion through Citizenship and the Double Standards of Modernity/Coloniality

Thursday 14 July

Plenary

4.4 Benjamin TEJERINA, University of the Basque Country, Spain The Ruins of the Future. a Glance into Precariousness from inside the Crisis

Discussant: Alain TOURAINE, CADIS, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 6.1 Asef BAYAT, University of Illinois, USA Imagining a Post-Islamist Democracy 6.2 Akosua ADOMAKO AMPOFO, University of Ghana, Ghana Black Lives Matter and the Status of the Africana World 6.3 Emma PORIO, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines Risks and Resilience in a Rapidly Unfolding World: What Does It Hold for Our Sociological Practice? 6.4 Todd GITLIN, Columbia University, USA What Kind of a World Can Weather Climate Change?

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Common Sessions Monday 11 July 7

8.3 Ruut VEENHOVEN, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands The Sociology of Happiness

Common Session 1A - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Chair: Arturo RODRIGUEZ MORATO, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain

8.4 Douglas CONSTANCE, Sam Houston State University, USA The Future of the Agrifood System: Competing Visions and Contested Discourses

9

Common Session 1C - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 7.1 Anthony Gary DWORKIN, University of Houston, USA and Marios VRYONIDES, European University of Cyprus, Cyprus Emerging and Continuing Inequalities in Education

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

7.2 Christiana CONSTANTOPOULOU, Panteion University, Greece Communication, Media and Politics: Contradictions and Pretensions on Human ‘Destiny’

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

7.3 Paulo MENEZES, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil Arts and Imagination: The constitution of Social Interpretation

9.1 Jeffrey BROADBENT, University of Minnesota, USA Comparing Climate Change Policy Networks: Improving Global Transparency 9.2 Stewart LOCKIE, James Cook University, Australia Making society possible: re-imagining sociology in an era of global environmental change

7.4 Dean PIERIDES, University of Manchester, United Kingdom and Stewart CLEGG, University of Technology Sydney, Australia Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World: Contributions from the sociology of organization

Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Chair: Abdul-Mumin SA’AD, Federal College of Education, Nigeria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 8.1 Amelie QUESNEL-VALLEE, Canada Research Chair in Policies and Health Inequalities, McGill University, Canada Closing the Gap: The Potential of Sociology for the Study of Policies and Health Inequalities 8.2 Helen SAMPSON, Cardiff University, United Kingdom Shaping the future of work

9.4 Patrick BAERT, Cambridge University, United Kingdom Biographies and the Sociology of the Future: A Proposal 9.5 Nikita POKROVSKY, Higher School of Economics, Russia and Vladimir ILIN, St. Petersburg University, Russia The Antinomies of the Current Crisis and the Futures of Complex Societies

10

Common Session 1D - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Chairs: Jan SPURK, LASCO-IMT (Paris), Universite Paris Descartes, France and Olivier CHANTRAINE, Universite de Lille 3, France

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Common

Common Session 1B - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

9.3 Timothy W. LUKE, Virginia Tech, USA The Grounding Sociologies of the Future: Anthropocene Futures Emerging from the Present Burning Up the Past 

8

Chairs: Wilson AKPAN, University of Fort Hare, South Africa and Shujiro YAZAWA, Center of Glocal Studies, Seijo University, Japan

No. 11

Program–Session Details

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 10.1 Gustavo VERDUZCO, El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico Refugees in the Mediterranean: How Can We Prepare a Better Future? 10.2 Claudia MITCHELL, McGill University, Canada Looking into the Futures: Problematizing socially engaged research in Visual Sociology 10.3 Charlotte FABIANSSON, Victoria University, Australia The Power of Risk Perception: The Discord Between Public and Scientific Perception of Risks Around Food 10.4 Kelvin LOW, National University of Singapore, Singapore The Social Life of the Senses

11

Common Session 1E - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Chair: Paulo Henrique MARTINS, UFPE, Brazil Co-Chair: John HOLMWOOD, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 11.1 Paolo GERBAUDO, King`s College London, United Kingdom and Geoffrey PLEYERS, University of Louvain & College d’Etudes Mondiales, Belgium Social movement studies beyond the instrumental reductionism 11.2 David STRECKER, University of Jena, Germany Back to the Future? Slavery, Refeudalization and the Issue of Conceptual Clarification

13

Common Session 2B - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Chair: Roberto CIPRIANI, University Roma Tre, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 13.1 James SPICKARD, University of Redlands, USA Six Narratives in Search of a Future: Current ‘Theory’ in the Sociology of Religion 13.2 Birgit PFAU-EFFINGER, University of Hamburg, Germany How cultural change can contribute to welfare state change: Tracing cultural and institutional processes 13.3 Gabriele ROSENTHAL, Georg-August University of Göttingen, Germany Challenges of Biographical Research 13.4 Lauren LANGMAN, Loyola University, USA From Legitimation Crises to Movements to Power

14

Common Session 2C - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Chair: Raquel SOSA ELIZAGA, UNAM, Mexico AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 14.1 Celine-Marie PASCALE, American University, USA Discourses of the North Atlantic: Epistemology and Hegemony

11.4 Wolfram MANZENREITER, University of Vienna, Dept. of East Asian Studies, Austria and John HORNE, University of Central Lancashire, School of Sport and Wellbeing, England Sport and the Role of Sport Sociology for Alter-Globalization

14.2 Nira YUVAL-DAVIS, University of East London, United Kingdom Contemporary Politics of Belonging and Everyday Bordering

12 

12.4 Stephen MENNELL, University College Dublin, Ireland History is Not Bunk: Why Comparative Historical Sociology is Indispensable When Looking to the Future

11.3 Yuri KAZEPOV, University of Vienna, Austria From Citizenship to Cit(y)zenship: the changing boarders of social inclusion and exclusion

14.3 Robert M. FISHMAN, Carlos III University in Madrid, Spain How the Past Shapes Struggles for Equality: Contrasting Legacies of Reform and Revolution 14.4 Hanno SCHOLTZ, University of Konstanz, Germany Analyzing Current Challenges in the Mirror of the Past: The Two-Step Nature of Modernity and What We Learn from It

Tuesday 12 July

Common

Common

Common Session 2A - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

15

Common Session 2D - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Chair: Dilek CINDOGLU, Abdullah Gul University, Turkey

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Chair: Wolfgang KNOEBL, Hamburg Institute for Social Research, Germany, Germany

12.1 Rhoda REDDOCK, The University of the West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago Sociology, Feminisms and the Global South: Back to the Future 12.2 Isabel DA COSTA, CNRS-IDHE, France; Julia ROZANOVA, Yale University, USA; Fatima ASSUNCAO, University of Lisboa, Portugal; Eleni NINA-PAZARZI, University of Piraeus, Greece and Catherine CASEY, University of Leicester, United Kingdom Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self Management: Past, Present, and Future 12.3 Reiner KELLER, University of Augsburg, Germany, Germany The Complex Discursivity of Global Futures in the Making

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Co-Chair: Sergio COSTA, Freie Universitat Berlin, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 15.1 Ellen KUHLMANN, Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany Professions, Governance and Citizenship through the Global Looking Glass 15.2 Jonathan ANSON, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel Roots and Fruits of Population Growth: Back to Malthus or Forward to Marx?

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Common

Program–Session Details

15.3 Jose Vicente TAVARES-DOS-SANTOS, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil New Perspectives about Social Control, Crime and Violence: For Another Possible World 15.4 Helena CARREIRAS, Instituto Universitario de Lisboa, Portugal Reflexivity and the Sociological Study of the Military

Wednesday 13 July 16

Common Session 3A - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Chairs: Aigul ZABIROVA, Eurasian National University, Kazakhstan and Alberto MARTINELLI, Milan, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 16.1 Helena FLAM, University of Leipzig, Germany Solidarity, ‘feel good’ activism and emotional domino effects in transnational social movements 16.2 Bernard SCOTT, Center for Sociocybernetics Studies, Germany The Role of Sociocybernetics in Understanding World Futures 16.3 Thomas Spence SMITH, University of Rochester, USA The Sensory Motor Body. Inventing Culture Theory in the Light of Cultural Difference 16.4 Margaret O’BRIEN, University College London, United Kingdom Do Father-Targeted Policy Measures Improve Gender Equality and Child Well-being?

17

No. 19

17.2 Mans SVENSSON, Lund University, Sweden and Stefan LARSSON, Lund University Internet Institute, Sweden Law in a Digital Society: Code, Norms and Conceptions 17.3 Jan STETS, University of California, Riverside, USA A Social Psychological Perspective on “The Futures We Want” 17.4 Tina UYS, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Social Justice and Whistleblowing: Creating a Better World in the Workplace

18

Common Session 3C - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Chair: Habibul KHONDKER, Zayed University, United Arab Emirates AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 18.1 Steve FULLER, University of Warwick, United Kingdom Is the Future ‘Human’, ‘Posthuman’ or ‘Transhuman’ 18.2 Sylvia WALBY, Lancaster University, United Kingdom Is the Crisis Cascading into Violence? 18.3 Andrea LAMPIS, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Colombia Global risk and local vulnerabilities: Considerations on the shaping of disasters in contemporary Global South 18.4 Eric MYKHALOVSKIY, York University, Canada Institutional Ethnography and Activist Futures

19

Common Session 3D - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

Common Session 3B - The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Chairs: Alberto Leonard BIALAKOWSKY, UBA, Argentina; Alicia Itati PALERMO, UBA, Argentina and Guillermina JASSO, New York University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 17.1 Sharlene SWARTZ, University of Cape Town, South Africa Movements and Moments: Shifting theoretical paradigms through youth-led justice struggles in the Global South

Chair: Chin-Chun YI, Academia Sinica, Taiwan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 19.1 Ulrike M.M. SCHUERKENS, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France Globalization, Local Social Movements, and Social Transformations 19.2 Doris BUEHLER-NIEDERBERGER, University of Wuppertal, Germany Good Childhood – Good Future World? Global Programs and the Sociology of Childhood 19.3 Raf VANDERSTRAETEN, Ghent University, Belgium National and Global Sociology 

Common

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NOTES

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

SOCIOLOGY OF DEVELOPMENT

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ “Sociology of Development provides a much

needed venue for work on the Global South, and it _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ will be an invaluable resource to both scholars and policymakers alike.”

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ —James Mahoney, Northwestern University _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Sociology of Development is an international journal addressing issues of development, broadly considered. With basic as well as policy-oriented research, _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ topics explored include economic development and well-being, gender, health, inequality, poverty, environment and sustainability, political economy, conflict, _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ social movements, and more.

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Editors: Andrew Jorgenson and Jeffrey Kentor _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ eISSN: 2374-538X Published: March, June, September, December

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ S O C D E V. U C P R E S S . E D U

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Research Council Monday 11 July

Friday 15 July

09:00 - 10:30

Research Council Meeting 2

Research Council Meeting 1

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)



Council

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independent thinking from polity What is the Future? John Urry “John Urry combines here an extremely comprehensive yet very readable overview of the futures literature with a more detailed focus on some central themes. This learned yet very accessible book is in the best traditions of critical future studies. Anyone who hopes to be around for the next few years or longer should read it.” William Outhwaite, Newcastle University PB | 9780745696546 | £14.99 | June 2016

Strangers at Our Door Zygmunt Bauman This is a timely intervention in the debate on the refugee crisis in Europe, arguing that the perennial status of refugees as strangers, outsiders whose very presence calls attention to the fears and anxieties of an unstable world, is being exploited by politicians and the media in order to whip up a dehumanising moral panic. A plea for solidarity in the face of the refugee crisis from one of the world’s leading thinkers.

The Metamorphosis of the World Ulrich Beck “This book, which its author, one of the most original and perceptive thinkers of our time, was prevented from completing by a sudden catastrophe, reads as a most thorough and exhaustive – indeed complete – description of our world: a world defined by its endemic incompleteness and dedicated to resisting completion.” Zygmunt Bauman HB | 9780745690216 | £14.99 | March 2016

Intersectionality Patricia Hill Collins & Sirma Bilge “Comprehensive and highly accessible, Intersectionality is set to become the go-to book for students, activists, policy makers, and teachers looking for an analytic tool to help identify and challenge social inequalities and achieve social justice.” Nancy Naples, University of Connecticut PB | 9780745684499 | £15.99 | April 2016

PB | 9781509512171 | £9.99 | April 2016

Crisis Sylvia Walby “Sylvia Walby’s new complexity theory analysis of the current crises adds an essential dimension, addressing the financial, economic, welfare state and political ramifications of the crisis as strongly connected dynamics. Her book is an indispensable academic intervention in the politics of knowledge and empowers academics, politicians and citizens alike to address crisis.” Mieke Verloo, Radboud University PB | 9780745647616 | £15.99 | September 2015

Order your copy now: phone John Wiley & Sons Ltd on 0800 243407 (UK) or +44 1243 843294 (overseas) or go to www.politybooks.com

Gender, Work, and Economy Unpacking the Global Economy Heidi Gottfried “Heidi Gottfried’s synthesis and original analysis is a welcome addition to research trying to grasp the complexities of globalization from a feminist perspective. As review, critique and analysis, Gender, Work, and Economy makes an important contribution to our understanding of gendered social process, structure and relations.” Work, Employment and Society PB | 9780745647654 | £17.99 | November 2012

politybooks.com

RC01 Armed Forces and Conflict Resolution

Research Committees RC01

Armed Forces and Conflict Resolution Program Coordinator: Christian LEUPRECHT, Royal Military College of Canada, Canada and Helena CARREIRAS, Instituto Universitario de Lisboa, Portugal

Monday 11 July

14:15-15:45 21

10:45-12:15 20

The Future and Challenges of Professional Military Education

Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Irregular Wars - Conflict Studies I

Session Organizer: Mihail ANTON, National Defence University “Carol I”, Romania

Language: French, Spanish, English Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Abu BAH, Northern Illinois University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 20.1 Yagil LEVY, Open University of Israel, Israel Why Should We Study Fatality Ratio? 20.2 Izadora XAVIER, Université Paris 8/GTM-CRESPPA, France Who’s Got the Biggest Humanitarianism: How Nations Soldier for Peace 20.3 Javed HUSSAIN, University of Malakand, Pakistan; Hafsa TARIQ, The University of Agriculture Peshawar, Pakistan and Jawad HUSSAIN, University of Malakand, Pakistan Militant’s Indoctrination Typology of Institutionalized Means and Social Desires with Reference to Violence Enactment 20.4 Temitope ORIOLA, Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Canada and Marcella CASSIANO, Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Canada Boko Haram in Nigeria: Statistical Trends, Patterns and Social Implications

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 21.1 Maja GARB, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia Issues and Dilemmas of Professional Military Education in Slovenia 21.2 Alejandra NAVARRO, University of Buenos Aires Argentina, Argentina “Argentinean Army Officials in Democracy: New Challenges for the Military Profession” 21.3 Michele NEGRI, University of Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy Present Situation and Perspectives in the Educational System of the Italian Armed Forces: General Aspects and inDepth Analysis of Military Health System 21.4 Marinel-Adi MUSTATA, Carol I National Defence University, Romania and Aurelia MUSTATA, Carol I National Defence University, Romania Critical Thinking and Decision Making in the Military 21.5 Juha MAKINEN, National Defence University of Finland, Finland Revolution in Educational Affairs at the Finnish National Defence University?

20.5 Javed HUSSAIN, University of Malakand, Pakistan; Hafsa TARIQ, The University of Agriculture Peshawar, Pakistan and Jawad HUSSAIN, University of Malakand, Pakistan Militant’s Indoctrinations Typology of Institutionalized Means and Social Desires with Refrence to Violence Enactment 20.6 Alemayehu KUMSA, Charles University, Czech Republic What Is the Root Causes of the Rise of Jihadist Movements in Africa?

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RC01

No. 22

Program–Session Details

Tuesday 12 July

Wednesday 13 July

22

10:45-12:15

Irregular Wars - Conflict Studies II

Language: Spanish, French, English

23

Armed Forces and Conflict Resolution

Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC01 Tuesday 12 July

Tourism and Conflict Resolution

Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

Session Organizer: Jean FABIEN, Unicamp, Haiti

Session Organizer: Pirzada AMIN, Kashmir University, India

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 22.1 Miguel Angel VITE PEREZ, Universidad de Alicante, Mexico México, Fragmentación Social y Violencia Zhacia Un Control Estatal Neoliberal?

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

22.2 Jean FABIEN, Unicamp, Haiti Conflits Armés Et Changement Social à Cité Soleil (Haiti) De 1990 à Nos Jours: Une Analyse Critique De La Gestion Politique Et Du Rôle Des Religions

23.1 Azer SUMBAS, HACETTEPE UNIVERSITY, Turkey An Alternative Discussion on the Direct Participation in Hostilities: WHO ARE the ‘Unlawful Combatants’ or “Civilians”? 23.2 Emre AMASYALI, McGill University, Canada and Mehri GHAZANJANI, McGill University, Canada From Tension to War: A Fuzzy-Set Analysis on Levels of Civil Conflict in the Middle East and North Africa

22.3 Luis BUITRAGO ROA, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Colombia El Enfrentamiento Entre Guerrillas: Nuevos Aportes Para El Entendimiento De La Lucha Por El Territorio En Contextos De Guerra Civil

23.3 Margaret ABAZIE-HUMPHREY, Office Nigeria of the Special Adviser to President on Niger Delta / Presdiential Amnesty Programme, Nigeria Local Cooperation As a Determinant of Conflict Resolution Success: Lessons from Niger Delta DDR Program

22.4 Diana MACHUCA, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Colombia El Impacto Del Conflicto Armado En Los Movimientos Sociales: Una Aproximación Desde Los Estudios De La Guerra Civil. 22.5 Alemayehu KUMSA, Charles University, Czech Republic Comparative Analysis of Two Models of Conflict Resolution in Somalia

NOTES

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RC02 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

Economy and Society

Sunday 10 July

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 25.6 Armando GARCIA CHIANG, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Unidad Iztapalapa, Mexico The Oil Industry in Mexico, Corporate Social Responsibility and Local Development. Social Clauses in the New Oil Contracts. Real Alternative for Development?

09:00-10:30 Author Meets Critics: Capitalism’s Crises in South Africa and the World: Class Struggle and Left Responses by V. Satgar, A. Bieler, H. Wainwright

14:15-15:45 26

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Climate Change, Capitalism, Geoengineering

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Session Organizer: Vishwas SATGAR, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Chair: Heidi GOTTFRIED, Wayne State University, USA

Session Organizer: Jean Philippe SAPINSKI, University of Victoria, Canada

Panelist: Hilary WAINWRIGHT, Transnational Institute, USA

Chair: William CARROLL, University of Victoria, Canada

Discussant: Jennifer CHUN, University of Toronto, Canada

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 24.1 Andreas BIELER, School of Politics and IR, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Austerity and Resistance: The Politics of Labour in the EuroZone Crisis

26.1 Andrew SZASZ, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA Going Rogue: Russ George and the Problem of Governance in Geoengineering

JS-10 Sociology of Innovation: The Social

26.2 Nils MARKUSSON, Lancaster University, United Kingdom; Mads DAHL-GJEFSEN, University of WisconsinMadison, USA; Jennie STEPHENS, University of Vermont, USA and David TYFIELD, Lancaster University, United Kingdom Promises of Technical Fixes: Geoengineering Justifications of Defensive Spatio-Temporal Fixes

Committees: RC02 Economy and Society (Host); RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology

26.3 Jean Philippe SAPINSKI, Department of Sociology, University of Oregon, USA Climate Politics, Capitalism, and the Governance of Solar Radiation Management

10:45-12:15 and Cultural Structure of Innovative Societies

See Joint Session Details for JS-10.

Monday 11 July

12:30-14:00 25

Corporate Power and Carboniferous Capitalism

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: William CARROLL, University of Victoria, Canada

09:00-10:30 27

RC02 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Chair: Jean Philippe SAPINSKI, University of Oregon, USA

10:45-12:15

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

28

25.1 William CARROLL, University of Victoria, Canada Modalities of Corporate Power in Carboniferous Capitalism: An Overview 25.2 Nicolas GRAHAM, University of Victoria, Canada Flow and Friction: Networks of Power and the Infrastructures of Fossil Capitalism 25.3 Paul GELLERT, University of Tennessee, USA The Political ‘hangover’ of Coal in US Appalachia: Maintaining and Disguising Power Via the Multi-Layered Subsidiary Firm

Author Meets Critics: Crisis by Sylvia Walby

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Heidi GOTTFRIED, Wayne State University, USA Chair: Heidi GOTTFRIED, Wayne State University, USA Panelist: Sylvia WALBY, Lancaster University, United Kingdom Discussants: Stefanie WOEHL, University of Applied Sciences BFI Vienna, Austria and Christopher CHASE-DUNN, University of California-Riverside, USA

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Economy and Society

Program Coordinator: Heidi GOTTFRIED, Wayne State University, USA

25.5 Mihai SARBU, University of Ottawa, Canada Contesting Corporate Power: Exploring Why Individuals and Organizations Divest from Fossil Fuels Companies and What Social Factors Influence Them.

RC02

25.4 James GOODMAN, University of Technology Sydney, Australia The Coal Rush and Beyond: India, Germany, Australia

RC02

24

No. 28

RC02

No. 29

Program–Session Details

Tuesday 12 July

14:15-15:45 29

Reconsidering debt, assets, money, and other relationships: Panel II

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Economy and Society

Session Organizer: Aaron PITLUCK, University of Chicago, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 29.1 Alejandro MARAMBIO-TAPIA, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Living in Debt: Households Narratives in the Chilean Credit Retail-Led Expansion

09:00-10:30 31

Global Think Tanks

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Georgina MURRAY, Griffith University, Australia and Alejandra SALAS-PORRAS, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Chair: David FASENFEST, Wayne State University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

29.2 Mateusz HALAWA, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Productive Lives of Mortgages in Poland 29.3 Alya GUSEVA, Boston University, USA and Akos RONATAS, UCSD, USA Understanding Consumer Credit through Comparative Lens 29.4 Elias STORMS, University of Antwerp, Belgium Debt As a Heterogeneously Constituted Relationship: Payment and Collection at the Household Level 29.5 Marcus WOLF, University of Bremen, Germany The Political Voice of Everyday Finance – Debtor and Creditor Organizations in Post-Crisis Financial Regulation

16:00-17:30 30

RC02 Tuesday 12 July

Reconsidering debt, assets, money, and other relationships: Panel I

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Aaron PITLUCK, Illinois State University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 30.1 Jacques-Olivier CHARRON, Paris Dauphine University, France Investees’ Voices 30.2 Clea BOURNE, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom Sensemaking While Speculating: Collective Understandings of Financial Risk-Taking in Jamaican Online Communities 30.3 Erin TAYLOR, Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal and Heather HORST, RMIT, Australia Social-Material Aspects of Digital Consumer Finance: Findings from a “Portable Kit” Study in Hispaniola 30.4 Sebastian MOLLER, University of Bremen, Germany Municipal Debt and the Derivative Market: Interest Rate Swaps As an Emerging Social Relationship Between Local Authorities and Transnational Finance 30.5 Frederick WHERRY, Yale University, USA Relational Accounting: Extensions and Applications

31.1 Karin FISCHER, Kepler University Linz, Austria and Dieter PLEHWE, WZB Berlin Social Science Center, Germany Neoliberal Think Tank Networks in Latin America and Europe: Strategic Replication and Cross National Organizing 31.2 Matilde LUNA, UNAM, Mexico and Jose VELASCO, UNAM, Mexico Power without Representation in a Transnational Governance Network: The Coherence and Closeness of the Trilateral Commission 31.3 William CARROLL, University of Victoria, Canada and Elaine COBURN, American University of Paris, France Counter-Hegemonic Projects and Cognitive Praxis in Transnational Alternative Policy Groups 31.4 Georgina MURRAY, Griffith University, Australia Australian Think Tanks: Key Sites in a Global Distribution of Power? 31.5 Alejandra SALAS-PORRAS, Facultad de Ciencias Politicas y Sociales-UNAM, Mexico Think-Tank Networks in Mexico and How They Shape Economic and Political Reforms 31.6 Bruce CRONIN, University of Greenwich, United Kingdom The Rise and Decline of the Business Roundtable: Large Corporations and Congressional Lobbying

10:45-12:15 32

Changes in the Global Class Structure. The Precariat in the North and South. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Hiroko INOUE, University of California, Riverside, USA and Yoshimichi SATO, Tohoku University, Japan Chair: Christopher CHASE-DUNN, University of CaliforniaRiverside, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 32.1 Emanuele FERRAGINA, Sciences Po, France and Alessandro ARRIGONI, University of Oxford, United Kingdom The Rise of the Invisible Majority 32.2 Andrea HENSE, SOFI: Sociological Research Institute Göttingen, Germany Explaining the Emergence of Self-Perceived Precarity

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RC02 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

32.4 Justyna ZIELINSKA Unity in Diversity? New Working Class Under Regime of Precariousness

10:45-12:15 JS-52 Migrant Labor and Development in

Comparative Perspective: Lessons from the Chinese Case

14:15-15:45

See Joint Session Details for JS-52.

33

14:15-15:45

Changes in the Global Class Structure: The Precariat in the North and South. Part I

34

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Christopher CHASE-DUNN, University of California, USA and Yoshimichi SATO, Tohoku University, Japan

Gender Regimes or Gendered Institutions?

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Chair: Hiroko INOUE, University of California, Riverside, USA

Session Organizer: Sylvia WALBY, Lancaster University, United Kingdom

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

33.1 Valentine MOGHADAM, Northeastern University, USA “a Female Precariat? the Middle East and North Africa in Comparative Perspective” 33.2 Chris TILLY, University of California Los Angeles, USA The Future of Work: From Dystopia to Utopia? 33.3 John O’BRIEN, Portland State University (ret.), France “India’s Overdetermined Précarité: Caste and Class Between Tradition and Modernity” 33.4 Patricio SOLIS, El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico; Eduardo CHAVEZ MOLINA, UBA - Universidad Nacional de Mar de Plata, Argentina and Daniel COBOS, El Colegio de México, Mexico Class Structure, Structural Heterogeneity and Living Conditions in Latin America

34.1 Karin GOTTSCHALL, SOCIUM, Germany and Andrea SCHAEFER, SOCIUM, Germany Capturing Dynamics of Changing Gender Inequality: Regimes, Institutions and Indices 34.2 Stefanie WOEHL, University of Applied Sciences BFI Vienna, Austria Gender Regimes Revisited in Times of Economic Crisis 34.3 Karen SHIRE, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany Social Institutions and Gender Regimes in Conservative Welfare States 34.4 Ilse LENZ, University of Bochum, Germany Changing gender orders, varieties of gender regimes and institutional changes

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

33.5 Andre SALATA, Pontificia Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Defining the Middle Class Boundaries in a Changing Society: Is There a New Middle Class in Brazil?

34.5 Hiroko TAKEDA, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, University of Tokyo, Japan Between Reproduction and Production: Womenomics and the Japanese Government’s Approach to Women and Gender Policies

33.6 Giselle VELASQUEZ, World Bank Group, USA Conga Va Vs. Conga No Va: A Case Study on the Pervasiveness of Poverty in Cajamarca, Peru

16:00-17:30 35

16:00-17:30 JS-46 Careworkers Organizing Challenges, Strategies and Successes. Part I

Committees: RC02 Economy and Society (Host); RC44 Labor Movements

Endangered Democracies and the Fate of Feminisms

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Mieke VERLOO, IWM, Institute fro Human Sciences, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 35.1 Vicki DABROWSKI, Goldsmiths College, University of London, United Kingdom Re-Signifying Feminism: The Neo-Liberalization of Gender Equality in Post-Recession Britain.

See Joint Session Details for JS-46.

Wednesday 13 July JS-49 Careworkers Organizing Challenges,

35.2 Rosalind CAVAGHAN, Radboud University, Netherlands The Democratic Impacts of EU Macro-Economic Surveillance: Reconfiguring the Eu’s Gendered Normative Base

Committees: RC44 Labor Movements (Host); RC02 Economy and Society

35.3 Nadia SHAPKINA, Kansas State University, USA Mobilizing the Past: Gender Politics and Neo-Traditionalism in Russia

09:00-10:30 Strategies and Successes. Part II

See Joint Session Details for JS-49.

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Economy and Society

Committees: RC44 Labor Movements (Host); RC02 Economy and Society

RC02

32.3 Rossana CILLO, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Italy New Frontiers of Precariousness. Internships and the Training to a Precarious Life

No. 35

RC02

No. 36

Thursday 14 July

RC02 Thursday 14 July

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 36

Economy and Society

Program–Session Details

Comparative Political Responses to Neoliberalization and Austerity

37.6 Kwang-Yeong SHIN, Department of sociology, ChungAng University, South Korea and Ju KONG, Department of Sociology, Chung-Ang University, South Korea Economic Crisis, Financialization and Debt Financing in South Korea

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

14:15-15:45

Session Organizers: Cory BLAD, Manhattan College, USA and Ricardo DELLO BUONO, Manhattan College, USA

38

Chair: Alfonso LATONI, NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCES - NIH, USA

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizer: Ursula MENSE-PETERMANN, University of Bielefeld, Germany

36.1 Cory BLAD, Manhattan College, USA Searching for Saviors: Neoliberalism and the Persistence of Economic Protectionist Demands 36.2 Ligaya LINDIO MCGOVERN, Indiana University, USA Response to Neoliberal Globalization: The Philippine Experience 36.3 Seyed A. HOSSEINI FARADONBEH, The University of Newcastle, Australia and Barry GILLS, University of Helsinki, Finland Social Movements for Global Alternatives: Livelihood, Collaboration, Transformation 36.4 Ricardo DELLO BUONO, Manhattan College, USA Crisis Neoliberalism and the Social Welfare State: Comparing Structural Challenges and Policy Responses in the US and Scandinavia

Chair: Ursula MENSE-PETERMANN, Bielefeld University, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 38.1 Karen SHIRE, Institute of Sociology, Germany; Hannelore MOTTWEILER, Institute of Sociology, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany and Chih-Chieh WANG, Institute of Sociology, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany Market Making in Inter-Regional Comparison: Cross-Border Temporary Agency Employment in Europe and East Asia 38.2 Benedicte ZIMMERMANN, EHESS Paris, France A Transnational Approach to Work: Methodological Issues 38.3 Graham HOLLINSHEAD, University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom The Social Construction of Global Value Chains; A Case in Pharmaceuticals 38.4 Sigrid QUACK, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany Cross-Border Careers in an Emerging Transnational Labor Market for NGO Staff

10:45-12:15 37

In Search of the Global Labour Market – Actors, Institutions, and Policies

The Regulation of Cross-Border Labor Mobility

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Karen SHIRE, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 37.1 Ludger PRIES, Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum, Germany Transnationalisation of Labour Mobility - Trends and Challenges for Its Regulation Ludger Pries 37.2 Verena ROSSOW, University of Applied Sciences Düsseldorf, Germany and Simone LEIBER, University of Applied Sciences Düsseldorf, Germany Europeanisation By Under-Regulation? the Role of Brokering Agencies in the (Informal) Care Market Between Germany and Poland 37.3 Ingo SCHULZ-SCHAEFFER, University of DuisburgEssen, Germany and Matthias BOTTEL, University of DuisburgEssen, Germany Transnationally Distributed Software-Engineering: Do Technological Standardization and Professional Homogenization Make Cultural Barriers Disappear? 37.4 Laura WIESBOCK, University of Vienna, Austria Cross-Border Labour Commuting in the Central European Region: Emerging Patterns and Implications 37.5 Birgit APITZSCH, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany Different Forms of Regulation and the Formalization of the Prostitution Sector

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 38.5 Knut PETZOLD, Catholic University of EichstattIngolstadt, Germany The Worth of International Experience during Education for Potential Employers. Some Hypotheses and Experimental Evidence

16:00-17:30 39

In Search of the Global Labor Market Actors, Strategies and Successes: Panel II

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Ursula MENSE-PETERMANN, University of Bielefeld, Germany Chair: Ursula MENSE-PETERMANN, Bielefeld University, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 39.1 Alinaya Sybilla FABROS, University of the Philippines, Philippines The Making of a Transnational Workforce: A Historical View of Global Labor Deployment from the Philippines, 1974-2014 39.2 Vili LEHDONVIRTA, Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Global Online Labour Markets: Theoretical Perspectives and Initial Findings 39.3 Ross FERGUSSON, The Open University, United Kingdom Global Actors and Policies on Youth Unemployment: Historical and Comparative Perspectives 39.4 Joerg FLECKER, University of Vienna, Austria A Global Labour Market for Digital Work?

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www.isa-sociology.org

RC03 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

No. 41

Program Coordinator: Peter ACHTERBERG, Tilburg University, Netherlands

40.3 Luiz TEIXEIRA, Federal University of Parana, Brazil; Maria Tarcisa Silva BEGA, Federal University of Paraná, Brazil and Jose Miguel RASIA, Federal University of Paraná, Brazil The Curitiba Urbanization Process: The Case of Iguaçu Park Garden

Community Research

40.4 Chiara LODI RIZZINI, CENTRO DI RICERCA LUIGI EINAUDI, Italy Paris, London, Stockholm, When the Crisis Is Social

09:00-10:30 40

40.5 Jean BEAMAN, Purdue University, USA France’s Racial Project: Banlieues, Social Exclusion, and the North African Second- Generation

Understanding Urban Unrest

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Peter ACHTERBERG, Tilburg University, Netherlands AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 40.1 Kristien GILLIS, University of Antwerp, Belgium How We Share Space: Social Categorization Processes at Work in a Residential Street Prostitution Area

Tuesday 12 July 41

RC03 Business Meeting

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

NOTES

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Community Research

Monday 11 July

RC03

RC03

40.2 Bengt ANDERSEN, Work Research Institute, Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway Angry or Bored? Understanding the Acts of the “Gaza Rioters” in Oslo, Norway

Sociology of Education

RC04

No. 42

Program–Session Details

42.7 Feng-Jihu LEE, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan Inquiring into the Policy of Integration of Early Childhood Education and Care in Taiwan: From a Politics of Difference

RC04

Sociology of Education Program Coordinator: Anthony Gary DWORKIN, University of Houston, USA and Marios VRYONIDES, European University of Cyprus, Cyprus

Sunday 10 July

12:30-14:00 43

Mass Participation to Higher Education and Social Justice: Issues Revisited

Session Organizers: Marios VRYONIDES, European University of Cyprus, Cyprus and Maria Ligia BARBOSA, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Gender Stereotypes and STEM Education: Global and Local Perspectives

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology (Host); RC04 Sociology of Education See Joint Session Details for JS-5.

10:45-12:15 42

42.8 Huang BO-RUEY, Chinese Culture University, Taiwan The Development of Competency in Taiwan Teacher Education: A Historical Review

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

09:00-10:30 JS-5

RC04 Sunday 10 July

Competition, Competence and Educational Reinstitutionalization in Confucian Cultural Countries

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Feng-Jihu LEE, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan and Jason Chien-chen CHANG, Chinese Culture University, Taiwan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 42.1 Chihming CHANG, National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan Does Confucian Culture Make Difference on Student [email protected] 42.2 Jia-Li HUANG, National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan Competition and Competence in Marketization of Teacher Force: Reinstitutionalization of Teacher Education in Taiwan 42.3 Chun-wen LIN, National Chiayi University, Taiwan One Story, Differently Told: What Went Wrong in the Competence-Based Schools 42.4 Benjamin CHANG, The Hong Kong Institute of Education, Hong Kong “What’s the Point When We Can’t Even Afford a Home?” Competition, Competence, and Agency Among Hong Kong and Mainland Chinese Tertiary Students

43.1 Agnes DAVID-KACSO, Babes-Bolyai University, Romania; Maria ROTH, Babes-Bolyai University, Romania and Paul-Teodor HARAGUS, Babes-Bolyai University, Romania Social and Demographic Factors with Influence on the Educational Status of Romanian Youth 43.2 Iasonas LAMPRIANOU, University of Cyprus, Cyprus; Loizos SYMEOU, European University Cyprus, Cyprus and Eleni THEODOROU, European University Cyprus, Cyprus Is Access to Public and Private Universities a Matter of Social Justice? 43.3 David KONSTANTINOVSKIY, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Consequences of Inequality in Education Become Clear in the Labor Market 43.4 Claudia FINGER, WZB Berlin Social Science Center, Germany The Black Box before Transitions: Social Inequality in Application for and Admission to Higher Education in Germany. 43.5 Cláudia CAVALCANTE, PUC Goiás, Brazil; José Maria BALDINO, PUC Goiás, Brazil and Aldimar DUARTE, PUC Goiás, Brazil Permanence Strategies in High Selective Undergraduate Courses and Professional Expectations: The Case of Quota System Beneficiaries in Brazilian Public Universities 43.6 Kelly GIANEZINI, UNESC, Brazil The Expansion of Legal Higher Education and the Access of Ethnic Minorities

14:15-15:45 44

National Educational Systems for the Global Market: Professional and Educational Trajectories for Youth

42.5 Sheng Yao CHENG, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan and W. James JACOB, University of Pittsburgh, USA A Review of the Common Core State Standards Initiative in the United States and Its Relevance in Taiwan

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

42.6 Chousung YANG, National Chi Nan University, Taiwan Influences of Government and Market Mechanisms on the Development of Teacher Education Institutions in Taiwan

Session Organizers: Svetlana SHARONOVA, St.Tikhon’s Orthodox University, Russia and Galina CHEREDNICHENKO, Institute of Sociology of Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia 44.1 Nina ARSENTYEVA, Institute of Economics and Industrial Engineering, Russia Adaptation of Young People in the Labor Market 44.2 Natalia AZERBAEVA, Tula state University, Russia Competence Approach - a Blessing or a Tragedy for the Russian Education

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RC04 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 45

The Sociology of the Educational System - a Reappraisal

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Kari KANTASALMI, University of Helsinki, Finland and Raf VANDERSTRAETEN, Ghent University, Belgium AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 45.1 Jana HEINZ, Technische Universitat Munchen, Germany A Review of Theoretical Approaches to Study the Bologna Process in Educational Sociology from 2004-2014 45.2 Achala GUPTA, National University of Singapore, Singapore Conceptualising Schooling and Education in Modern Society: A Theoretical Approach 45.3 Thomas PFEFFER, Danube University Krems,, Austria Education in World Society: Combining NeoInstitutionalism and Social Systems Theory

14:15-15:45 47

Life-Long Learning ‘Aspirations’ and Labour Market(s) ‘Realities’

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Dionysios GOUVIAS, University of the Aegean, Greece ROUNDTABLES:

Ethnic Contexts 2 ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

10:45-12:15 46

46.8 Yuk Man CHEUNG, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Cultural Dynamics and Educational Expansions of Secondary Schools in Japan and Hong Kong: Equality for Individuals or Citizens?

Sociology of Education

Language: English, Spanish

46.7 Nabanita BARUAH, JNU New Delhi-110067, India Some Reflections on the ‘Creativity’ Among the Secondary School Students : Case Study of a Kendriya Vidyalaya (School) in Delhi

Educational Achievement and Provision of Opportunity, of Secondary Education

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Shinichi AIZAWA, Chukyo University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 46.1 Joanna SIKORA, Australian National University, Australia and David PITT, Macquarie University, Australia Choices of Mathematics Courses in Year 12: How Horizontal Gender Inequality Reproduces Itself in the Comprehensive Education System of Australia 46.2 Yasmiyn IRIZARRY, The University of Texas at Austin, USA Racial Gaps in Math Course Taking: How School and Classroom Segregation Shape Opportunities to Learn 46.3 Yael EISENBACH, The College of Management Academic Studies, Israel and Yasmin BALOUM, Israel Ministry of Education, Israel English Studies for the Arab Minority in Israel: Social Tracking or a Key to Mobility? 46.4 Anna UBOLDI, university of Milano Bicocca, Italy Sociogenesis of the Artistic Vocation. The Study of Art Between Dispositions and Aspirations. 46.5 Leandro RAIZER, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil Secondary Education in Brazil: A System That Persists in Social Reproduction

47.12 Wan-Chi CHEN, Department of Sociology, National Taipei University, Taiwan Does the Age of Career Decision-Making Matter? Accounting for Teacher’s Job Commitment in Taiwan 47.26 Ove SKARPENES, Department of Sociology and Social Work, University of Agder, Norway Education and the Working Class - Ambivalences and Paradoxes 47.22 Alberto PIERDANT, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana-Xochimilco, Mexico; Jesus RODRIGUEZ, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana - Xochimilco, Mexico and Ana Elena NARRO, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana Xochimilco, Mexico Educational Inequality in Nuevo Leon and Oaxaca, Mexico, 2008 and 2010. the Basis of an Uncertain Future for These Societies. 47.6 Karina MALDONADO, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany Innovations in Education. the Role of Innovations in Education and Society in São Paulo, Brazil 47.4 Wai-Chung HO, Hong Kong Baptist University, China Perspectives on the Umbrella Movement and the Adaptation of the Song “Do You Hear the People Sing?” Among Chinese University Students in Hong Kong 47.20 Damaris RIBEIRO, Faculdade de Direito do Sul de Minas, Brazil; Rafael Lazzarotto SIMIONI, Abrasd, Brazil and Danielle Domingues de CARVALHO, FDSM Faculdade de Direito do Sul de Minas, Brazil The History of Education in Brazilian Constitutionalism: From Colonail Brazil to 1964 Brazilian Military Coup

46.6 Jin JIANG, Lingnan University, Hong Kong Expansion of Upper Secondary Education in Mainland China, 1980—2010

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RC04

Monday 11 July

No. 47

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Program–Session Details

Spanish Language 1 ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 47.30 Miguel MONROY FARIAS, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico Creencias Estudiantiles Sobre Cómo El Pensamiento Mejora La Convivencia Humana

Sociology of Education

RC04

No. 47

47.1 Maria Jose SOUZA, UFF, Brazil and Pablo FICA PIRAS, UEFS, Brazil Extensión Universitaria y Formación Contra-Hegemónica En Los Cursos De Derecho e Ingeniería 47.18 Ana Araceli BECERRA, Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico Los Investigadores En Las Universidades Ante Un Nuevo Esquema De Trabajo 47.29 Rosana SANTIAGO GARCIA, UNIVERSIDAD AUTÓNOMA DE CHIAPAS, Mexico and Luz Marina IBARRA URIBE, Universidad del Estado de Morelos, Mexico Responsabilidad Social De La Educación Superior En La Formación De Recursos Humanos 47.9 Nancy HERNANDEZ REYES, Universidad Autónoma de Chiapas, Mexico; Fernando LARA PINA, Universidad Autónoma de Chiapas, Mexico and Elsa Maria DIAZ ORDAZ CASTILLEJOS, Universidad Autónoma de Chiapas, Mexico SER UN Buen Profesor. Valoraciones De Estudiantes Y Docentes De Posgrado SOBRE La Excelencia AcadÉmica 47.14 Pablo GUERRERO, Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Morelos, Mexico; Luz Marina IBARRA URIBE, Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Morelos, Mexico and Ana Esther ESCALANTE FERRER, Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Morelos, Mexico Significado De La Calidad e Integridad Académica, Desde La Perspectiva De La Sociología De La Educación 47.25 Sebastian FUENTES, UNTREF/FLACSO/CONICET, Argentina The Diversification and Expansion of Higher Education: University Elections of Young and Families in Upper Middle Classes of Buenos Aires and Its Impact on Educational Inequality.

RC04 Monday 11 July

47.2 Martha GOMEZ COLLADO, Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Mexico, Mexico La Reforma Educativa 2013 En México Zlogrará Elevar La Calidad En La Educación? 47.7 Natalia SLACHEVSKY, Université Paris Descartes, France La Sociedad De La Información En Chile: Discurso Político y Sus Limites 47.28 Benigno BENAVIDES MARTÍNEZ, Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Mexico La Valoración De La Calidad Del Trabajo Docente Universitario

Table A ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 47.21 Yusuf SAHIN, Metu Sociology, Turkey Educational Aspirations Versus Educational Expectations in Turkey 47.8 Krisztina BERNATH, Partium Christian University, Romania Motivation Factors of Pursuing Higher Education in the Hungary-Romania Cross-Border Area 47.3 Paul-Teodor HARAGUS, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania, Romania; Mihai IOVU, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania, Romania and Maria ROTH, Babes-Bolyai University, Romania Outcomes of Adolescence and Perceived Life Chances in Romanian Youth 47.19 Nicole KAISER, Friedrich-Alexander University ErlangenNuremberg, Germany and Miriam RUDEL, Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany Relocation after Bachelor Degree? Spatial Mobility of Students on Their Way to Master Programs. 47.15 Carmen BAUMELER, Swiss Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training, Switzerland The Translation of Swiss Vocational Education and Training into Other Cultural Contexts

Youth ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Spanish Language 2 ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 47.11 Alícia VILLAR AGUILÉS, Universitat de València, Spain; Francesc Jesus HERNANDEZ DOBON, Universitat de València, Spain and Rafael GARCIA ROS, Universitat de València, Spain Ante La Divergencia De Modelos De Financiación Universitaria En Europa. Un Estudio Sobre Factores Socioeconómicos y Permanencia Del Estudiantado En La Universidad 47.31 Servando GUTIÉRREZ, Profesor investigador de UAM; sociólogo-demógrafo., Mexico; David Francisco RAMIREZ, Profesor Investigador de la Universidad Intercultural del Estado de Hidalgo, Mexico and Clara Elena VALLADARES, Profesora investigadora UAM México; Depto. Economía, Mexico El Futuro Laboral De Los/As Jóvenes a Través De La Educación? Lo Que Opinan Estudiantes Hombres y Mujeres Indígenas y No Indígenas De Nivel Secundaria y Bachillerato De Tenango De Doria; Hidalgo, México. 47.17 Ana LUNA MIRANDA, Universidad Autonoma de Tlaxcala, Mexico; Manuel CAMACHO HIGAREDA, Universidad Autónoma de Tlaxcala, Mexico and Mariela JIMENEZ VASQUEZ, Universidad Autónoma de Tlaxcala, Mexico Identidad Profesional y Trabajo Colaborativo En Cuerpos Académicos 47.23 Guadalupe CHAVEZ-GONZALEZ, Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Mexico La Excelencia Del Profesorado Universitario. La Visión De Los Estudiantes.

98

47.16 Dina TANATOVA, Russian State Social University, Russia Educational Trajectories of Modern Youth: Problems of Choice. 47.27 Sofia BOUTSIOUKI, University of Macedonia, Greece Experiences from Student International Internships: Taking a Step into the Real World? 47.13 Sergio SEVERINO, University of Enna, Italy; Giada CASCINO, University of Enna, Italy; Caterina POLOPOLI, University of Enna, Italy and Aiello FABIO, University of Enna, Italy Prevent Early School Leaving: The Risk of School Dropout Questionnaire (RSDQ) 47.24 Tatiana SEMENOVA, D. Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia, Department of Sociology, Russia The Career-Guidance As an Instrument for Increasing Motivation of Students for Acquisition Professional Skills 47.5 Andrey E. ZUEV, Eutoexpo AG, Russia The Education and Vocational Training As Part of Modern Youth Lifestyle 47.10 Heike BEHLE, University of Warwick, United Kingdom The International Baccalaureate Career Programme (IBCP). Young Peoples’ Career-Decision Making within This New Approach to Combine Academic and Vocational Education.

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RC04 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

Inequalities 3

48

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Postcolonial Studies and Education: Understanding the Past to Inform the Future

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

ROUNDTABLES:

Inequalities 1 ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 48.20 Nora SKOPEK, GESIS, Germany and Oshrat HOCHMAN, GESIS, Germany Can Parental Wealth Explain the Low Rates of Intergenerational Educational Upward Mobility in Germany? 48.18 Analia TORRES, CIEG/ISCSP University of Lisbon, Portugal; Fernando SERRA, CAPP/ISCSP University of Lisbon VAT# 600019152, Portugal and Diana MACIEL, CIEG/ISCSP University of Lisbon, Portugal Educational and Social Mobility: Results from a Longitudinal Study 48.1 Jennifer CHESTERS, University of \Canberra, Australia Educational Expansion and the Persistence of Social Inequality Related to Parental Education in Australia 48.8 Tatang MUTTAQIN, University of Groningen/ICS, Netherlands; Marijtje VAN DUIJN, University of Groningen/ICS, Netherlands and Rafael WITTEK, University of Groningen/ICS, Netherlands Social Capital and Pre-School Participation in Indonesia 48.14 Valer VERES, Babes-Bolyai University Cluj / HAS - CSS Minority Research Institute, Romania Social Inequalities in Romania and the Educational Expansion 48.17 Gina LAI, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong Transition to Higher Education and Social Capital Inequality

Inequalities 2 ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 48.15 Ayture TURKYILMAZ, Wuppertal University, Germany How Do Parents and Primary School Children in Germany Cope with Increasing Educational Pressure? 48.19 Marek MUSZYNSKI, Educational Research Institute (IBE), Poland Inequality Despite or Due to Educational Expansion: English Teaching in Rural Areas Versus Big Cities in Poland. 48.12 Patricio SOLIS, El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico and Pablo DALLE, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Leveling the Field? Educational Expansion and Occupational Attainment in Latin America 48.7 Carlos Andre GOMES, UFMG, Brazil and Marisa DUARTE, UFMG, Brazil School Infrastructure and Socioeconomic Status in Brazil

48.16 Tanja VUCKOVIC JUROS, Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb, Croatia and Ana TOKIC MILAKOVIC, University of Zagreb, Croatia Is There a Way out? Cultural Capital and Educational Outcomes of Young People Who Grew up in Poverty 48.4 Minami SHIMOSEGAWA, University of Tokyo, Japan and Satoshi MIWA, University of Tokyo, Japan The Effect of Dropout from Tertiary Education on Status Attainment in Japan 48.10 Alessandro LOVAT, Faculty of Arts The University of Adelaide, Australia and Igusti DARMAWAN, School of Education The University of Adelaide, Australia The Influence of Gender, Age, SES Background and VET Qualification Entry Level on Undergraduate Academic Performance at an Australian University

Postcolonial Studies and Education: Understanding the Past to Inform the Future ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 48.3 Terry WOTHERSPOON, University of Saskatchewan, Canada Indigenous Education in Canada: Representation, Rights and Democratic Colonization 48.6 Marietta MAYRHOFER-DEAK, University of Vienna, Austria Postcolonial Pedagogy in Practice

Stedent Achievement ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 48.2 Kaspar BURGER, Universite de Geneve, Switzerland How Educational Policies Affect Social Gradients in Student Achievement: A Comparative Study of 31 European Countries 48.13 Ieva KARKLINA, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, University of Latvia, Latvia; Ilze KOROLEVA, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, University of Latvia, Latvia and Ilze TRAPENCIERE, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, University of Latvia, Latvia Reduced School Dropouts and Lower OECD PISA Scores: Controversial Impact of Rural Schools on Education Policy Efficacy in Latvia 48.9 Bernhard RIEDERER, Vienna Institute of Demography, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria Social Change and Growing Inequality in Educational Systems? a Multi-Level Analysis of Schools’ Social and Ethnic Segregation with PISA Data from 2000 to 2012

48.5 Marilia RAMOS, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil The Impact of Cultural Capital on Undergraduate Students’ Performances in Brazil

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Sociology of Education

Session Organizer: Julie MATTHEWS, School of Education, The University of Adelaide, Australia

48.11 Anita KOO, Hong Kong Polytechnic Unviersity, Hong Kong Having Vocational Education and Underpaid Internship: Project of Human Capital Formation Among Disadvantaged Youths in China

RC04

16:00-17:30

No. 48

RC04

No. 49

Tuesday 12 July

RC04 Tuesday 12 July

49.10 Yannie CHEUNG, Global Studies Programme, Faculty of Social Science, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong The Societal Effects of Secondary School Curriculum Reforms on Gender Participation in Higher Education: A Comparative and Longitudinal Study of Asia, 1950 - 2010

09:00-10:30 49

Sociology of Education

Program–Session Details

Education of Refugee Children

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Maha SHUAYB, Centre for Lebanese Studies, Lebanon ROUNDTABLES:

49.14 Renata SIEMIENSKA, University of Warsaw, Poland; Ilona MATYSIAK, University of Warsaw, Poland and Erica WAAGENE, Nordic Institute for Studies in Innovation, Research and Education, Norway Young Ph.D. Graduates in Poland and Norway: Expectations of Women and Men Vs. Reality of the Labor Market

Education of Refugee Children

Higher Education

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

49.20 Neda MOINOLMOLKI, University of Delaware, USA Bhutanese Refugee Adolescents’ Academic Adjustment: The Role of Acculturation and Familial Social Capital 49.3 Frank RIDZI, CNYCF, USA Examining the Effectiveness of Book Distribution Programming on English As a Second Language Children: The Imagination Library Program and Implications for Refugee Resettlement 49.12 Tahereh ABOOFAZELI, Society for defending street and working children, Iran; Setareh GHODSI, Bahamestan, Iran and Ronak FAZLI, Bahamestan, Iran Learning with Children and Not Teaching Them: Pedagogy of the Refugee Children 49.6 Anthony Gary DWORKIN, University of Houston, USA; Kun ZHANG, Minzu University, China and Jon LORENCE, University of Houston, USA Non-Promotional School Mobility of Immigrant and Refugee Language Minority Children in Texas: Unintended Consequences of the Educational Accountability System 49.19 Oluwayemisi OBASHORO-JOHN, University of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria and Gbolabo ONI, University of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria Refugee Education:the State of Nigeria’s Preparedness 49.17 Maha SHUAYB, Centre for Lebanese Studies, Lebanon The Effect of Segregated Verses Integrated Schooling on Teaching and Learning of Syrian Refugee Children and Lebanese Students in Public Lebanese Schools.

49.15 Helena HELVE, University of Tampere, School of Social Sciences and Humanities, Finland A Comparative Study of Future Horizons and Value Shifts Among Young Finns in Higher Education 49.11 Syed JAMALI, ICL Business School, New Zealand Assessing the Difficulty Level of the Curriculum: Chinese Students’ Perspectives on the New Zealand Diploma in Business (Level 6) 49.2 Chi Yuan CHEN, Chinese Culture University, Taiwan Do the reasons professors choose academic work influence their work interest, time devotion and achievements? A study of academics in Taiwan’s higher education 49.8 Claudia SANTOS, University Institute of Lisbon- ISCTEIUL, Brazil Student Grant in Public Universities: A Comparative Study Between Brazil and Portugal

Higher Education 2 ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 49.1 Munesh KUMAR, Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj University, Kanpur, India Deprived Communities in Higher Education: Issues of Equality and Social Justice 49.7 Ana Luiza MATOS DE OLIVEIRA, Unicamp, Brazil Public Policy, Social Rights and Social Justice: Higher Education in the Brazil of the 2000s 49.13 Catarina EGREJA, CIES / ISCTE-IUL, Portugal Sociology in Foreign Scientific Fields: The Students’ Perspective in the Portuguese Higher Education System

Ethnic Context 1 ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 49.5 Walter ALLEN, University of California, Los Angeles, USA; Florence BONNER, Howard University, USA; Chantal JONES, UCLA, USA and Jalil BISHOP, UCLA, USA The Educational Benefits of Student Diversity in U.S. Law Schools 49.9 Meihui LIU, National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan The Praxis Approach to Multicultural Teacher Education: A Case Study in Taiwan

Gender

49.18 Simona ILIE, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romania and Dana Ioana EREMIA, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romania The Role of University Degree in Youth Transition to Work

10:45-12:15 50

Language: Spanish, English

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 49.16 Ana BURGUES, Department of Sociology and Organizational Analysis, University of Barcelona, Spain; Esther OLIVER, University of Barcelona, Spain; Lidia PUIGVERT, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom and Tinka SCHUBERT, University of Barcelona, Spain Contributions of the Communicative Methodology to Gender Violence Prevention in Educational Research

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Analia MEO, Consejo Nacional de Investigaaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas, Argentina; Sofia MARQUES DA SILVA, University of Porto, Portugal and Diana MILSTEIN, Universidad del Comahue / Universidad Nacional de la Matanza / IDES, Argentina

49.4 Tatiana ZIMENKOVA, TU Dortmund University, Germany Learners As Equality Providers: Learner’s Agency in Framing and Handling Inequality. a Lgbttiq Support Project

100

Space, Education and Inequalities. Lessons Learned and Ways to Move Forward

www.isa-sociology.org

RC04 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

50.1 Vicky PLOWS, Victoria University, Australia; Dorothy BOTTRELL, Victoria University, Australia and Kitty TE RIELE, Victoria University, Australia But on Whose Scale? Staff and Student Perspectives on Valued and Valuable Outcomes in the ‘Counter-Spaces’ of Flexible Learning Programs

50.3 Eleanor GURNEY, King’s College London, United Kingdom Navigating the Education Marketplace: The Impact of Space and Place on School Choice Amongst Low Income Households in New Delhi, India

51

Educating Emotions and Bodies: A Sociological Perspective

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Mariana NOBILE, Latin American School Social Sciences, Argentina and Sebastian FUENTES, Latin American School Social Sciences, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 51.1 Chris SHILLING, University of Kent, United Kingdom and Philip MELLOR, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Learning to Work: Embodying Occupations 51.2 Alice OLIVIER, Sciences Po/INED, Paris, France Shaping Professional Bodies and Emotions: Male and Female Students in Midwifery and Social Work Schools in France

50.4 Reza GHOLAMI, Keele University, United Kingdom The Diasporization of Educational Space: An Ethnographic Exploration of Power and Educational Experience within Iranian Supplementary Schools in London

51.3 Sue NICHOLS, University of South Australia, Australia and Garth STAHL, University of South Australia, Australia “I Don’t Really Have Time for People Who Get Moody”: Young Men Negotiating Emotions in Education Contexts.

50.5 Anna BACZKO DOMBI, Institute of Sociology, University of Warsaw, Poland; Agata KOMENDANT-BRODOWSKA, University of Warsaw, Poland and Tomasz ZAJAC, Uniwersytet Warszawski, Poland Local Determinants of Educational Inequalities: Example of Poland

51.4 Emma PARFITT, University of Warwick, United Kingdom A Managed Heart in Relation to Storytelling: How Education Policy Shapes Young People’s Perceptions of Emotion.

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 50.6 Ingrid BAMBERG, Independent Researcher, France Spatial Inequalities, Decentralization and Schooling Practices in Democratic South Africa: Some Ways to Understand Educational Inequalities 50.7 Maria JIMENEZ DELGADO, Universidad de Alicante, Spain; Brahim EL HABIB DRAOUI, Universidad de Alicante, Spain and Diana JARENO-RUIZ, Universidad de Alicante, Spain El Abandono De La Educación Secundaria Obligatoria De Las Jóvenes Españolas Gitanas

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 51.5 Karla Marisol GARCIA MACIAS, Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico Lindas, Sexis y Aplicadas. El Orden De Género En Las Alumnas De La Escuela Secundaria 51.6 Zia HASHEMI, University of Tehran, Iran; Mohamad REZAEI, University of Tarbiat Modarres, Iran and Sepideh AKBARPOURAN, University of Tehran, Iran Experience of Happiness in Students’ Daily Lives 51.7 Analia MEO, University of Warwick, United Kingdom “I Love My Students”: Teachers’ Work Identities, Emotions and Inequalities in the City of Buenos Aires (Argentina)

50.8 Carlos Andre GOMES, UFMG, Brazil and Marisa DUARTE, UFMG, Brazil Oportunidades Educacionales En Territorios Urbanos y Rurales En Brasil

16:00-17:30

50.9 Kumiko HIGUCHI, Tokyo Jogakkan University, Japan Toward Inclusive Alternative Learning Spaces: A Qualitative Study of Japan’s Educational Support Centers

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

50.10 Christoph ZANGGER, University of Bern, Switzerland Spatializing Educational Inequalities. Spatial Econometric Models of Neighborhood Effects on Elementary Students’ Mathematical Achievement in Zurich, Switzerland.

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

50.11 Tobias BUCHNER, queraum.cultural and social research, Austria The Restroom As a Room to Rest: Territories, Hegemonic Masculinity and Intersectional Practices of Belonging in an ‘inclusive’ Schoolxs Spaces 50.12 Trinh TRAN, Middlebury College, USA Overlapping and Disconnected Social Spheres: A MultiContextual Model of the Link Between School Choice and Neighborhood Effects on Adolescents

52

Education, Youth and Labor Market in the Modern and Future World

Session Organizer: David KONSTANTINOVSKIY, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia 52.1 Hala AWADA, Lebanese Sociological association, Lebanon Graduates of Lebanese Institute of Social Sciences: Which Equality in Learning, Which Equality in Job Market? 52.2 Tracey HUGHES, University of Stirling, United Kingdom “Remember Me”: Enabling Young People’s Voice Regarding Their Futures, in a Society Striving for Economic Prosperity 52.3 Ekaterina POPOVA, Institute of Sociology of Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia School Graduates’ Attitudes Towards Education and Labor Market in Russia 52.4 Mei-Ling LIN, Sociology of National Open University in Taiwan, Taiwan Political Economy of Work and Employability. Educational Challenges, Boundaryless Careers and Youth

www.isa-sociology.org

101

Sociology of Education

50.2 Elaine ANDRADE, Faculdade de Psicologia e de Ciências da Educação, Universidade do Porto, Portugal and Manuela FERREIRA, Faculdade de Psicologia e de Ciências da Educação, Universidade do Porto, Portugal Discussing the Uses of Public Space By Children of Bangladeshi Immigrants in Portugal: A Small Urban Square in Porto

14:15-15:45

RC04

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

No. 52

Sociology of Education

RC04

No. 53

Program–Session Details

52.5 Fatima FARINA, University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy and Domenico CARBONE, University of Eastern Piedmont, Italy Mind the Gap! Analysing the Gender Gap and Crisis Effects on Occupational Paths of Young Graduates in Italy 52.6 Pepka BOYADJIEVA, Institute for the Study of Societies and Knowledge, BAS, Bulgaria and Petya ILIEVA-TRICHKOVA, Institute for the Study of Societies and Knowledge, BAS, Bulgaria Working or Studying: (Re)Shaping Students’ Transitions after Leaving High School

RC04 Wednesday 13 July

53.5 Amurabi OLIVEIRA, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil Race and the Brazilian Sociology of Education Renewal from South Theories

14:15-15:45 54

52.7 Eeva SINISALO-JUHA, University of Tampere, Finland Informal Education in Youth Work – an Opportunity for a Youngster

Access, Sustainability and Success in Higher Education Continues to be a Global Struggle – Interrogating the Disjuncture Between Policy and Practice.

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

52.8 Margarita BERSHADSKAYA, Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia; Marina ARTAMONOVA, Research University - Higher School of Economics, Russia; Andrey KOZHANOV, Research University - Higher School of Economics, Russia; Olga RYBAKOVA, Corporation “Foundation “Socium”,, Russia; Natalia SEDOVA, Russian Public Opinion Research Center (VCIOM), Russia; Irina VOROBYOVA, Russian State University for the Humanities, Russia and Miroslava TSAPKO, Main Directorate of territorial policy of the Moscow region, Russia Professional Standard As the Basis for the Interaction of Education and the Labor Market

Session Organizer: Shaheeda ESSACK, Nat Dept Higher Education & Training, South Africa

Wednesday 13 July

Education Dialogues with/in the Global South

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Carol REID, University of Western Sydney, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 53.1 Marilia CARVALHO, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil and Adriano SENKEVICS, Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisas Educacionais, Brazil Does the “Developing Countries Girl” Exist? 53.2 Filipa LOURENCO REIS, Universidade Lusofona de Humanidades e Tecnologias, Portugal and Manuela GUILHERME, Centre for Social Studies, Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal Epistemological Conversations with the South: New Conceptual Models of Intercultural Higher Education in Latin America 53.3 Achala GUPTA, National University of Singapore, Singapore Gandhi and Education: Theoretical and Practical Approaches to Conceptualising School Education in Modern Society 53.4 Raquel SOSA ELIZAGA, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Education for and with the Excluded: Broadening Horizons through Memory, Imagination, Spaciality and Sensoriality

102

54.1 Nitza DAVIDOVITCH, Ariel University of Samaria, Israel The Descent from the Ivory Tower: On Higher Education’s Contribution to Reducing Social Disparities. the Case of Israel. 54.2 Jon RAINFORD, Staffordshire University, United Kingdom Making It Fit: Institutional Variations in Access and Success Policies 54.3 Maria Ligia BARBOSA, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Policies for Expansion of Higher Education and Practical Institutional Barriers

09:00-10:30 53

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

54.4 Dhaneswar BHOI, TATA INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, MUMBAI-88, India Participation and Success of Scheduled Castes in Higher Education: A Neoliberal Discourse on Indian Experience 54.5 Dionysios GOUVIAS, University of the Aegean, Greece and Marios VRYONIDES, European University of Cyprus, Cyprus E-Qualified : An in-Depth Investigation of an Innovative Post-Graduate Program at a Greek University 54.6 Judith PEREZ-CASTRO, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico The Dualism Between Mass Participation and Inequality in Mexican Higher Education 54.7 Chien-Lung WANG, National Taitung University, Taiwan and Juhui CHANG, National Taitung University, Taiwan Forecasting Models for the Numbers of Indigenous Graduate Students in the Context of Graduate Schools Expansion in Taiwan—Curvilinear Regression of the Ministry of Education’s Statistics from 1998 to 2014 54.8 Sara ARNON, Tel-Hai College, Israel Incorporating Internal Social Responsibility As Part of the Third Mission of Higher Education Institutions

16:00-17:30 55

RC04 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

www.isa-sociology.org

RC04 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

Thursday 14 July JS-61 Justice and Inequality in Education See Joint Session Details for JS-61.

10:45-12:15 Will Educational Accountability, Standards, and High-Stakes Testing Give Us the Futures We Want?

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Anthony Gary DWORKIN, University of Houston, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 56.1 Chun-Ying TSENG, University of Taipei, Taiwan Professionalism in the Remaking: New Labour and the ‘New’ Teachers in England 56.2 Miranda CHRISTOU, University of Cyprus, Cyprus The Gender of Accountability 56.3 Nerida SPINA, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Orienting Teachers to High Stakes Data: The Increasing Role of Edubusinesses in Schools 56.4 Charles KIRSCHBAUM, Insper, Brazil Willingness to Use Test Data and Its Impact on Teachers’ Relationships

14:15-15:45 57

57.5 Leticia PONS BONALS, Universidad Autonoma de Chiapas, Mexico; Rosario Guadalupe CHAVEZ MOGUEL, Universidad Autónoma de Chiapas, Mexico and Karla Jeanette CHACON REYNOSA, Universidad Autonoma de Chiapas, Mexico Etica Y Productividad Academica. SOBRE Las Evaluaciones DEL Trabajo De Profesores Universitarios 57.6 Ana Esther ESCALANTE FERRER, Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Morelos, Mexico and Cesar Dario FONSECA BAUTISTA, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos, Mexico La Responsabilidad Social Universitaria En Tres Universidades De América Latina. Comparación De Planes De Desarrollo 57.7 Herwig REITER, German Youth Institute - DJI, Germany Extended Research Ethics in Qualitative Interviewing DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 57.8 Concepcion del Rocio VARGAS, Instituto Tecnológico de Toluca, Mexico Fomentar La Empatía Para Formar Ingenieros Con Responsabilidad Social 57.9 Julia PUASCHUNDER, Harvard University, USA Ethical Decision Making Under Social Uncertainty: An Introduction of Überethicality

16:00-17:30 58

Social Inequality Despite or Due to Educational Expansion?

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Tobias MAIER, Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training, Germany

Ethics of Social and Educational Research

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Anita Cecilia HIRSCH ADLER, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 57.1 Judith PEREZ-CASTRO, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico Ethics of Research and the New Conditions of Knowledge Production 57.2 Maria del Rocio AMADOR BAUTISTA, NationalAutomous University of Mexico, Mexico Desafíos De La Movilidad Internacional De Jóvenes Universitarios Mexicanos 57.3 Juan LOPEZ-CALVA, Universidad Popular Autonoma del Estado de Puebla, Mexico and Maria del Carmen DE LA LUZ, Universidad Popular Autónoma del Estado de Puebla, Mexico Professional Ethics and Scientific Research: Conceptions from Researchers Members of the National Researchers System (SNI) in a Mexican Private University

58.1 Pepka BOYADJIEVA, Institute for the Study of Societies and Knowledge, BAS, Bulgaria and Petya ILIEVA-TRICHKOVA, Institute for the Study of Societies and Knowledge, BAS, Bulgaria The Social Embeddedness of the Influence of Higher Education Expansion on Graduate Employability 58.2 Ralph FEVRE, Cardiff University, United Kingdom Educational Expansion, Egalitarian Individualism and Neoliberalism 58.3 Anna KIERSZTYN, University of Warsaw, Dept. of Philosophy and Sociology, Poland Skills, Inequalities, and Overeducation: The Perverse Effects of Educational Expansion in Poland 58.4 Inhoe KU, Seoul National Universty, South Korea; JungEun KIM, Seoul National University, South Korea and Hyerim LEE, Seoul National University, South Korea Consequences of Private Tutoring for Educational Attainment: The Case of South Korea 58.5 Oliver WINKLER, Martin-Luther-University HalleWittenberg, Germany Educational Reform, Delayed Education and Social Inequality in Germany

www.isa-sociology.org

103

Sociology of Education

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology (Host); RC04 Sociology of Education

RC04

57.4 Cecilia NAVIA ANTEZANA, National Pedagogical University, Campus Ajusco Mexico, Mexico and Douglas IZARRA, Universidad Pedagógica Experimental Libertador, Venezuela Responsible Teachers in Venezuela and Mexico

09:00-10:30

56

No. 58

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations

RC05

No. 59

Program–Session Details

12:30-14:00

RC05

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations Program Coordinator: Georgina TSOLIDIS, Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation, Australia

Sunday 10 July

61

Session Organizers: Karim MURJI, Open University, United Kingdom; Giovanni PICKER, European University Viadrina, Germany and Manuela BOATCA, University of Freiburg, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 61.1 Christopher MELE, University at Buffalo, USA Urban Development through the Prism of Race

61.3 Natalie BYFIELD, St. John’s University, USA Race Science and Surveillance

Early Career Researchers Career Development Session

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Umut EREL, Open University, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 59.1 Vilna BASHI-TREITLER, Baruch College, CUNY, USA Book Publishing

61.4 Randi GRESSGARD, University of Bergen, Norway Necronormativity – Death Politics on the Margins of the Law

14:15-15:45 JS-17 Racial, Ethnic and National

Marginalization of Female Labor: Intersecting Inequalities at Work /La marginalisation raciale, ethnique et nationale de travailleures : des inégalités en intersection au travail

59.2 Karim MURJI, Open University, United Kingdom Publishing in Journals 59.3 Ann DENIS, Université d’Ottawa, Canada Networking in Professional Associations

Committees: RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations (Host); RC32 Women in Society

10:45-12:15 60

Racial Urbanities: A Global Cartography

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

61.2 Nicole TRUJILLO-PAGAN, Wayne State University, USA A Tale of Four Cities: Mobility and Place-Making Among Ethiopian Migrants

09:00-10:30 59

RC05 Sunday 10 July

Anti-Jewish and Anti-Muslim Racisms

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Ulrike VIETEN, Queen’s University Belfast, Northern Ireland and Nira YUVAL-DAVIS, University of East London, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 60.1 Kristina NOTTBOHM, Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Germany and Gudrun HENTGES, Hochschule Fulda, Germany Anti-Muslim Racism and the Feminization of the Extreme Right. Examples from France and Germany

See Joint Session Details for JS-17.

Monday 11 July 62

Far-Right Anti-Immigrant Movements and Counter Actions in Europe

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Helma LUTZ, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

60.2 Benjamin OPRATKO, Department of Political Science, University of Vienna, Austria “Devils from Our Past”. Racist Historicism in Contemporary Anti-Muslim Discourse

62.1 Ulrike VIETEN, Queen’s University Belfast, Northern Ireland and Scott POYNTING, University of Auckland, New Zealand Normalising Xenophobia and Cosmopolitan Justice: The New Meaning of Populism in Europe

60.3 Julia EDTHOFER, University of Vienna, Austria Debates on Contemporary Anti-Semitism and Anti-Muslim Racism in a Post-Nazi and Post-Colonial Research Setting

62.2 Helena FLAM, University of Leipzig, Germany National Media Coverage and “Politicized Lawyering” in the NSU Court Case, Germany

60.4 Arun KUSHWAHA, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India Nationalism and the Construction of Muslim Identity:a Study of Print Media in North India

62.3 Minna SEIKKULA, University of Turku, Finland Meanings Given to Counter Action Against AntiImmigration Racism. an Intersectional Analysis of Accounts By Activists in Finland

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 60.5 Gert PICKEL, Leipzig University, Germany and Alexander YENDELL, Leipzig University, Germany Anti-Muslim Sentiments: The Effect of Direct and Parasocial Contacts

104

62.4 Iris WIGGER, Loughborough University, United Kingdom German Society Between ‘Open Doors’ for Refugees and ‘the End of Tolerance’? Representations of Migration in Contemporary Germany and the Rising Tide of Populist Nationalism, Anti-Immigration and Islamophobia

www.isa-sociology.org

RC05 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

10:45-12:15

63

65

Racismo y blanquitud en América Latina: Metodologías y formas de análisis

RC05

16:00-17:30

No. 66

Everyday Bordering in the Metropolis

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Nira YUVAL-DAVIS, University of East London, United Kingdom

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizer: Natividad GUTIERREZ CHONG, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 63.1 Eugenia ITURRIAGA, Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan, Mexico Mérida La Ciudad Blanca: Reflexiones En Torno La Blanquitud En Yucatán 63.2 Stephanie GRAF, Red Interdisciplinaria sobre Racismo, Xenofobia e Identidades INTEGRA, Mexico El Discurso Antisemita En México: Un Estudio De Casos Múltiple Entre Estudiantes 63.3 Elena NAVA, Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales UNAM, Mexico Medios De Comunicación Indígena: Entre El Acceso y La Exclusión 63.4 Antonieta VERA, University Alberto Hurtado, Chile; Isabel AGUILERA, Universidad de Chile, Chile and Rosario FERNANDEZ, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom Comodificación y Fetichización: Desafíos Para El Estudio Del Racismo En El Chile Neoliberal. 63.5 Paola CONTRERAS, Universidad de Barcelona, Spain Giro Decolonial y análisis Interseccional: Una Aproximación Epistemológica/Metodológica Para El Estudio De Las Mujeres Latinoamericanas En España 63.6 Benno ALVES, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil Racismo, Democracia Racial y Blanquitud: Un análisis De Trayectoria En El Sur De Brasil

65.2 Shohei NAKAMURA, Kyoto University, Japan Notion of Ethnicity and the Sense of Belonging to a Neighborhood Community: An Insight from City Life of Betawi in Jakarta, Indonesia 65.3 Hannah JONES, University of Warwick, United Kingdom Dissonant Belonging: Nation, Race and Immigration through a Queer Post-Imperial Lens 65.4 Reinhard SCHWEITZER, University of Sussex, United Kingdom The Local, Everyday Politics and Negotiation of Irregular Migrants’ Entitlements and Effective Access to Public Healthcare. Insights from on-Going Research in London and Barcelona 65.5 Paola BONIZZONI, University of Milan, Italy Good Families, Good Tenants, Good Homes. Cohabitations, Housing Standards and Immigration Controls in Italy. 65.6 Jonathan DARLING, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Privatising Asylum: Neoliberal Bordering and the Urban Governance of Forced Migration

14:15-15:45 66

Families and Racialized Boundaries

Language: English, French

Tuesday 12 July

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Umut EREL, Open University, United Kingdom

09:00-10:30 64

65.1 Natividad GUTIERREZ CHONG, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico 43 Students Are Missing in Mexico: Racism and Ethnicity Around Narratives of Denial and Justice

Chair: Umut EREL, Open University, United Kingdom

Ethno-Political Battles of Middle Eastern Diasporas

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Ipek DEMIR, University of Leicester, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 64.1 Abdoulaye GUEYE, University of Ottawa, Canada The African Diaspora Uprising: Blackness in the Making in France 64.2 Ayatollah MIRZAIE, The Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies (IHCS), Iran Nationalism Among Iranian University Students 64.3 Lipaz SHAMOA-NIR, Zefat Academic College, Israel and Irene RAZPURKER-APFELD, Zefat Academic College, Israel The Power of Implicit Processing of Religious Symbols to Activate or Moderate Anti-Muslim Attitudes Among Jews

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 66.1 Kathryn SWEENEY, Purdue University Calumet, USA Racial Exposure and Neighborhood Choices of White Parents of Black and Multiracial Transracially Adopted Children in the United States 66.2 Georgina TSOLIDIS, Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation, Australia Mothering Difference 66.3 Tracey REYNOLDS, Greenwich University, United Kingdom and Elisabetta ZONTINI, University of Nottigham, United Kingdom Family Habitus and Transnational Families: Mapping Gender and Generational Borders and Relations through the Lens of Migrant Youths 66.4 Ashli MULLEN, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom The ‘Blonde Angel’ and the ‘Gypsy Childsnatcher’: Racialisation of Romani Family Relations in the British Press 66.5 Matthew HUGHEY, University of Connecticut, USA Still the Tragic Mulatto? Manufacturing Multiraciality in Magazine Media, 1961-2011

www.isa-sociology.org

105

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations

Language: English, Spanish

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations

RC05

No. 67

Program–Session Details

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 66.6 Lalitha CHAMAKALAYIL, University of Applied Sciences and Art, Northwestern Switzerland, Switzerland and Christine RIEGEL, University of Education Freiburg, Germany Life Strategies in the Context of Societal Inequalities and Asymmetrical Migration and Gender Relations – Intergenerational Transmissions

16:00-17:30 67

Cultures of Violence and Contemporary Racism

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Claudia TAZREITER, University of New South Wales, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 67.1 Deirdre HOWARD-WAGNER, University of Sydney, Australia Indigenous Peoples, the Neoliberal Settler State and TransGenerational Violence 67.2 Meghan TINSLEY, Boston University, USA The Right Kind of Violence: Race, Belonging, and Militarism in the First World War Centenary

RC05 Wednesday 13 July

68.2 Changhye AHN, Chung-Ang University, South Korea Social Construction of Migrant Women: Focusing on Status of Sojourn and Civic Stratification 68.3 Juhui CHANG, National Taitung University, Taiwan and Chien-Lung WANG, Department of Education, National Taitung University, Taiwan Is Gender Division of Labor Unequal? Children’s Experiences in the Puyuma Tribe 68.4 Naaz RASHID, University of Sussex, United Kingdom Veiled Threats? Producing ‘the Muslim Woman’ in the UK Public Policy Imaginary 68.5 Bandana PURKAYASTHA, University of Connecticut, USA and Vrushali PATIL, Florida Atlantic University, USA Constituting Anti-Racist Feminism for Today’s World. DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 68.6 Faten KHAZAEI, University of Neuchatel - MAPS, Switzerland Racialization of Cultures of Violence By State Institutions: The Case of Western Switzerland 68.7 Hengameh ASHRAF EMAMI, Northumbria uNiversity, United Kingdom Paradox of Visibility

67.3 Maja CURCIC, The University of Auckland, New Zealand and Marko GALIC, The University of Auckland, New Zealand Practices of Exclusion: Mass Incarceration of M?ori and the Impact of State Violence on the Indigenous Community in Aotearoa/New Zealand

10:45-12:15

67.4 Bozhin TRAYKOV, Univesrsity of Alberta, Canada Failure of Roma Inclusion As a Symptom: Nationalism, Balkanism and Neoliberalism in Bulgarian Context

Session Organizer: Scott POYNTING, University of Auckland, New Zealand

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 67.5 Nazli KIBRIA, Boston University, USA; Saher SELOD, Simmons College, USA and Tobias Henry WATSON, Boston University, USA “Why Did They Do It?” Muslims, Terrorism and the Boston Marathon Bombings 67.6 Kathleen BLEE, university of pittsburgh, USA; Matthew DEMICHELE, RTI International, USA and Pete SIMI, university of Nebraska, USA How Violent Right-Wing Extremists Leave Racist Groups in the U.S. 67.7 Ajailiu NIUMAI, Centre for the Study of Social Exclusion & Inclusive Policy, University of Hyderabad, Telangana, India, India Racial Discrimination: An Experience of North East Indians in the Metropolises

Wednesday 13 July

69

Racism and Public Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 69.1 Peter RATCLIFFE, University of Warwick, United Kingdom The Neoliberal University and Racism Research 69.2 Peter GALE, University of South Australia, Australia and Jesse BARKER GALE, Flinders University of South Australia, Australia Racism, Nationalism and the Asylum Seeker Crisis: Towards a Sociology without Borders 69.3 Maggie WALTER, University of Tasmania, Australia Telling It like It Is: Race Relations in Darwin, Australia – Survey Results 69.4 Anna ZAKHARCHENKO, Scientific and Technical Center «Perspektiva», Russia Actuality of Diagnostic Procedure and Risks Forecasting in the Ethno-Confessional Sphere 69.5 Krishna PANDEY, South Asian University, India Ethnic Identity and Everyday Life: Madheshis and NONMadheshis in Nepal’s Eastern Tarai

09:00-10:30

14:15-15:45

68

70

Anti-Racist Feminism - Is Anything New Happening?

Diversity in Organisations: Policies and Practices

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Georgina TSOLIDIS, Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation, Australia

Session Organizers: Karen FARQUHARSON, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; Val COLIC-PEISKER, RMIT, Australia and Nana OISHI, The University of Melbourne, Australia

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 68.1 Rashida BIBI, University of Manchester, United Kingdom ‘Wherein the Women?’- Gendered Notions of Citizenship, British South Asian (BSA) Muslim Women and a Case for the Extra-Ordinary…’

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AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 70.1 Yael KESHET, Western Galilee College, Israel and Ariela POPPER-GIVEON, David Yellin Academic College, Israel Ethnic Diversity within Israeli Healthcare Organizations: Manifestations of Racism and Strategies of Coping

www.isa-sociology.org

RC05 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

No. 71

16:00-17:30

70.3 Nana OISHI, The University of Melbourne, Australia; Pookong KEE, The University of Melbourne, Australia and Mayuko ITOH, The University of Melbourne, Australia Workforce Diversity in Higher Education in Australia: The Representation of Scholars with Asian Backgrounds

JS-67 The Use of Language and Silences in

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70.2 Ramon SPAAIJ, Victoria University, Australia; Jonathan MAGEE, Victoria University, Australia; Sean GORMAN, Curtin University, Australia; Ruth JEANES, Monash University, Australia; Karen FARQUHARSON, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; Dean LUSHER, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; Ryan STORR, Victoria University, Australia; Caitlyn MACKENZIE, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia and Georgia MCGRATH, Monash University, Australia Diversity Work in Community Sport: Beyond Individual Commitment?

RC05 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations

Thursday 14 July 14:15-15:45 Coping with Everyday Nationalism, Racism and Sexism

Committees: RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations (Host); RC25 Language and Society

70.4 James LAURENCE, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Working Together, Working Apart: An Investigation into the Policy Rationale for Workplace Diversity and Its Role in Inter-Group Relations and Social Cohesion

See Joint Session Details for JS-67.

16:00-17:30

70.5 Virginia MAPEDZAHAMA, Western Sydney University, Australia and Kwamena KWANSAH-AIDOO, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia An Un/Prepared Workplace? Rethinking the Social Relations of Work in Culturally and Racially Diverse Workplaces in Australia

JS-70 Exploring the Role of Seeing in Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations

Committees: RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations (Host); WG03 Visual Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-70.

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 70.6 Feriha OZDEMIR, University of Siegen, Germany UN-Doing Differences. Towards Creating and Managing Capabilities

NOTES

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RC06

No. 72

Program–Session Details DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

RC06

72.6 Magdalena ZADKOWSKA, University of Gdansk, Poland Communication, Ethics, Empathy, Kaufmann’s Comprehensive Interview and Feminist Methodology Applied to Longitudinal Study of Migrating Couples.

Family Research Program Coordinator: Margaret O’BRIEN, University College London, United Kingdom and Barbara BARBOSA NEVES, University of Toronto, Canada

Sunday 10 July

72.7 Stephan KÖPPE, University College Dublin, Ireland and Misa IZUHARA, University of Bristol, United Kingdom Investigating Family Relations through Court Cases: Qualitative Endeavours and Pitfalls 72.8 Sahmicit KUMSWA, University of South Africa, Nigeria Demonstrating the Use of Thematic Analysis in Family Research 72.9 Yi-Ping SHIH, Fu Jen Catholic University, Taiwan Whose Family Story to Tell? Reflection on a Longitudinal Ethnography of Asian Parenthood

09:00-10:30 JS-1

Family-Friendly Policies and Gender (In) Equality in Paid and Unpaid Work

Committees: RC06 Family Research (Host); RC32 Women in Society See Joint Session Details for JS-1.

14:15-15:45 73

10:45-12:15 JS-7

Intersectionality and Intergenerational Family Relationships

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC06 Family Research See Joint Session Details for JS-7.

Reflections on Qualitative Research Methods Used in Family Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Marlize RABE, University of South Africa, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 72.1 Detlev LUECK, Federal Institute for Population Research, Germany Interviews Based on Family Drawings - Capturing Cultural Conceptions 72.2 Kamini GRAHAME, The Pennsylvania State University, USA and Peter GRAHAME, Pennsylvania State University Schuylkill, USA Insiders, Outsiders, and Background Knowledge in SemiStructured Interviews: Notes on Researching Transnational Families 72.3 Rosalina COSTA, Universidade de Evora, Portugal Understanding Families Beyond Ruler and Square. Advances in the Use of the Genogram in Family Sociology Research 72.4 Candace KEMP, Georgia State University, USA; Mary BALL, Emory University, USA; Jennifer Craft MORGAN, Georgia State University, USA; Patrick J. DOYLE, Brightview Senior Living, USA; Elisabeth O BURGESS, Georgia State University, USA and Molly M PERKINS, Emory University, USA Convoys of Care: Reflections on a Methodologically Complex Study 72.5 Irena JUOZELIUNIENE, Vilnius University, Lithuania; Indre BIELEVICIUTE, Vilnius University, Lithuania and Irma BUDGINAITE, Vilnius University, Lithuania Using Visual Methods to Describe Migrant Family Change

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Author Meets Critics: “Fathers on Leave Alone” Edited By Margaret O’Brien and Karin Wall & “Fathering, Masculinity and the Embodiment of Care” By Gillian Ranson

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Margaret O’BRIEN, University College London, United Kingdom Chair: Ria SMIT, University of Johannesburg, USA

12:30-14:00 72

RC06 Sunday 10 July

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 JS-23 The Social Reproductive Worlds of Migrants

Committees: RC06 Family Research (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration See Joint Session Details for JS-23.

10:45-12:15 74

Contemporary Families in Urban Asia

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: JooEan TAN, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 74.1 JooEan TAN, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Family Ties and Social Networks of Married Women in PostReformasi Jakarta, Indonesia. 74.2 Noriko TATEYAMA, Kanto-gakuin University, Japan What Kind of Personal Networks Do Spouses Share with One Another? Focusing on the Degree of Urbanization 74.3 Xiaoying QI, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong Continuity and Transformation: Family Relations and Obligation in China 74.4 Ali Ashgar FIROUZJAEIAN, university of mazandaran, Iran; Habib SABOURI KHOSROWSHAHI, azad university of tehran, Iran and Ahmad REZAII, Associate Professor, Department of Social Sciences, University of Mazandaran, Iran Emotional Divorce in Iranian Family: Sociological Explanation of the Rate and Factors Affecting on Emotional Divorce Among Women

www.isa-sociology.org

RC06 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 74.6 Hsiu-hua SHEN, Institute of Sociology, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan Homeownership, Gender, and Intimacy in Urban China

76

Convergence or Divergence of Asian Family Values and Practices: Comparative Studies Based on CrossNational Datasets in Asia

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Hachiro IWAI, Kyoto University, Japan and Ki-Soo EUN, Seoul National University, South Korea AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

14:15-15:45 75

The Social Reproductive Worlds of Migrants II

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Majella KILKEY, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom Chairs: Laura MERLA, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium and Loretta BALDASSAR, University of Western Australia, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 75.1 Lise Widding ISAKSEN, Department of Sociology, University of Bergen, Norway Ambivalence and Inclusion: Italian Middle Class Migrants in Norway. 75.2 Guida MAN, York University, Canada Social Reproduction and the Transnational Migration Strategies of Immigrant Families in Canada 75.3 Arianna SANTERO, University of Turin, Italy and Manuela NALDINI, University of Turin, Italy Migrant Families in Italy: Gendered Reconciliation Processes Between Social Reproduction and Paid Work 75.4 Laura OSO CASAS, Universidade da Coruña, Spain and Laura SUAREZ-GRIMALT, University of Barcelona, Spain Reproductive and Productive Social Mobility Strategies of Latin American Migrant Families in Spain 75.5 Agnieszka RADZIWINOWICZ, University of Warsaw, Poland; Weronika KLOC-NOWAK, University of Warsaw, Poland and Anna KORDASIEWICZ, University of Warsaw, Poland Transnational Spaces of Care – Migrant Families of the Elderly Poles DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 75.6 Maria MARTINEZ-IGLESIAS, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain The Multiplication of Elder Care Strategies in Migrant Indigenous Mexican Families 75.7 Catherine HARRIS, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom Translocal Lives: Social Reproduction Amongst Polish Migrant Entrepreneurs in the UK 75.8 Magdalena SLUSARCZYK, Jagiellonian University, Poland and Paula PUSTULKA, Jagiellonian University, Poland Ambivalence? Cultivation? or Simply Some Free Time? Transnational Short-Term Migrant Returns Across Three Family Generations 75.9 Majella KILKEY, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom and Domenica URZI, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom How Migrants Do Family: Citizenship Entitlements, Family Rights, Gender and Social Stratifications

76.1 Patcharawalai WONGBOONSIN, College of Population Studies, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand and Pataporn SUKONTAMARN, College of Population Studies, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand Living Arrangement Preferences in Southeast Asian Modern Societies 76.2 Kota TOMA, National Institute of Population and Social Security Research, Japan The Variety of Family Life in East Asia: A Comparative Study Using Issp 2012 76.3 Jo-Pei TAN, Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom; Ibrahim RAHIMAH, Institute of Gerontology, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Malaysia; Patcharawalai WONGBOONSIN, College of Population Studies, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand; Kua WONGBOONSIN, Sasin Graduate Institute of Business Administration of Chulalongkorn University, Thailand and Huu Minh NGUYEN, Institute for Family and Gender Studies, Vietnam Practice of Intergenerational Support and Its Predictors: Evidence from Bangkok Metropolis, Hanoi and Kuala Lumpur 76.4 Shu HU, National University of Singapore, Singapore and Wei-Jun YEUNG, National University of Singapore, Singapore Gender Role Attitudes and Housework Division in East Asia DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 76.5 WenHsu LIN, Academia Sinica, Taiwan and Chin-Chun YI, Academia Sinica, Taiwan Early Family and School Negative Experience and Later Life Development: A Prospective Study

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 77

Family Change in Western and NonWestern Global Contexts: New Gender Models and Praxis

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Bahira TRASK, University of Delaware, USA and Barbara SETTLES, University of Delaware, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 77.1 Bahira TRASK, University of Delaware, USA and Kenny DAUGHTRY, Univ. of Delaware, USA Families and Work in Western and Non-Western Contexts: Global Convergences and Divergences 77.2 Livia GARCIA-FAROLDI, University of Malaga, Spain Convergence of Gender Roles in a Globalized World: International Comparison of Family and Changing Gender Roles 77.3 Siyang CAO, University of York, United Kingdom Egalitarian Husbands and Engaged Fathers? Negotiating ‘New’ Familial Masculinity in Contemporary Chinese Families

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74.7 Yu-Hua CHEN, National Taiwan University, Taiwan The Rise of Solo Living in Taiwan: Age, Gender, and Educational Differences

16:00-17:30

RC06

74.5 Pei-Chia LAN, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Compressed Parenthood: Middle-Class Parenting in Taiwan

No. 77

Family Research

RC06

No. 78

Program–Session Details

77.4 Christie SENNOTT, Purdue University, USA “Mothers of Nowadays Are Independent”: Work, Money, and Motherhood in Rural South Africa 77.5 Junko NISHIMURA, Meisei University, Japan Women’s Employment after the First Childbirth in Japan 77.6 Kamini GRAHAME, The Pennsylvania State University, USA Gender and Family Transformation in Globalization’s Wake: The Indo-Trinidadian Case 77.7 Sabrina SCHOETTLE, Heinrich-Heine-University Duesseldorf, Germany Role Models and Stereotypes in Germany from 1962 until Today – Women, Household Chores and Employment. an Empirical Longitudinal Study. DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 77.8 Alya GUSEVA, Boston University, USA and Dilyara IBRAGIMOVA, Higher School of Economics, Russia His Money Is Theirs, and Her Money Is Hers Alone: Household Money Management in Two-Partner Russian Households 77.9 Zahra MAHDAVI MAZINANI, Imam Khomeini Research Institute, Iran Fluctuations and Paradoxes in Family Policy in PostRevolutionary Iran 77.10 Magdalena GERUM, German Youth Institute, Germany; Claudia ZERLE-ELSASSER, German Youth Institute, Germany and Karin JURCZYK, German Youth Institute, Germany Practices in Egalitarian Partnerships: New Findings from German Families 77.11 Patrizia ALBANESE, Ryerson University, Canadian Sociological Association, Canada Life in Military-Connected Families: A Glimpse into Adolescent Men’s and Women’s Experiences during the Afghanistan Missions 77.12 Gayle KAUFMAN, Davidson College, USA and Hiromi TANIGUCHI, University of Louisville, USA Gender Equality and Work-Family Spillover from a CrossNational Perspective 77.13 Kadri RAID, University of Tartu, Estonia and Kairi KASEARU, University of Tartu, Estonia Changing Gender Roles - Do Unmarried Cohabiting Men Have More Egalitarian Family Related Attitudes? 77.14 Barbara MOORE, University College Dublin, Ireland Transitions Towards Equality: Sociological Analysis of Contemporary Irish Fathering

10:45-12:15 78

Family Change in Western and NonWestern Global Contexts: New Gender Models and Praxis II

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Bahira TRASK, University of Delaware, USA and Barbara SETTLES, University of Delaware, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 78.1 Atilla BARUTCU, Bulent Ecevit University, Turkey and Naz HIDIR, Ankara University, Turkey Changing Roles of Fathers in Turkey: Example of (Pro) Feminist Fatherhood 78.2 Olga ROJAS, El Colegio de México, Mexico and Mario MARTINEZ, Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico, Mexico A New Look at Male Participation in Domestic Work and Childcare in Mexico

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RC06 Tuesday 12 July

78.3 Pia SCHOBER, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Germany and Juliane STAHL, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Germany Maternal Work and Care Arrangements for Children below 3: Increasing Socioeconomic Disparities in East and West Germany 78.4 Mariko TATSUMI, Osaka Prefecture University, Japan Can Fathers’ Parenting Change Gender? -the Work-Family Life of Japanese Fathers 78.5 Elisabetta RUSPINI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy and Lia LOMBARDI, University of Milan, Italy Fathers and Antenatal Education in Italy. a Challenge for Gender Equality. 78.6 Rosario ESTEINOU, Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropologia Social, Mexico Womenxs Working Role in Double Earner Mexican Families: Communication, Marital Satisfaction and Intimacy DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 78.7 Milosz UKLEJA, University of Warsaw, Poland Families of Choice in Poland. Same-Sex Relationships As a Modern Alternative to a Family – Case Study. 78.8 Ingolfur GISLASON, University of Iceland, Iceland From Non-Existence to Reluctant Inclusion. Fathers in Writings on Care 78.9 Nicole KIRCHHOFF, TU Dortmund, Germany Child(hood) As a Successful Product of New Fatherhood?: Changing Relations in the Inner Space of Family 78.10 Gundula ZOCH, Bamberg Graduate School of Social Science (BAGSS), Germany Day-Care Expansion and Changing Attitudes of Parents

14:15-15:45 79

Gender (In)Equality and Labour Markets

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Pia SCHOBER, Department of Education Policy German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Germany and Lena HIPP, Social Science Research Center Berlin, Germany Chair: Lena HIPP, Social Science Research Center Berlin, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 79.1 Nadine REIBLING, University of Siegen, Germany Reconciliation of Work and Family Life in Europe: A PseudoPanel Approach 79.2 Ina BERNINGER, University of Cologne, Institute of Sociology and Social Psychology, Germany and Tim SCHRÖDER, University of Bremen, SOCIUM, Germany Occupational Segregation, Trade Unions and the Gender Pay Gap 79.3 Krista BRUMLEY, Wayne State University, USA Spilling over? Policies, Practices, and Supervisor Influence on Employer Flexible Work Arrangements 79.4 Yukiko SENDA, Tohoku-gakuin University, Japan Practice of Gender Discrimination By Government and Companies in Japan: Based on the Analysis of Official Surveys 79.5 Jun SAKANASHI, Rikkyo University, Japan The Context, Process and Consequence of Positive Action Policy for Gender Equality in Academia in the Japanese Government and Universities

www.isa-sociology.org

RC06 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

80

Future Perspectives on Work and Family Dynamics in Southern Europe: The Importance of Culture and Regional Contexts

Session Organizers: Isabella CRESPI, University of Macerata, Italy and Almudena MORENO MINGUEZ, University of Valladolid, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 80.1 Claude MARTIN, CNRS, France A Southern Trajectory for the Work-Care Arrangements, Family and Care Policies 80.2 Gerardo MEIL, universidad autonoma de madrid, Spain; Jesus ROGERO-GARCIA, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain and Pedro ROMERO-BALSAS, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain The Pluralization of Resources for Balancing Working and Family Lives and Grandparents Childcare in Spain 80.3 Analia TORRES, CIEG/ISCSP University of Lisbon, Portugal; Diana MACIEL, CIEG/ISCSP University of Lisbon, Portugal; Diana CARVALHO, CAPP/ISCSP University of Lisbon, Portugal and Joao FERREIRA DE ALMEIDA, CIES/ IUL University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal Family and Gender Patterns in the Transitions to Adulthood: Findings from a Longitudinal Study 80.4 Isabel VALARINO, University of Lausanne, Switzerland Familialism in Spain: Do Policies Match Individual Preferences? DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 80.5 Silvia DI GIUSEPPE, University of Lisbon, Portugal “Women, Work and Family in the Digital Society: Italy and Portugal, 1960-2015” 80.6 Livia GARCIA-FAROLDI, University of Malaga, Spain Attitudes Towards Childcare and Social Practices: The Case of Spain (1994-2012)

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 81

Stages and Transitions in the Family Life Cycle in an International Comparative Perspective

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Bernhard NAUCK, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany

81.4 Ralina PANOVA, Federal Institute for Population Research, Germany How Do Individual Normative Attitudes Influence the Childbirth Between Two Waves of Ggs in Germany, France and Bulgaria 81.5 Yan XIA, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA; B Devi PRASAD, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India; Anqi XU, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, China and Madhura NAGCHOUDHURI, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India Understanding Marriage and Families in Social Transition in China and India: A Comparative Approach DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 81.6 Megan CURRAN, University College Dublin, Ireland Large Family, Poor Family?: A Comparative Examination of Changing Patterns in Children’s Family Circumstances and Inequality

10:45-12:15 82

Transition to Adulthood: Longitudinal Data Analyses

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Chin-Chun YI, Academia Sinica, Taiwan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 82.1 Jeylan MORTIMER, University of Minnesota, Department of Sociology, USA and Dom ROLANDO, University of Minnesota, Department of Applied Economics, USA Life Experiences Linked to Positive Trajectories during Adolescence and the Transition to Adulthood 82.2 Nicolas LEGEWIE, German Institute for Economic Research, Germany and Ingrid TUCCI, LEST, CNRS, France Turning Points during Transitions to Adulthood – the Descendants of Immigrants in Germany 82.3 Hiroshi ISHIDA, University of Tokyo, Japan Who Leaves Home in Japan? Differences Between Families and within the Family 82.4 Barbara BARBOSA NEVES, The University of Melbourne, Australia “It’s Not What You Know, It’s Who You Know”? Social Capital in Transition(s) to ‘Early Adulthood’ – a Longitudinal Study 82.5 Hsing-Jung CHEN, Graduate Institute of Social Work, National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan and Yi-fu CHEN, Department of Sociology, National Taipei University, Taiwan Childhood Poverty, Cumulative Risk Exposure, and Adjustment in Emerging Adults: A Prospective Latent Profile with Contextual Factors DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 81.1 Shannon DAVIS, George Mason University, USA and Elizangela STORELLI, George Mason University, USA The State As a Family Resource: Social Spending, CoResidential Aging Parents, and Family to Work Conflict in Europe

82.6 Dirk KONIETZKA, TU Braunschweig, Germany and André TATJES, Technische Universitat Braunschweig, Germany Leaving Parental Home in Germany: “Hotel Mama” Revisited.

81.2 Tak Wing CHAN, UCL Institute of Education, United Kingdom; John ERMISCH, University of Oxford, United Kingdom and Laura LANGNER, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Economic Risks, Shocks and Responses: Family Dynamics in a Comparative Perspective

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Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

81.3 Barbara FULDA, TU Chemnitz, Germany Family Formation in China and Germany: A Study of National Cohabitation Patterns and Their Determinants

RC06

16:00-17:30

No. 82

RC06

No. 83

Program–Session Details

Thursday 14 July

14:15-15:45 83

Global Family Issues

09:00-10:30

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

Family Research

Session Organizer: Mark HUTTER, Rowan University, USA

85

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 83.1 Maurizio AMBROSINI, university of Milan, Italy Latin Women and Italian Families: Agency Beyond Structural Constraints and Exploitation 83.2 Luis AYUSO-SANCHEZ, University of Malaga, Spain and Ana GOLDANI, Princeton University, USA Lats By Choice in Europe. Determinant Factors of Their Evolution 83.3 Joice VIEIRA, Unicamp, Brazil and Tirza AIDAR, Unicamp, Brazil Incarceration and Social Security Benefits in Brazil: Children and Family Rights Perspective DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 83.4 Jie LI, China Women’s University, China and Jing LIU, Clemson University, USA The Influence of Husband Involvement on Women’s Postpartum Recovery and Family Relationship: The Case of Beijing 83.5 Gerlinde MAUERER, University of Vienna, Institute of Sociology; University of Applied Sciences Vienna, Austria Paternal Leave and Part-Time-Work. Challenges and Future Perspectives 83.6 Isabel VALARINO, University of Lausanne, Switzerland Fathers on Leave Alone in Switzerland: Agents of Social Change? 83.7 Gundula ZOCH, University of Bamberg, Germany Change in the Gender Division of Domestic Work after Mummy or Daddy Took Leave: An Examination of Alternative Explanations 83.8 Rudy SEWARD, University of North Texas, USA and Michael RUSH, University College Dublin, Ireland Paternity and Parental Leave for Fathers to Promote Greater Domestic Work and Care Equality: A Global View

16:00-17:30 84

RC06 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

RC06 Thursday 14 July

The Families We (Do Not) Want: Constructing the Past, Present and Future Families through Rituals

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Rosalina COSTA, Universidade de Evora, Portugal AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 85.1 Evelyn RODRIGUEZ, University of San Francisco, USA Troubling the Borders of Mexican and Filipino America through Second-Generation Daughters’ Coming-of-Age Rituals 85.2 Julia CARTER, Canterbury Christ Church University, United Kingdom The Wedding: Constructing Family Meaning through Ritual 85.3 Ria SMIT, University of Johannesburg, USA Contemplating Repetitive and Symbolic Social Action: Viewing Family Rituals through the Eyes of Young Adults 85.4 Giuseppina SAPIO, University Panthéon-Assas (Paris 2), France Learning the Family We Are. the Practice of Home Movies in France 85.5 Filipa CACHAPA, University of Lisbon, Institute of Social Sciences, Portugal and Rosalina COSTA, CEPESE, Portugal Unwrapping the Children’s Gift Box. a Sociological Perspective on the Role of Offering Toys, Clothes and Money in the Construction of Desirable Futures.

10:45-12:15 86

Troubling ‘families’? Global Futures for Family Discourses and Practices.

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jane MCCARTHY, The Open University, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 86.1 Brian HEAPHY, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Troubling Convention and Reflexivity: The Continuing Significance of Family 86.2 Sarah WILSON, University of Stirling, United Kingdom Using Qualitative Secondary Analysis to Maintain a Critically Reflexive Approach to Research with ‘Troubled’ Families 86.3 Irena JUOZELIUNIENE, Vilnius University, Lithuania and Irma BUDGINAITE, Vilnius University, Lithuania How Transnational Families Are Seen to be “Troubling”? 86.4 Sirkka KOMULAINEN, Kymenlaakso University of Applied Sciences, Finland and Suleman IBRAHIM, Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom Physical Punishment in Light of Criminological, SocioCultural Diversity and Human Rights Approaches: Ghana and Finland 86.5 Janet BODDY, University of Sussex, United Kingdom Troubling Meanings of ‘Family’ for Young People in Care: Connecting Perspectives

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RC06 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

No. 88

86.6 Jane MCCARTHY, Open University, United Kingdom Troubling Families: Who’s Troubled and Why? Approaches to Inter-Cultural Dialogue.

87.6 Thordis REIMER, University of Hamburg, Germany Fathers’ Involvement: Interpreting Fathers’ Contemporary Practices in Childcare By Contrasting Different Measures

86.7 Julia CARTER, Canterbury Christ Church University, United Kingdom and Simon DUNCAN, University of Bradford, United Kingdom Troubling Relationships: Towards a New Language of Personal Life

87.7 Ausra MASLAUSKAITE, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania Non-Resident Fathers’ Involvement in Child Rearing: Role of Policies and Resources

86.8 L. M. Anabel STOECKLE, Wayne State University, USA (Troubling) Families in the Age of Surrogacy

87.8 Mariko TATSUMI, Osaka Prefecture University, Japan Can New Concept of Father Change Gender? | Ikuman and Masculinity in Japan

86.9 Doris BUEHLER-NIEDERBERGER, University of Wuppertal, Germany and Lars ALBERTH, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany The Overburdened Mother – How Social Work Conceives of Troubled Families

87.9 Roberta BOSISIO, University of Turin, Italy and Alessandra VINCENTI, University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy “They Dance Alone”. Children Between Poverty and Social Rights

86.10 Pei-Chia LAN, National Taiwan University, Taiwan New Parenting Scripts and the Production of “High-Risk Families”: The Case of Taiwan

87.10 Michael RUSH, University College Dublin, Ireland Theory and the Meaning of State Feminism and Global Patriarchy

86.11 Vicki WELCH, UNIVERSITY OF STRATHCLYDE, United Kingdom Compulsory Supervision in Scotland; The Unique Case of Children Looked after at Home

16:00-17:30

86.12 Luke GAHAN, La Trobe University, Australia Separated Same-Sex Parented Families: Troubling and Troubled By Family and Separation Discourses

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

14:15-15:45 87

Social Policy, Feminism and the Decline of Patriarchal Fatherhood

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Michael RUSH, University College Dublin, Ireland

88

Connecting Families? Family Life and Communication Technologies

Session Organizers: Claudia CASIMIRO, ISCSP - University of Lisbon VAT#600019152, Portugal and Barbara BARBOSA NEVES, University of Toronto, Canada Co-Chair: Claudia CASIMIRO, ISCSP - University of Lisbon VAT#600019152, Portugal AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 88.1 Catalina ARANGO, Ottawa University, Canada Floating Narratives: Digital Storytelling and Transnational Families

87.1 Gayle KAUFMAN, Davidson College, USA and AnnaLena ALMQVIST, Malardalen University, Sweden Responses to Changing Parental Leave Policies in Sweden and the UK

88.2 Bernadette KNEIDINGER-MÜLLER, University of Bamberg, Germany “Wherever You Go, Wherever You Are, I Am with You… Connected with My Mobile”. the Usage of Mobile Text Messages for the Maintenance of Family and Romantic Relations.

87.2 Fabienne BERTON, LISE CNRS CNAM UMR 3320, France; Marie-Christine BUREAU, Lise-CNRS, Cnam, France and Barbara RIST, LISE CNRS CNAM UMR 3320, France Diversification of Fatherhood Figures in France As a New Trend That Follows Depatriarchalisation

88.3 Ronny KONIG, University of Zurich, Switzerland; Bettina ISENGARD, University of Zurich, Switzerland and Marc SZYDLIK, University of Zurich, Switzerland Connecting Generations? Contacts Between Parents and Adult Children in a Mobile World

87.3 Katarzyna SUWADA, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun, Poland “It Was Necessary at the Beginning to Make This Whole Revolution”. Men’s Attitudes to Daddy Quota and Gender Neutral Parental Leaves in Poland and Sweden

88.4 Siu-ming TO, Department of Social Work, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Is Mobile Parenting Possible? a Qualitative Study on the Parenting Experiences of Chinese Rural-to-Urban Migrant Mothers of Left-behind Children

87.4 Eva-Maria SCHMIDT, University of Vienna, Austria; Irene RIEDER, University of Vienna, Austria; Ulrike ZARTLER, University of Vienna, Austria and Rudolf RICHTER, University of Vienna, Austria Parental Constructions of Masculinity at the Transition to Parenthood: The Division of Parental Leave Among Austrian Couples

88.5 Esra DEMIRKOL, University of Sussex, United Kingdom To be Connected Family or Not to be? ICTs and Transnational Families in the Case of Turkish Transnational Families in Japan

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

87.5 Diana LENGERSDORF, University of Cologne, Germany and Anna BUSCHMEYER, German Youth Institute, Germany Changes Among Post-Patriarchal Men and Fathers

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 88.6 Evelyn HONEYWILL, Macquarie University, Australia The Coming Home of Post-Industrial Society 88.7 Wilasinee PANANAKHONSAB, Faculty of Sociology and Anthropology, Thammasat University, Thailand Cyberspace and Intimacy: Maintaining Cross-Cultural Relationships at a Distance

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Family Research

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

RC06

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Futures Research

RC07

No. 89

Program–Session Details AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC07

Futures Research Program Coordinator: Andre SALATA, Pontificia Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

Sunday 10 July 09:00-10:30 JS-2

Elites, the Poor and the Welfare State in Unequal Democracies

Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); RC18 Political Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-2.

89.1 Patricio LANGA, University of the Western Cape/ Eduardo Mondlane University, South Africa and Sandra MANUEL, Eduardo Mondlane University, Mozambique Excluded from within: Knowledge, Class and Massification of University Access in Developing Countries 89.2 Peng LU, Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Cadre Parents and Their Entrepreneurial Children? the Dual-Track Intergenerational Reproduction of State and Market Elites in China: 1978-2010 89.3 Andre SALATA, Pontificia Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Classes and Income in Brazil on the Last Decade: From the New Middle Class to the ‘affluent’ Working Class 89.4 Di ZHU, Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Quality of Life and Life Satisfaction of Chinese People: An Empirical Analysis from 2006-2013 89.5 Chen CHEN, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong A Time-Series Cross-Sectional Analysis of Exposure to Competition and Sense of Fairness in Urban China

10:45-12:15 JS-8

RC07 Sunday 10 July

Looking at Past and Present Inequalities for a Less Unequal Future

Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology

10:45-12:15 90

Scenarios and Future Societies

See Joint Session Details for JS-8.

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

12:30-14:00

Session Organizer: Chia-ling LAI, National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan

JS-13 The Future of University Research and

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

the National Innovation Systems

Committees: RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology (Host); RC07 Futures Research See Joint Session Details for JS-13.

14:15-15:45 Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

90.4 Nina BUTLER, Rhodes University, South Africa Becoming in the Open Space of History: Imagining Alternative Possible Futures in Palestine/Israel through the Words and Images of Mahmoud Darwish, Mustafa Hallaj and Edward Said.

See Joint Session Details for JS-18.

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30

90.5 Hannes KRAMER, Europa-Universität VIadrina, Germany Future Scenarios As an Epistemic Practice in Urban Transportation Planning

JS-24 Contested Futures of the South Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

14:15-15:45

See Joint Session Details for JS-24.

Class, Consumption and Wealth Distribution: Trends and Perspectives for the Future

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Celi SCALON, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Chunling LI, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China

114

90.2 Sigeto TANAKA, Tohoku University, Japan Dynamics of Ideology and Institution: Probable Scenarios for Changes in Beliefs about Gender and Family in Japan 90.3 Chia-ling LAI, National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan Performing on the Situated Global Stages: Comparing the Cosmopolitan Visions and Sustainable Future Scenarios Proposed in Shanghai and Milan Expos

JS-18 Alternative Futures of the South

89

90.1 Kathrin KOMP, University of Helsinki, Finland Future Scenarios in Ageing Research

91

New Directions on Social Movements, Contentious Politics, and Futures Research

Location: Hörsaal 48 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Geoffrey PLEYERS, University of Louvain & College d’Etudes Mondiales, Belgium

www.isa-sociology.org

RC07 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

RC07

ROUNDTABLES:

No. 93

Social movements producing the Future

Digital activism

Chair: Eiji HAMANISHI, Notre Dame Seishin University, Japan

Chair: Ionel SAVA, University of Bucharest, Romania

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

91.7 Airi-Alina ALLASTE, Tallinn University, Estonia and Kari SAARI, University of Kuopio, Finland Everyday Activism in Different Socio-Political Context: Cases of Estonia and Finland 91.12 Anna WIEMANN, University of Hamburg, Germany From Disaster to Opportunity: Social Movement Organizations As Hope Agents 91.1 Dorismilda FLORES, ITESO / UAA, Mexico Imagination/Action: Making Sense of Future in Online Public Expression By Local Activist Groups

Prefigurative activism & environmental challenges Chair: Nathalie BERNY, Sciences Po Bordeaux, France ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 91.17 Silke OETSCH, Department of Sociology, Austria Economic Practices and Role Models of the Transition Movement: From Market Societies Towards New Modes of Provisioning? 91.18 Anna SZOLUCHA, University of Bergen, Norway Grassroots Mobilisations and the Democracy They Want: Renewable Energy and Anti-Fracking 91.13 Luke YATES, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Novelty, Strategy and Timing in Social Movements Research: Prefiguring the Futures We Want? 91.3 Yavuz YILDIRIM, Nigde University, Turkey Rethinking the Common of the People through Social Movements: Turkish Cases 91.10 Ana Margarida ESTEVES, ISCTE - IUL, University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal Social Technologies for Trust, Transparency and Conflict Resolution and the Imagining of Peaceful Futures: The Engagement of Tamera Ecovillage with Peace Activism in Israel/Palestine

91.11 Colin ROBINEAU, CARISM (Paris 2, Assas), France An Anarchist Squat in Northeastern Paris : A Futur Here and Now ? 91.5 Marika GEREKE, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany What Kind of Future Do We Want? Power Dynamics and Negotiation Processes in Transnational Social Movements

Young activists and the future they want Chair: Sofia LAINE, Finnish Youth Research Network, Finland ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 91.9 Linus WESTHEUSER, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany Politics and the Conduct of Life - a Weberian Perspective on Young Antiracist Activists in Germany 91.2 Darcie VANDEGRIFT, Drake University, Department for the Study of Culture & Society, USA Politics Is Our Daily Bread: New Youth Political Subjectivity in Latin America 91.14 Danny OTTO, University of Rostock, Germany Post-Crisis Utopias? - Future Orientation and Sociological Imagination

16:00-17:30 JS-35 Social Movements and the Future They Want

Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements See Joint Session Details for JS-35.

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30

Right Wing Movements

92

Chair: Emanuele TOSCANO, University Guglielmo Marconi, Italy

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizer: Chia-ling LAI, National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan

91.8 Rajesh MISRA, University of Lucknow, India Mass Mobilizations, Contestations and the Contingent Future in a Plural Polity 91.15 Leslie GAUDITZ, University of Bremen, Germany Present Futures: Utopia, Prefiguration and Their Meaning in the Refugee Struggle 91.4 Celi Regina PINTO, UFRGS, Brazil The Discursive Trajectory of Street Demonstrations in Brazil (2013-2015)

Commemorating John Urry’s Work

10:45-12:15 93

Diagnosis of the Times: Tendencies in Education and Society

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Lars Geer HAMMERSHOJ, Aarhus University, Denmark

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115

Futures Research

91.16 Michael HAMMER, INTRAC, United Kingdom Activism As a Means of Empowerment and Change. Experiences of the Changing Nature of Civic Organising.

91.6 Margot VERDIER, SOPHIAPOL Universite Nanterre ParisOuest, France “Against the Airport and Its World”. Autonomies at the Zad Notre-Dame-Des-Landes.

RC07

No. 94

Program–Session Details

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 93.1 Lars Geer HAMMERSHOJ, Aarhus University, Denmark Diagnosing Future Employability in Higher Education

Futures Research

93.2 Dorota JEDLIKOWSKA, Jagiellonian University, Poland Diagnosis of Science Research. Discussion from the Science Policy Perspective 93.3 Riccardo CAMPA, Jagiellonian University at Krakow, Poland Robots and Unemployment: A Scenario Analysis

10:45-12:15 96

Care and Careworkers: Intersectional and Comparative Perspectives. Exploring the Future of Social Inequalities

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Bila SORJ, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro/ Department of Sociology, Brazil and Nadya GUIMARAES, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

14:15-15:45 JS-45 Imagining Futures through the Visual Committees: WG03 Visual Sociology (Host); RC07 Futures Research See Joint Session Details for JS-45.

16:00-17:30 94

RC07 Wednesday 13 July

96.1 Nadya GUIMARAES, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil and Helena HIRATA, GTM/CRESPPA,Université de Paris 8 Saint-Denis, France Carework in a Comparative Perspective: Exploring Professionalization Dilemmas Under Different National/ Cultural Contexts 96.2 Bila SORJ, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil “Community Care Work”, Social Policies and the Desprofessionalization of Care Work

Identity and the Future

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Mariolina GRAZIOSI, University of Milan, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 94.1 Mariolina GRAZIOSI, Università  Degli Studi di MilanoStatale, Italy Identity in Contemporary Society: Identity As a Mask 94.2 Elias LE GRAND, Stockholm University, Sweden Bauman and Maffesoli on Identity, (de)Individualisation and Neo-Tribal Sociality

96.3 Ruri ITO, Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo, Japan Shifting Modes of Incorporating Foreign Care Workers in Japan: Abe’s Growth Strategy and the Intensification of Japanese Women’s Mobilization As Productive and Reproductive

14:15-15:45 97

Future of Education

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

94.3 Sara MERLINI, University of Lisbon, Portugal Challenging Gender Orders: Some Clues to (Re)Think Transgender Identities

Session Organizers: Gabor KIRALY, Budapest Business School, Hungary and Zsuzsanna GERING, Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary

94.4 Britta BUSSE, Institute Labour and Economy - University of Bremen, Germany Chance or Challenge? How the European Union Fosters or Interferes with Young People`s Opportunities for Developing a Common Identity

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

97.2 Claire WAGNER, University of Pretoria, South Africa; Jacques DU TOIT, University of Pretoria, South Africa and Sanell VENTER, University of Pretoria, South Africa Interdisciplinary Near-Peer Mentoring: A Future for Teaching in Higher Education

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 95

97.1 Breitenbach ANDREA, Goethe University/Frankfurt/ Main, Germany Teaching with the Flipped Classroom Model!

The Politics of Conflict, Reconciliation, Memory, and Trauma: Paving a Path for the Present and Future

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Lynn RAPAPORT, Pomona College, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 95.1 Nicole FOX, University of New Hampshire, USA and Hollie NYSETH-BREHM, Ohio State University, USA Narrating Genocide: Time, Memory, and Blame 95.2 Akiko HASHIMOTO, University of Pittsburgh, USA Heroes, Victims, and Perpetrators: The Landscape of War Memories in Japan

97.3 Xiao MEI, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China How the Private Sector of Educational Training Is Shaping the Future of Education in China 97.4 Elmar SCHUELL, Salzburg University of Applied Sciences, Austria Future Challenges of the Austrian Universities of Applied Sciences 97.5 Alexandra KOVES, Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary; Sara CSILLAG, Budapest Business School, Hungary; Tamas GASPAR, Budapest Business School, Hungary; Zsuzsanna GERING, Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary and Gabor KIRALY, Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary The Future through the Eyes of the Key Stakeholders: Hungarian Backcasting Scenarios on the Future of Economic Higher Education

95.3 Roman DAVID, Lingnan University, Hong Kong The Future of the Past in Myanmar: Experimental Evidence

16:00-17:30

95.4 Vikki BELL, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom and Mario DI PAOLANTONIO, York University, Toronto, Canada Re-Emerging Pasts: Forums for Telling in Contemporary Argentina and Chile

98

116

RC07 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

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RC07 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45 101

09:00-10:30 99

Paths to Social Justice in the BRICS Countries

Session Organizers: Jayanathan GOVENDER, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, South Africa; Tom DWYER, University of Campinas, Brazil; Kiran ODHAV, North West University, South Africa and Mokong Simon MAPADIMENG, University of Limpopo, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 99.1 Rong HE, Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China The Zeal for Equality As a Way Toward Social Justice: Context and Practices in China 99.2 Feng TIAN, CHINA ACADEMY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, China The Research on the Consumption Gap and Consumption Inequality Between Urban and Rural Households 99.3 Soraya CORTES, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Cash Transfer and Social Assistance Policies Devised As Means to Improve the Consume of the Poorest in Brics Countries

10:45-12:15 100

Futures of Inequality and Collective Action

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jose Esteban CASTRO, Newcastle University, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 101.1 Matthias GROSS, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Germany Democratic Energy Futures through Real World Experiments? Proactionary Innovation and the Virtues of Nonknowledge 101.2 Angeliki PAIDAKAKI, University of Leuven, Belgium Resilience Cells in New Orleans: Challenges and Opportunities for Socially-Optimal Housing- Reconstruction Governance Models 101.3 Anna SZOLUCHA, University of Bergen, Norway Repowering Democracy: How Grassroots Energy Initiatives Are Changing the Face of Democracy in Europe 101.4 Ossi OLLINAHO, Independent Researcher, Brazil The Global South Powered By the Sun 101.5 Antonella MAIELLO, PROURB-FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF RIO DE JANEIRO (UFRJ), Brazil; Ana Lucia Nogueira de Paiva BRITTO, PROURB-UFRJ, Brazil and Suya QUINSTLR, IPPURUFRJ, Brazil Social Innovation, Social Alternatives and the Public Intervention: What Do We Really Need to Improve the Future of Water Access in Emerging Contexts?

Session Organizer: Jan P. NEDERVEEN PIETERSE, University of California, USA

16:00-17:30

Chair: Antonio ALVAREZ-BENAVIDES, Centre d’Analyse et d’Intervention Sociologique, France

102

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 100.1 Mokong Simon MAPADIMENG, University of Limpopo, South Africa and Jayanathan GOVENDER, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, South Africa Paths to Social Justice in South Africa – a Critical Examination. 100.2 Valter SILVERIO, Universidade Federal de Sao Carlos, Brazil and Antonio GUIMARAES, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil Inclusion Policies and the Future of Racial Relations in Brazil

The Cultural Dimension of Innovation Processes

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Massimiliano RUZZEDDU, University Niccolò Cusano Rome, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 102.1 Denise MILSTEIN, Sociology, USA Trials in Tierra Del Fuego 102.2 Andrea PITASI, World Complexity Science Academy, Italy Understanding Calamity Impact As Evolutionary Global Innovation Trends

100.3 Myrian SANTOS, UERJ, Brazil The Social Construction of Inequality: The Case of Ilha Grande

102.3 Elisenda ARDEVOL, IN3-UOC, Spain and Débora LANZENI, IN3-UOC, Spain Future Practices and Social Innovation

100.4 Deniz Gunce DEMIRHISAR, Institut Français d’Etudes Anatoliennes, Turkey The Function of Liminal Spaces of Protest in Imagining the Future, Here and Now: The Case of Gezi Park Occupation

102.4 Andrea LOMBARDINILO, University “Gabriele d’Annunzio” of Chieti-Pescara, Italy Towards a Society of Innovation. Mcluhan and the Medial Symbolism

100.5 Christina SCHACHTNER, University of Klagenfurt, Austria Social Movements in the Age of the Internet

102.5 Michele BONAZZI, Alma Mater Studiorum University of Bologna, Italy For a Critical Theory of the Digitalization of Everyday Life

www.isa-sociology.org

117

Futures Research

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

Socio-Ecological Struggles and Emergent Innovations in the Sociogenesis of Democratic Futures

RC07

Thursday 14 July

No. 102

Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

RC09

No. 103

Program–Session Details

103.9 Nikolai GENOV, School of Advanced Social Studies, Slovenia Futures of Individualization in Cross-Border Migration: Patterns of the Post- Soviet Migration

RC09

Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

10:45-12:15

Program Coordinator: Ulrike M.M. SCHUERKENS, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France and Habibul KHONDKER, Zayed University, United Arab Emirates

104

The Battle of Ideas in NGO’s: How Development Specialists Change Their Minds About Changing the World

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Brian DILL, University of Illinois, USA Chair: Samuel COHN, Texas A and M University, USA

Sunday 10 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 104.1 Dimitri DELLA FAILLE, Universite du Quebec en Outaouais, Canada Why I Do Not Trust the “Realities” of Underdevelopment

09:00-10:30 103

Futures of Individualization in Local, Regional and Global Contexts

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Nikolai GENOV, School for Advanced Social Studies,, Slovenia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 103.1 Wing Shek Adrian LUI, Macquarie University, Australia The Diverse Paths of Individualisation in East Asian Societies: Findings from the Fifth (2005-2009) and Sixth Wave (2010 – 2014) of World Values Survey 103.2 Tea GOLOB, School of Advanced Social Studies, Nova Gorica, Slovenia, Slovenia and Matej MAKAROVIC, School of Advanced Social Studies, Nova Gorica, Slovenia, Slovenia Individualisation and Reflexivity in the National and Transnational Context: The Narratives of Social Transformations Among the Slovenian Youth 103.3 Martina YOPO DIAZ, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Revisiting Individualization in Chile. an Empirical Approach to the Life Course of Women 103.4 Margot VERDIER, SOPHIAPOL Universite Nanterre ParisOuest, France The Transgression of the Normative Frame. the Reception of Individualization and the Relationship to Formal Rules in Two French Squats. 103.5 Wolfram LAUBE, Center for Development Research, University of Bonn, Germany Selfish Funerals: Negotiating Individualization, Reciprocity, and Social Status in Rural Africa 103.6 Roberto Rubem SILVA-BRANDAO, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil Science, Technology and the Individualization Process in Preventive Public Health DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 103.7 Satoshi IDO, Aichi prefectural University, Japan Can Youth Secure a Place to Stay in the Local Community, Under Individualization Society? 103.8 Hossein MIRZAEI, associate professor of sociology,Tehran University & The director of - Iranian Institute of cultural-social studies, Iran and Saeedeh AMINI, Allame tanbatabaie university, Iran Individuality,Individualism and Individualization,a Deliberating about Iran

104.2 Adam MOE FEJERSKOV, Danish Institute for International Studies, Denmark Development Projects As Systems of Continuous Meaning Negotiation and Translation: Gender Equality from India to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation 104.3 Leopold RINGEL, University of Bonn, Germany and Tobias WERRON, University of Bonn, Germany How Developed Are You? a Sociological View of the Production and Impact of International Rankings 104.4 Meghan KALLMAN, Brown University, USA Bureaucratized Morality, Institutional Durability: Organizationally Mediated Idealism in the Peace Corps

12:30-14:00 105

Crafting Insurgent Urbanism and Democratic Spaces:Transforming Citizenship and Governance Systems in Cities

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Emma PORIO, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 105.1 Myungji YANG, University of Hawaii, manoa, USA Displacement in the Name of Development: Urbanization, Speculation, and Stratified Spatial Order in South Korea 105.2 Sandrine GUKELBERGER, Sociology, Germany Institutionalising Activism at the Interface with Government: Examples from South Africa 105.3 Anna DOMARADZKA, University of Warsaw, Poland Urban Tinkers – Between City Planning and Grassroots Insurgent Urbanism 105.4 Michael HUMPHREY, University of Sydney, Australia and Estela VALVERDE, Macquarie University, Australia The Cable Car and Urban Miracles in Latin America: Neoliberal Urbanisation and the Right to the City

14:15-15:45 JS-18 Alternative Futures of the South Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development See Joint Session Details for JS-18.

118

RC09 Sunday 10 July

www.isa-sociology.org

RC09 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

Monday 11 July

RC09

106.11 Jessica VILIRAN, Polytechnic University of the Philippines, Philippines Community Mobilization Strategy in Advancing Urban Social Development: The Case of Metro Manila

09:00-10:30 Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development See Joint Session Details for JS-24.

106.13 Patoo CUSRIPITUCK, Mahidol University, Thailand and Jitjayang YAMABHAI, Mahidol University, Thailand The Performance in Transformative Learning Practice for Cultural Transmission of Tai Dam in Thailand

10:45-12:15 Futures of Development

Location: Arcade Courtyard (Main Building) Session Organizer: Habibul KHONDKER, Zayed University, United Arab Emirates

14:15-15:45 JS-32 Gender-Technology Interface:

Implications for Social Transformation and Development

Chair: Nikolai GENOV, School of Advanced Social Studies, Slovenia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 106.1 Jair SCHALKWIJK, Ghent University Belgium and Anton de Kom University of Suriname, Suriname An Evaluation of Evaluation Methods: The Case for MetaEvaluations in the Development Sector 106.2 Matthew C MAHUTGA, University of California, Riverside, USA Networks and Economic Development: A New Agenda 106.3 Shawn DORIUS, Iowa State University, USA Undercounting, Underreporting, and Inequality in the Global Development Data Infrastructure 106.4 Nerih CATIK, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences sociales (EHESS), France International Decentralized Cooperation As a New Instrument of Development Aid: The Case of Marmara Region in Turkey 106.5 Eric POPKIN, Colorado College, USA New Pedagogical Approaches in Teaching the Sociology of Development 106.6 Gyanendra YADAV, MAGADH UNIVERSITY, India Globalization, Development and Its IMPACT on Gender Equality in Developing Countries- an Analysis. 106.7 Christine TSCHOELL, PhD-candidate, Sociology, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy Social and Structural Changes in Rural Areas of South Tyrol (Northern Italy): A Longitudinal Case Study 106.8 Aurea IANNI, School of Public Health of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil; Denise COELHO, School of Public Health of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil; Maria Izabel Sanches COSTA, School of Public Health of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil; Ricardo de Lima JURCA, School of Public Health of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil; Thiago Marques LEAO, School of Public Health of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil and Roberto Rubem SILVA-BRANDAO, School of Public Health of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil Individualization in the Context of Contemporary Social Changes: The Challenges for Public Health in Brazil 106.9 Ingrid PAVEZI, University of Freiburg, Germany Which Development from Bolivia? Indigenous Cosmologies Intersections with Politics

Committees: RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development (Host); RC32 Women in Society See Joint Session Details for JS-32.

16:00-17:30 107

Development, Social Transformations and New Gender Relations: Africa and the World

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Tamara HERAN CUBILLOS, École Hautes Études Sciences Sociales, France and Rae BLUMBERG, Virginia University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 107.1 Valentine MOGHADAM, Northeastern University, USA “Development, Social Transformation, and Gender Relations: A Comparative Analysis of Iran and Tunisia” 107.2 Charles EFFERSON, University of Zurich, Switzerland; Ernst FEHR, University of Zurich, Switzerland; Sonja VOGT, University of Zurich, Switzerland; Nadia A. ZAID, Omdurman, Sudan and Hilal E. AHMED, Khartoum, Sudan Gently Prodding the Cultural Evolution of Attitudes on Female Genital Cutting 107.3 Jeffrey SWINDLE, University of Michigan, USA The Ideational Effects of Foreign Aid: Accounting for Increasing Gender Egalitarian Beliefs in Malawi 107.4 Sandrine GUKELBERGER, Sociology, Germany Transforming Gender Relations through Women’s Activism in South Africa and Senegal 107.5 Antje DANIEL, University of Bayreuth, Germany Navigating within the Development Nexus: The Women’s Movement in Kenya DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 107.6 Christine BIGLER, University of Bern, Switzerland, Switzerland State Driven Agricultural Transformation and Its Impact on Gender Roles in Rural Rwanda

106.10 Kaori YAMASHITA, University of Marketing and Distribution Sciences, Japan Study on the Spaces Where Handicrafts Associated with Mothers Are Exhibited - As the Spaces for Self-Actualisation to Connect with Society and Others in the ResidentialIndustrial-Commercial Mixed Land Use Area in Kobe-

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119

Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

106.12 Xiaoguang FAN, Institute of Sociology, Zhejiang Academy of Social Sciences, China and Peng LU, Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Status Identity of Private Entrepreneurs in Contemporary China: 1995-2014

JS-24 Contested Futures of the South

106

No. 107

RC09

No. 108

Tuesday 12 July

Political and Economic Developments in Postsocialist Countries

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Nina BANDELJ, University of California, Irvine, USA Chair: Nina BANDELJ, University of California, Irvine, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 108.1 Sandra MARQUART-PYATT, Michigan State University, USA Understanding Environmental Sustainability in Postsocialist Countries over Time 108.2 Laura WIESBOCK, University of Vienna, Austria The Economic Crisis As a Driver of Cross-Border Labour Mobility? a Multi Method Study for the Case of the Central European Region. 108.3 Ngai Ming YIP, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong and Hoai Anh TRAN, Malmo University, Sweden Neighbourhood Governance in Post-Socialist States: A Comparison Between Vietnam and China 108.4 Anna MATTHIESEN, New School for Social Research, USA Professionalizing Protest: A Comparative Analysis of Advocacy Organizations in Serbia and China 108.5 Dmitry IVANOV, St.Petersburg state university, Russia Paradoxes of Social Change: Virtualization of Society, GlamCapitalism, and Beyond

10:45-12:15 109

RC09 Tuesday 12 July

109.4 Ilona WYSMULEK, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Fighting Corruption during Transformations in Poland: Determinants and Changes in Perception of Government Effectiveness

09:00-10:30 108

Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

Program–Session Details

Socio-Economic Development in Postsocialist Countries: Comparative Perspectives

109.5 Max HOLLERAN, New York University, USA Europe’s Exploding Edges: The Social Response to 2008 ‘crisis Landscapes’ in Coastal Spain and Bulgaria

14:15-15:45 110

Changing Development-Scape and Unchanging Development Theories

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Chair: Joshua DUBROW, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 110.1 Rukmini SEN, Ambedkar University Delhi, India Practice in Development, Practicing Development: Shifting Contours in Knowledge from the Field 110.2 Yunjeong YANG, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, South Korea Participation As a Keyword to Development: Learning from Past and Present Korean Practices 110.3 Anchal KUMARI, Research Scholar, India New Townships in India: Inclusion, Exclusion and Governance 110.4 Su-ming KHOO, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland and Chiara COSTANZO, National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland Has Development Entered a Post-Human Rights Era? Reuniting the Generations of Human Rights for Sustainable Development.

16:00-17:30 111

Recent Breakthroughs in Development Sociology

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Session Organizer: Nina BANDELJ, University of California-Irvine, USA

Session Organizer: Samuel COHN, Texas A&M University, USA

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 109.1 Matthew C MAHUTGA, University of California, Riverside, USA and Andrew JORGENSON, Boston College, USA Production Networks and Varieties of Institutional Change: Earnings Inequality in Post-Socialism Revisited. 109.2 Polina MANOLOVA, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom and Philipp LOTTHOLZ, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom No Escape from Ideology? Comparing Imaginaries of Global Development in the Former Soviet Periphery 109.3 Nina BANDELJ, University of California, Irvine, USA and Katelyn FINLEY, University of California, Irvine, USA Economic Attitudes of East Europeans

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 111.1 Brian DILL, University of Illinois, USA The Contemporary Development Sector in Kenya: The Emergence of a Development Assemblage 111.2 Manoj TEOTIA, Centre for Research in Rural and Industrial Development, India Urban Development in North-Western India: Some Emerging Sociological Questions in Post Liberalization Era 111.3 Tamara HERAN CUBILLOS, Instituto Profesional Duoc, Chile The Challenge of Researching Development Issues: A Methodological Proposal DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 111.4 Tim ROSENKRANZ, The New School for Social Research, USA Nations to Destinations: The Developmental Limits of National Tourism Marketing

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RC09 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

Wednesday 13 July

Development and its Theories

Session Organizer: Ulrike M.M. SCHUERKENS, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 112.1 Samuel COHN, Texas A and M University, USA Changing Economic History and Unchanging Development Theories: Can World Systems Theory Survive a Past That Is Continually Being Re-Written? 112.2 Habibul KHONDKER, Zayed University, United Arab Emirates and Mehraj JAHAN, Zayed University, United Arab Emirates From Sociology of Development to Sociology of Global Development 112.3 Joanna HADJICOSTANDI, Univ Texas Permian Basin, USA Social Activism and gender-based student engagement through online classes 112.4 Dieter NEUBERT, University of Bayreuth, Germany Intellectuals and Activists Against the Rest of the World. Why (post-)Development? 112.5 Kate WILLIAMS, The University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Research Context and the Production of Paradigms and Theories of Development. 112.6 Rae BLUMBERG, University of Virginia, USA From Bonobos and Chimps to (Human) Gender and Development 112.7 Cristina ROJAS, Carleton University, Canada Dialectics of Universal/ Pluriversal in the Sociology of Development

115

Development, Social Transformations and New Gender Relations: Asia and Both Sides of the Pacific

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Tamara HERAN CUBILLOS, École Hautes Études Sciences Sociales, France and Rae BLUMBERG, University of Virginia, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 115.1 Marina BASSI, Inter-American Development Bank, USA; Rae BLUMBERG, University of Virginia, USA and Mercedes MATEO DIAZ, Inter-American Development Bank, USA Under the “Cloak of Invisibility”: Gender Bias in the Classroom in Chile 115.2 William SCARBOROUGH, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA; Barbara RISMAN, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA and Catherine MEOLA, International Food Policy Research Institute, USA Agricultural Technology and Gender Structure Theory: The Case of Women’s Group-Fishponds in Bangladesh 115.3 Kenton BELL, University of Wollongong, Australia Men As Allies: A Case Study of White Ribbon Australia 115.4 Jennifer PARKER, Pennsylvania University, USA Between Giant Corporate Retailers and Family Food Economies: A Focus on Mothers as “intermediaries” in India’s Neoliberal Development Strategies

09:00-10:30

RC09 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

JS-62 How Did Environment Call Development Pathways out?

14:15-15:45 114

16:00-17:30

Thursday 14 July

10:45-12:15 113

114.5 Guzel BAYMURZINA, The Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia and Veronica VALIAKHMETOVA, SIFAT Research Center, Russia Socio-Labor Precarization in Russia: National and Subnational Features

Globalization, New Forms of Work and Inequality

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Tamara HERAN CUBILLOS, École Hautes Études Sciences Sociales, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 114.1 Michel VILLETTE, AgroParisTech and Centre Maurice Halbwachs (ENS/EHESS/CNRS), France The Experience of a French Expat in a Mexican Factory : An Ethnographic Account of Workplace Transgressions and Multiple Realities 114.2 Ariel SEVILLA, Universite de Reims, France Les inégalités De Diplôme Lors De L’embauche Chez Les Ouvriers De L’industrie Automobile En Perspective Comparée (Argentine, France, Brésil) 114.3 Deniz SEEBACHER, University of Vienna, Austria ‘If You Don’t like It, Don’t Work with Us’. on Situational Position of Textile Suppliers in Turkey.

Committees: RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development (Host); RC24 Environment and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-62.

10:45-12:15 116

Monetary Practices in the Global South

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Ulrike M.M. SCHUERKENS, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 116.1 Aaron PITLUCK, University of Chicago, USA Can We Tether Finance to the Productive Economy? Experimental Monetary Practices in Islamic Finance 116.2 Mariana GATZEVA, Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Canada Social Capital and Group Homogeneity: Joint-Liability Lending in Thailand

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121

Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC09

114.4 Mark ANNER, Penn State University, USA Worker Rights and the Pricing and Sourcing Squeeze in Global Supply Chains

09:00-10:30 112

No. 116

Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

RC10

No. 117

Program–Session Details

RC10 Monday 11 July

Cross-generational Civic Participation

RC10

Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Program Coordinator: Isabel DA COSTA, CNRS-IDHE, École Normale Supérieure de Cachan, France and Fatima ASSUNCAO, University of Lisboa, Portugal

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 JS-25 Social Enterprises and Empowerment. Part I

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 117.10 Domonkos SIK, University Eötvös Loránd, Hungary Alienation, Civic Privatism, Emancipatory and Populist Activism: Patterns of Youth Participation in Europe 117.6 Srinivas SAJJA, Birla Institute of Technology & Science Pilani, Hyderabad Campus, India Local Governance and Empowerment: An Analysis of CrossGenerational Impact of Democratic Decentralisation in Telangana, India 117.9 Cristiano GIANOLLA, Centre For Social Studies, VAT NUMBER: 500825840 - University of Coimbra (& University Sapienza of Rome - Italy), Portugal The Democratisation Potential of Participation – Comparing Emerging Political Movements in Italy and India 117.3 Martijn HOGERBRUGGE, Cardiff University, United Kingdom; Ian JONES, Cardiff University, United Kingdom and Martin HYDE, Department of Sociology, University of Manchester, United Kingdom The Impact of Country Characteristics on the Level of (Late Life) Volunteering in Europe

Committees: RC26 Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice (Host); RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

Rediscovering Democracy

See Joint Session Details for JS-25.

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

10:45-12:15 JS-29 Social Enterprises and Empowerment. Part II

Committees: RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management (Host); RC26 Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice See Joint Session Details for JS-29.

14:15-15:45 117

Participation and Democracy in the Futures We Want: Social Actors and New Demands

Language: English, French, Spanish

117.4 Fernando LIMA NETO, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Brazilian Ouvidorias: Searching for the Public Use of Reason 117.8 Ingrid PAVEZI, University of Freiburg, Germany Indigenous Movements and Politics in Bolivia: An Emergent Way of Governance in the XXI Century 117.1 Luis MIGUEL, Universidade de Brasilia, Brazil Participación y Representación En El Debate Brasileño 117.12 Viviane CUBAS, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil and Frederico Castelo BRANCO, Núcleo de Estudos da Violência, Brazil Self-Legitimacy and the Military Police in the State of Sao Paulo – Brazil

16:00-17:30

Location: Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Luciana SOUZA, Faculdade de Direito Milton Campos (Milton Campos Law School), Brazil and Pawel STAROSTA, University of Lodz, Poland

118

Sociology of the Future: Braiding Theory-Making and Policy/ Practice Change

Chair: Pawel STAROSTA, University of Lodz, Poland

Location: Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum)

ROUNDTABLES:

Session Organizers: Julia ROZANOVA, Yale University, USA and Eleni NINA-PAZARZI, University of Piraeus, Greece

Actor demands in several sectors

Chair: Julia ROZANOVA, Yale University, USA

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

ROUNDTABLES:

117.7 Agnese HERMANE, Latvian Academy of Culture, Latvia and Baiba TJARVE, Latvian Academy of Culture, Latvia Creative Professionals As Influential Stakeholder Group in the Preservation and Development of Latvian Song and Dance Celebration Tradition 117.5 Oliver KOENIG, University of Vienna, Austria Fulfilling the Promise of the UN Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities through the Evolution of Organisational Forms in the Disability Service Sector 117.11 Mariella BERRA, University of Turin, Italy New Productive Technological and Relational Models. a Survey on ICT Entrepreneurs.

Critical Reflections on Gender and the Future of Democracy ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 118.3 Fatima ASSUNCAO, University of Lisboa, Portugal Gender, Entrepreneurship and Public Policies in Portugal 118.8 Jon RAINFORD, Staffordshire University, United Kingdom Making Internal Conversations Public: Reflexivity of the Connected Doctoral Researcher and Its Transmission Beyond the Walls of the Academy

117.2 Maria FREGIDOU-MALAMA, University of GAVLE, Department of Business and Economic Studies, Sweden Social Marketing in Social Enterprises the Case of Sweden

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RC10 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

Diversities in theory making and policies for the future ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 118.7 Hongze TAN, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong and Miguel Angel MARTINEZ LOPEZ, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Has Urban Cycling Improved in Hong Kong from the 1980s to Present? : A Socio-Political Analysis of Managers’ and Activists’ Contributions 118.4 Micha FIEDLSCHUSTER, Leipzig University, Germany Organizing Possible Futures: Organizational Democracy in the World Social Forum 118.1 Andrea CERRONI, University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy and Rita GIUFFREDI, Cern, Switzerland Reductionism and Short-Termism in EU Knowledge Policies: How Are We Conceiving EU Future? 118.6 Takahiro DOMEN, Hitotsubashi University, Japan Who Should Maintain Unused Public Lands? : To Foster Citizens’ Behaviours Based on Private and Local Needs in Order to Overcome Public Issues on Japanese Context

Tuesday 12 July

119.4 Daniele DI NUNZIO, Fondazione Di Vittorio, Italy Organizing, Participation and Democracy in the Work Fragmentation: Precarious Workers’ Collective Actions in Italy 119.5 Sara ROCHA, CICS-NOVA - Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities of the Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal; Cristina ALBUQUERQUE, CICS-NOVA - Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities of the Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal; Gil PENHA-LOPES, CCIAM-CE3C, FFCUL - Climate Change Research Group of the Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes, Foundation of the Science Faculty of Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal; Patrícia SANTOS, CCIAM-CE3C, FFCUL - Climate Change Research Group of the Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes, Foundation of the Science Faculty of Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal and Maria NOLASCO, CICSNOVA - Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities of the Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal Potentialities and Limitations of Participation and Change Processes Based on Bottom-up Approach - Evidence from the Project Catalise in Portugal

14:15-15:45 120

The Role of Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management in the Futures We Want. Part I

Language: French, English

09:00-10:30

Location: Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

JS-40 Climate Change, Famines and Conflicts in Globalised World: Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

Session Organizer: Isabel DA COSTA, CNRS-IDHE, École Normale Supérieure de Cachan, France Chair: Eleni NINA-PAZARZI, University of Piraeus, Greece AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Committees: WG05 Famine and Society (Host); RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

120.1 Heinz SUENKER, Wuppertal University, Germany Democracy Against Capitalism?!

See Joint Session Details for JS-40.

120.2 Wolfgang WEBER, University of Innsbruck, Institute of Psychology, Innrain 52, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria; Christine UNTERRAINER, University of Innsbruck, Institute of Psychology, Innrain 52, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria and Thomas HOGE, University of Innsbruck, Institute of Psychology, Innrain 52, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria A Research Review on Democratic Firms: Employee-Related and Societal Outcomes for Alternative Futures?

10:45-12:15 119

The Role of Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management in the Futures We Want. Part II

120.3 Jocelyne ROBERT, University of Liege, Belgium The Methods of Management: an Answer to the Crisis?

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Isabel DA COSTA, CNRS-IDHE, France Chair: Stefan LUECKING, Hans Bockler Foundation, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 119.1 Teresa MONTAGUT, University of Barcelona, Spain Civil Society and Local Government

120.4 Daniel SILVER, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Evaluation for Radical Democratic Transitions 120.5 Mohsen ABBASZADEH MARZBALI, University of Tehran, Iran Democratic Activism: Between Organizing and Spontaneity

119.2 Nagender TADEPALLY, VILLAGES IN PARTNERSHIP (VIP), India From Representative to Participatory Democracy - Gram Swaraj for a Better Future.

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Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

118.2 Michal PALGI, Institute for Research of the Kibbutz and the Cooperative Idea, The University of Haifa, Israel and Helena DESIVILYA, The Max Stern Yezreel Valley College, Israel Women’s Voices in Management in Different Cultural Settings

119.3 Olivia GARRAFA TORRES, Universidad Autonoma de Nayarit, Mexico; Francisca LOPEZ REGALADO, Wageningen University, Netherlands and Karla Yanin RIVERA FLORES, Universidad Autonoma de Nayarit, Mexico Participation and Organization in Two Rural Communities in Ruiz, Nayarit, Mexico: Between Corporatism and Self-Management

RC10

118.5 Michael TSANGARIS, University of Piraeus, Greece and Iliana PAZARZI, Okypus Theatre Company, Greece Occupational Segregation and Gender Representations at Cinema

No. 120

RC10

No. 121

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30 121

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Democratic Decentralisation and Justice Delivery

Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

Location: Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: P.P. BALAN, Kerala Inst Local Administration, India Chair: P.P. BALAN, Kerala Inst Local Administration, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 121.1 Jose CALLEGARI, Programa de Pos-graduacao em Sociologia e Direito, Brazil and David Ferreira BASTOS, Univsersidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil Brazilian CIVIL Procedure: Democratizing the Procedure Relationship. 121.2 Ioanna PAZARZI, Athens Law Bar Association, Greece and Michalis PAZARZIS, University of Piraeus, Greece Legal and Social Aspects of the Institution of Mediation 121.3 Tonatiuh LAY, Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico The Weakening of Civil Society and Strengthening of the De Powers in the Reform of Telecommunications Legislation in Mexico 2013-2015

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 122

The Future of Organizational and Workplace Participation: Capacities, Capabilities, Innovations

Location: Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Catherine CASEY, University of Leicester, United Kingdom and Volker TELLJOHANN, IRES Emilia-Romagna, Italy Chair: Stefan LUECKING, Hans Böckler Foundation, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 122.1 Terry LEUNG, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong “Consensus” in Participatory Management: What Is in a Name? 122.2 Barbara GIULLARI, University of Bologna (Italy), Italy Workplace Participation: An Informational Basis Issue? 122.3 Shlomo GETZ, Academic College of Emek Jezreel, Israel The Israeli Kibbutz – from Commune to Cooperative? 122.4 Maarten HERMANS, HIVA - KU Leuven, Belgium and Monique RAMIOUL, HIVA - KU Leuven, Belgium Representative Employee Participation and WorkplaceLevel Innovation Processes: A Cross-National Qualitative Analysis of Labor Union Practices

10:45-12:15 123

123.1 Gema MEDERO, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain and Bernabe ALDEGUER CERDA, Universidad de Alicante, Spain Employment Policies in Times of Crisis: The Labour Reforms in Spain. 123.2 Hermes COSTA, University of Coimbra, Faculty of Economics, Center for Social Studies, Portugal; Manuel Carvalho SILVA, Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, Portugal and Bia CARNEIRO, University of Coimbra, Portugal Changes in Labour Law and Devaluation of Labour in Portugal: Critical Perspectives and Prospects for a New Labour Regulation 123.3 Morena TARTARI, University of Padua, Italy Labeling the Crisis: Left and Right Wings Discourses about the Crisis and the Role of the Mediated Public Sphere in Italy 123.4 Ana ROMAO, Academia Militar, Portugal and Maria da Saudade BALTAZAR, University of Evora, Portugal La Participation De La Société Civile Dans La Crise Des Réfugiés: Le Cas Portugais 123.5 Helen RETHYMIOTAKI, Law School, University of Athens, Greece and Ioannis FLYTZANIS, Law school Athens University, Greece Striving for an Alternative Path: Reimagining Politics and Law in the Never-Ending Greek Crisis. Could the Law Constitute an Empowerment Factor for the Political Transformation from below?

14:15-15:45 124

Rediscovering Latin America Democracy, Social Actors and New Demands

Language: English, Spanish Location: Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Luciana SOUZA, Milton Campos Law School, Brazil Chair: Teresa MONTAGUT, University of Barcelona, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 124.1 Maria da Gloria GOHN, University of Campinas, Brazil Movimientos Sociales y Los Derechos En Brasil: 1980-2015 124.2 Laura LOEZA REYES, CEIICH, UNAM, Mexico Violencia Estructural, Marcos De Interpretación y Acción Colectiva En México 124.3 Julio CALDERON COCKBURN, Consultor independiente, Peru Democracia, Individualismo y Clientelismo. Un Contra Ejemplo En Peru 124.4 Sara GORDON-RAPOPORT, UNAM Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales, Mexico Democracy Seeking Csos’social Performance

The Impacts of the Debt Crisis on the World of Work in Southern Europe

Language: English, Spanish Location: Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Maria CERDEIRA, SOCIUS, Portugal and Fatima ASSUNCAO, University of Lisboa, Portugal Chair: Philippe POCHET, European Trade Union Institute, Belgium

124

RC10 Wednesday 13 July

www.isa-sociology.org

RC10 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

Civic Participation in Globalising World. Inequalities, Patterns and Determinants

09:00-10:30 126

Location: Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Pawel STAROSTA, University of Lodz, Poland

RC10

Thursday 14 July

16:00-17:30 125

No. 127

Language: Spanish, French, English

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

125.1 Martine LEGRIS REVEL, Lille University CERAPS, France What If Citizens Participate in Research Project ? a Democratic Governance of Science.

Session Organizer: Vera VRATUSA, Belgrade University, Serbia Chair: Azril BACAL ROIJ, Uppsala University, Department of Sociology, Sweden, Sweden

125.2 Takeshi WADA, The University of Tokyo, Japan; Yoojin KOO, The University of Tokyo, Japan and Kayo HOSHINO, The University of Tokyo, Japan A Cross-National Comparison of the Patterns of Civic Participation: Worldwide Convergence, National Divergence, or Enduring Influences of Cultural Repertoire?

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 126.1 Gerard KESTER, retired, Netherlands Europe One Hundred Years from Now: Towards Democratic Control of the Economy

125.3 Carlos CORTEZ, UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA METROPOLITANA, Mexico The Debate on the Post-2015 Global Agenda. Civic Participation from the Local to the Global.

126.2 Aline PIRES, Universidade Federal de Sao Carlos, Brazil Is the Self-Management Possible? a Study on the Recovered Factories in Brazil 126.3 Yuval ACHOUCH, Western Galilee College, Israel Quel Futur Pour L’industrie Kibboutzique?

125.4 Krzysztof MACZKA, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland The Reception of Participation. Gaps in Existing Knowledge.

126.4 Vera VRATUSA, Belgrade University, Serbia The Concepts and Practices of Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management in the Futures We Want

10:45-12:15 127

RC10 Business Meeting

Location: Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

NOTES

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Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

Chair: Pawel STAROSTA, University of Lodz, Poland

Self-Management As Simultaneous Goal and Means of Overcoming Systemic Accumulation of Capital Crisis

Sociology of Aging

RC11

No. 128

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

RC11

129

Sociology of Aging Program Coordinator: Virpi TIMONEN, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland

Sunday 10 July

Ageing and the Body: Twenty Years on

Session Organizers: Wendy MARTIN, Brunel University London, United Kingdom and Julia TWIGG, University of Kent, United Kingdom Chair: Stephen KATZ, Trent University, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 128.1 Chris GILLEARD, UCL (University College London), United Kingdom and Paul HIGGS, University College London, United Kingdom Corporeality Versus Embodiment in Later Life 128.2 Julia TWIGG, University of Kent, United Kingdom Dress, Gender and the Embodiment of Age 128.3 Wendy MARTIN, Brunel University London, United Kingdom and Katy PILCHER, Aston University, United Kingdom Visual Representations of Health, Risk and the Body in Everyday Life 128.4 Susan STUART, Bucks New University, United Kingdom Phew! Pathways to Health, Exercise and Wellbeing: A Qualitative Study of Exercise 50+ 128.5 Fumiko HOSOKAWA, California State University Dominguez Hills, USA Aging As a Developmental Perspective

10:45-12:15 Aging Society and New Welfare Policies

Committees: RC11 Sociology of Aging (Host); RC15 Sociology of Health See Joint Session Details for JS-9.

Session Organizer: Karen GLASER, King’s College London, United Kingdom

129.1 Karen GLASER, King’s College London, United Kingdom; Loretta PLATTS, Stress Research Institute, Stockholm University, Sweden; Giorgio DI GESSA, Institute of Gerontology, Department of Social Science Health & Medicine, King’s College London, United Kingdom; Rachel STUCHBURY, Epidemiology & Public Health, University College London, United Kingdom and Debora PRICE, Institute of Gerontology, Department of Social Science, Health & Medicine, King’s College London, United Kingdom Changes Across Cohorts in the UK in the Relationship Between Employment and Family Experiences and Working until or Beyond State Pension Age 129.2 Laurie CORNA, Institute of Gerontology, Department of Social Science Health & Medicine, King’s College London, United Kingdom; Loretta PLATTS, Stress Research Institute, Stockholm University, Sweden; Diana WORTS, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Canada; Peggy MCDONOUGH, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Canada; Debora PRICE, Institute of Gerontology, Department of Social Science, Health & Medicine, King’s College London, United Kingdom; Amanda SACKER, Director ESRC International Centre for Lifecourse Studies, University College London, United Kingdom and Anne MCMUNN, Epidemiology & Public Health, University College London, United Kingdom Employment Experiences in Later Life in England and the US: A Gendered Life Course Perspective 129.3 Martin HYDE, Department of Sociology, University of Manchester, United Kingdom and Chris PHILLIPSON, Manchester Institute for Collaborative Research on Ageing (MICRA), University of Manchester, United Kingdom Age and Socio-Economic Inequalities in Access to Learning and Training in Later Life in the UK 129.4 Ewan CARR, Epidemiology & Public Health, University College London, United Kingdom and Jenny HEAD, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, UK., United Kingdom Long-Term Effects of Job Strain and Mental Health in Midlife on Early Labour Market Exit 129.5 Clary KREKULA, Karlstad University, Sweden Occupational Ageing: Stereotypes of Older Workers As Ornamental, Institutionalised and Productive Discourses

12:30-14:00 JS-12 Aging, Health and Life Course:

Theoretical Issues and Methodological Problems. Joint Special Session of the Global Health Sociology Network: ISA RC15, ESA RN16 and ESHMS

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health (Host); RC11 Sociology of Aging See Joint Session Details for JS-12.

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

JS-9

Wellbeing, Health, and Later Life Work from a Cross-National Comparative Perspective

Discussant: Laurie CORNA, King’s College London, United Kingdom

09:00-10:30 128

RC11 Sunday 10 July

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 130

Ageing and the Economic Crisis

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Kathrin KOMP, University of Helsinki, Finland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 130.1 Monika WILINSKA, University of Stirling, United Kingdom and Jolanta PEREK-BIALAS, Jagiellonian University, Poland Economic Crisis and Ageing- Gendered Evidence from Poland

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RC11 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

130.4 Christos PLIAKOS, University of Central Lancashire, United Kingdom Older People in the Context of the Greek Dept Crisis. They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? 130.5 Andrzej KLIMCZUK, Warsaw School of Economics, Poland Crisis, the Silver Economy, and the Depopulation of Rural Areas: The Case of the Podlaskie Voivodeship (Poland)

10:45-12:15

132

Aging, Identity, and the Body

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Laura HURD CLARKE, The University of British Columbia, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 132.1 Hanna OJALA, University of Tampere, School of Social Sciences and Humanities, Finland and Ilkka PIETILA, University of Tampere, School of Health Sciences, Finland Age Management, Anti-Ageing Practices and Working Class Masculinity 132.2 Mary MADDEN, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Ageing, Identity and the Materialities of Wound Care 132.3 Johanne BRADY, University of Sydney, Australia Bodies Ageing with and without Parkinson’s Disease 132.4 Rachel THORPE, Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health and Society, La Trobe University, Australia From the Swinging Sixties to Their 60S: Considering the Role of the Past in the Subjective Experience of Sexuality in Old Age

Work, Aging, and Health

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Esteban CALVO, Universidad Diego Portales, Chile AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

132.5 Janicke ANDERSSON, CASE, Sweden and Lisa EKSTAM, CASE, Sweden Age Negotiation and Active Bodies at Senior Camps in Sweden

131.1 Sara ARBER, University of Surrey, United Kingdom and Robert MEADOWS, University of Surrey, United Kingdom Working Longer? How Being Employed/Self-Employed in Later Life in the UK Relates to Health and Increasing Gender and Income Inequalities

16:00-17:30

131.2 Ignacio MADERO-CABIB, University of Lausanne, Switzerland and Esteban CALVO, Columbia University, USA Aging Unequally in the United States: A Life-Course Study of the Health Effects of Employment Trajectories

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

131.3 Javiera CARTAGENA FARIAS, National Centre for Social Research (NatCen), United Kingdom and Sergio SALIS, NatCen for Social Research, United Kingdom Does Retirement Improve Health Outcomes of Older Individuals? Comparison Between Retiring and Remaining Employed. 131.4 Sara SANTINI, IRCCS-INRCA National Institute of Health & Science on Ageing, Italy; Marco SOCCI, INRCA, Italy and Andrea PRINCIPI, INRCA, Italy Health and Wellbeing during the Transition to Retirement: The More the Fears the Less the Actions? 131.5 Amilcar MOREIRA, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal; Catia ANTUNES, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal; Agnieszka SOWA, Center for Social and Economic Research (CASE), Poland; Henrike GALENKAMP, VU University Medical Center (VUmc), Netherlands and Dorly DEEG, VU University Medical Center (VUmc), Netherlands Poor Health and the Labour Supply of Senior Workers 131.6 Anna WANKA, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria; Vera GALLISTL, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria; Sophie PSIHODA, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria and Franz KOLLAND, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria Work Strain and Age Discrimination Among Older Employees – Identifying Challenges for Age-Friendly Work Places 131.7 Sophie PSIHODA, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria Effects of Retirement Pathways on Health and Income Inequalities from a European Perspective

133

Digital Technologies, Ageing and Everyday Life

Session Organizers: Wendy MARTIN, Brunel University London, United Kingdom and Barbara MARSHALL, Trent University, Canada Chair: Julia TWIGG, University of Kent, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 133.1 Loredana IVAN, National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, Romania and Shannon HEBBLETHWAITE, Department of Applied Human Sciences at Concordia University, Canada Older People’s Use of Facebook: A Netnographic Research of an Online Community 133.2 Rinat LIFSHITZ, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel; Galit NIMROD, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel and Yaacov BACHNER, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel Internet Use and Well-Being in Later Life: A Midway-Level Approach 133.3 Barbara BARBOSA NEVES, University of Toronto, Canada; Christian BEERMANN, University of Toronto, Canada; Rebecca JUDGES, University of Toronto, Canada; Nadia NASSAR, University of Toronto, Canada and Ron BAECKER, University of Toronto, Canada Can Digital Technology Enhance Social Connectedness Amongst Institutionalized Older Adults? Computer Science Meets Sociology for an Action Research Project 133.4 Stephen KATZ, Department of Sociology, Trent University, Canada Gaming the Aging Brain: Digital Cognitive Performance in the Shadow of Dementia 133.5 Louis NEVEN, Avans University of Applied Science, Netherlands and Alexander PEINE, University of Utrecht, Netherlands Towards Socio-Gerontechnology: Modelling the Theoretical Intersection of Social Science and Gerontechnology

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Sociology of Aging

130.3 Blanca DEUSDAD, Dep. Anthropology, Philosophy and Social Work. Rovira i Virgili University, Spain and Dolors COMAS-D’ARGEMIR, Dep. Anthropology, Philosophy and Social Work. Rovira i Virgili University, Spain LONG-TERM Care in Spain: The IMPACT of the Economic Crisis on Social Policies and Its Effects on Older Adults with Care NEEDS

RC11

14:15-15:45

130.2 Kathrin KOMP, University of Helsinki, Finland Retirement Age during the 2008 Economic Crisis

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No. 134

Program–Session Details

133.6 Anne MARTIN-MATTHEWS, Department of Sociology, The University of British Columbia, Canada ‘Ways of Knowing’ about Aging, Old Age and Transitions in Later Life: Insights from Social Media

Sociology of Aging

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 133.7 Wendy MARTIN, Brunel University London, United Kingdom and Katy PILCHER, Aston University, United Kingdom Visual Representations of Digital Connectivities in Everyday Life 133.8 Grant GIBSON, University of Stirling, United Kingdom; Claire DICKINSON, Newcastle University, United Kingdom; Katie BRITTAIN, Newcastle University, United Kingdom and Louise ROBINSON, Newcastle University, United Kingdom How Do People with Dementia and Their Carers Make Assistive Technology Work for Them; Innovation, Personalisation and Bricolage 133.9 Lynn SCHELISCH, University of Kaiserslautern, Germany and Annette SPELLERBERG, University of Kaiserslautern, Germany Neighbourhood and Technology: Opportunities for SelfDetermined Living in Older Age 133.10 Leah GILBERT, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa “Granny and Grandpa Popped out of the Computer”: An Exploratory Study of the Role of Skype in Intergenerational – Transnational Relationships Between Grandparents, Parents, Children and Grandchildren. 133.11 Viorela DUCU, Babes Bolyai University, Centre for Population Studies, Romania Online Caregiving in Romanian Transnational Families 133.12 Vera GALLISTL, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria and Franz KOLLAND, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria The Digital Divide and Technology Generations – European Implications from the Austrian Perspective 133.13 Alexander SEIFERT, Center for Gerontology (University of Zurich), Switzerland Mobile Internet Use in the Elderly 133.14 Selma KADI, Eberhard Karls Universitat Tubingen, Germany Diverging Strands? Multiple Approaches to Studying Older People’s Technology Use

09:00-10:30

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 134.4 Yunjeong YANG, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, South Korea Struggling Between “Conforming and Peace”, or “Rejecting and Conflicts”: Women Ageing in the Context of Gender/ Family Norm Flux 134.5 Deblina DEY, O.P.JINDAL UNIVERSITY, India New Roles and Old Bodies: Role Transformation Among Ageing Women in Kolkata 134.6 Loretta BALDASSAR, University of Western Australia, Australia and Emanuela SALA, The University of Western Australia, Australia Technologies of Transnational Aged Care over a Century of Italian-Australian Migration

10:45-12:15 135

New Social Roles of Older People

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Lucie VIDOVICOVA, Masaryk University, Czech Republic AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 135.1 Toni CALASANTI, Virginia Tech, USA and Marion REPETTI, University of Lausanne, Switzerland Swiss Retirees As “Active Agers”: A Critical Look at This New Social Role 135.2 Merril SILVERSTEIN, Syracuse University, USA and Vern BENGTSON, University of Southern California, USA Return to Religion? Post Retirement Religious Roles Among Older Adults in the United States 135.3 Justyna STYPINSKA, Free University Berlin, Germany A Mature Entrepreneur –a New Social Role for Older Adults? 135.4 Virpi YLÄNNE, Cardiff University, United Kingdom and Pirjo NIKANDER, University of Tampere, Finland Parenting and the Changing Landscape of Ageing and Reproduction

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

The Future of Older Persons in Global Perspective

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Shirley NUSS, Nuss & Asssociates, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 134.1 Jim OGG, Research on Ageing Unit, Caisse nationale d’assurance vieilliesse, France; Sylvie RENAUT, Research on ageing unit, Caisse nationale d’assurance veilliesse, France and Loic TRABUT, Institut National d’Etudes Démographiques / National Institute of Population Studies, France Intergenerational Coresidence Between Adults: A Form of Mutual Support 134.2 Claudia VOGEL, German Centre of Gerontology, Germany; Julia SIMONSON, German Centre of Gerontology, Germany and Clemens TESCH-ROMER, German Centre of Gerontology, Germany Volunteering Among Migrants Aged 40 Years and Above in Germany

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134.3 Barbara WOZNIAK, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Poland; Ewa KRZAKLEWSKA, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland and Marta WARAT, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland Gender Equality and Quality of Life in Older Age

135.5 Galit NIMROD, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel New Social Roles and Well-Being in Later Life

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RC11 Tuesday 12 July

135.6 Rodrigo SERRAT, University of Barcelona, Spain and Feliciano VILLAR, University of Barcelona, Spain Doing Well By Doing Good: Exploring the Relationship Between Political Participation and Older People’s Hedonic and Eudaimonic Well-Being 135.7 Montserrat CELDRAN, University of Barcelona, Spain; Rodrigo SERRAT, University of Barcelona, Spain; Sacramento PINAZO-HERNANDIS, University of Valencia, Spain; Carme SOLE, University Ramon Llull, Spain and Feliciano VILLAR, University of Barcelona, Spain Volunteering in Spanish Older People: A Life Course and Multicontextual Perspective 135.8 Lucia BOCCACIN, Universita’ Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy and Linda LOMBI, Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Italy Active Ageing and Third Sector Organizations in Italy 135.9 Danuta ZYCZYNSKA-CIOLEK, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Economic and Non-Economic Activities of Polish Retirees

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RC11 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

135.11 Yaroslava EVSEEVA, Institute of Scientific Information on Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Successful Life Trajectories in Old Age

136

Social Epidemiology of Aging

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Ronica ROOKS, University of Colorado Denver, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 136.1 Lea ELLWARDT, University of Cologne, Germany; Theo VAN TILBURG, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands and Marja AARTSEN, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands Which Types of Non-Kin Networks Relate to Survival in Late Adulthood? 136.2 Ronica ROOKS, University of Colorado Denver, Health and Behavioral Sciences, USA and Cassandra FORD, The University of Alabama, The Capstone College of Nursing, USA Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities and Cardiovascular Disease Risk in the USA 136.3 Erwin STOLZ, Medical University of Graz, Austria The Impact of Income- and Asset-Poverty on Frailty Worsening Among Older Adults in 10 European Countries: A Longitudinal Analysis Using Share (2004-2013) 136.4 Jonathan WOERN, University of Cologe, Research Training Group SOCLIFE, Germany; Lea ELLWARDT, University of Cologne, Germany; Martijn HUISMAN, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands and Marja AARTSEN, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands Level of and Change in Cognitive Functioning Among Dutch Older Adults: Does Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status Matter? 136.5 Rasmus HOFFMANN, European University Institute, Italy and Eduwin PAKPAHAN, European University Institute, Italy Causal Effects Between Socioeconomic Status and Health in a Life Course Perspective DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 136.6 Elizabeth BROOKE, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Integrating Datasets Supporting Ageing Populations and Workforces

16:00-17:30 137

Public Policies and Responsible Innovation in Response to the Population Aging Challenge /Políticas Públicas e Innovación Responsable como Respuesta al Desafío del Envejecimiento Poblacional

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Adriana FASSIO, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina

137.1 Adriana FASSIO, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Social Innovation, Public Policy and Organizational Learning: The National Homecare Program for Seniors 137.2 John WILLIAMSON, Boston College, Department of Sociology, USA; Esteban CALVO, Columbia University, USA and Lianquan FANG, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Institute of Latin American Studies, China Rural Pension Reform: What Can China Learn from Latin America? 137.3 Georgia CASANOVA, INRCA- National Institute of Health & Science on Ageing, Italy; Giovanni LAMURA, IRCCSINRCA National Institute of Health & Science on Ageing, Italy and Andrea PRINCIPI, INRCA, Italy Key Drivers and Barriers of Social Innovation in Long Term Care: Lessons from the Italian Case. 137.4 Maria Jose DORADO RUBIN, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Spain and Maria Jose GUERRERO, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Spain Las Estrategias PARA La Prolongaci”N De La Vida Zactiva? Zlaboral? Como Respuesta PolÍtica a Las Consecuencias DEL Envejecimiento De La Poblaci”N 137.5 Carolina A. GUIDOTTI GONZALEZ, Facultad de Psicologia, Universidad de la Republica, Uruguay; Lucia MONTEIRO, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad de la República, Uruguay; Mariana PAREDES, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de la República, Uruguay and Maria CARBAJAL, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad de la República, Uruguay El Sistema Nacional De Cuidados y Las Representaciones Sociales Del Cuidado De Personas Adultas Mayores En Uruguay DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 137.6 Jacob KATTAKAYAM, Sociology, India Wealth Management : The Need of the Hour for Post Retirement Security 137.7 Blanca DEUSDAD, Dep. Anthropology, Philosophy and Social Work. Rovira i Virgili University, Spain Challenges of Ageing-in-Place in Urban Places: The Case of the City of Tarragona (Spain) 137.8 Dafna HALPERIN, Yezreel Valley College, Israel; Hedva VINARSKY PERETZ, Yezreel Valley College, Israel; Ruth KATZ, Yezreel Valley College, Israel; Ariela LOWENSTEIN, Yezreel Valley College, Israel; Nissim BEN DAVID, Yezreel Valley College, Israel and Aviad TUR SINAI, Yezreel Valley College, Israel Policy Analysis in Response to Population Aging: Long Term Care and Social Support for Older People and Family Caregivers 137.9 Maite CIARNIELLO, Núcleo Interdisciplinario de Estudios sobre Vejez y Envejecimiento (NIEVE), Facultad de Psicología, Universidad de la República, Uruguay, Uruguay El IEA (Índice de Envejecimiento Activo), Su Aplicabilidad En América Latina y Su Valoración Conceptual Desde Los Ejecutores De Políticas Públicas. El Caso De Uruguay. 137.10 Jacqueline LOW, University New Brunswick, Canada and Suzanne DUPUIS-BLANCHARD, Universite de Moncton, Canada New Brunswick Seniors Classed As ALC Patients 137.11 Fernando SERRA, CAPP/ISCSP University of Lisbon VAT# 600019152, Portugal; Ana ESGAIO, CAPP/ ISCSP-University of Lisbon, Portugal; Paula PINTO, CAPP/ISCSP, University of Lisbon VAT#600019152, Portugal and Carla PINTO, CAPP/ ISCSPUniversity of Lisbon, Portugal Tensions and Future Scenarios of Elderly Care Policy in a Portuguese Municipality. a Case Study

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14:15-15:45

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC11

135.10 Beatriz JIMENEZ ROGER, University of Granada, Spain New Patterns of Intergenerational Transfers: A Comparative Approach.

No. 137

RC11

No. 138

Wednesday 13 July

JS-54 Ageing in Place in a Mobile World: New

The Work of Care: Ageing, Inequalities and Supply of Care Workers

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Susan MCDANIEL, University of Lethbridge, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 138.1 Glenda BONIFACIO, University of Lethbridge, Canada Global-Local Structures and Care Migration 138.2 Shirley HsiaoLi SUN, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore State Policy and Care Migration in Selected Countries in Asia 138.3 Susan MCDANIEL, University of Lethbridge, Canada and Alex ZANIDEAN, University of Lethbridge, Canada Inequality and Care Worker Supply in OECD Countries DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 138.4 Maren SCHORCH, University of Siegen, Germany Co-Designing an Information and Support Platform for Elderly, Informal Caregivers

Media and Older People’s Support Networks

Committees: RC11 Sociology of Aging (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration See Joint Session Details for JS-54.

16:00-17:30 140

Older Men

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Marcela PETROVA KAFKOVA, Masaryk University, Czech Republic AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 140.1 Grant GIBSON, University of Stirling, United Kingdom “I Expected to be Slow, but Not This Slow”; What Can Parkinson’s Disease Tell Us about the Embodiment of Masculinity As Men Age? 140.2 Anne MUENCH, Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Germany „It’s God-Awful, but You Have to Deal with It.“ - Individual Patterns of Action and Interpretation Among Older Male Caregivers 140.3 Lea SCHUETZE, LMU Munich, Germany Masculinity at the Margin? Self-Concepts of Elder Gay Men at the Intersection of Ageism and Homophobia

10:45-12:15 139

RC11 Wednesday 13 July

14:15-15:45

09:00-10:30 138

Sociology of Aging

Program–Session Details

The Fourth Age: “Real” Old Age?

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Marcela PETROVA KAFKOVA, Masaryk University, Czech Republic AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 139.1 Pauline MESNARD, University of Lausanne, Switzerland A Qualitative Approach of Fourth Agers’ Experiences of Long-Term Care: Comparing France, Switzerland and Sweden. 139.2 Bernhard WEICHT, University of Innsbruck, Austria Wanting to Die: Euthanasia Discourses and the Fear of Old Age and Dependency 139.3 Marcela PETROVA KAFKOVA, Masaryk University, Czech Republic and Lucie GALCANOVA, Masaryk University, Office for Population Studies, Czech Republic Ageing As an Increasing Uncertainty 139.4 Berfin VARISLI, Maltepe University, Turkey Sacred and Segregated: Women of the Fourth Age in Turkey

140.4 Miranda LEONTOWITSCH, Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main, Germany; Insa FOOKEN, Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main, Germany; Rafaela WERNY, Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main, Germany and Frank OSWALD, Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main, Germany Shifting Masculinities in Later Life - a Review of Research 2000-2015 DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 140.5 Cynthia CREADY, University of North Texas, USA and Adam OKULICZ-KOZARYN, Rutgers University, USA Age, Sex, and Happiness Among Men 140.6 Neal KING, Virgnia Tech, USA An Aging Male Turn in the Study of Hegemony 140.7 Laura HURD CLARKE, The University of British Columbia, Canada; Joseph KUGLER, School of Kinesiology, The University of British Columbia, Canada and Philip YAN, School of Kinesiology, The University of British Columbia, Canada Older Canadian Men’s Perceptions and Experiences of Physical Activity

Thursday 14 July 10:45-12:15 141

RC11 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

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RC12 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

144

Sociology of Law

Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Julia DAHLVIK, University of Vienna, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Monday 11 July

144.1 Alexandra WALKER, Australian National University, Australia and Tom R. BURNS, Uppsala University, Sweden How the Theory of Collective Consciousness Reveals Gaps and Dilemmas in International Gender Law

09:00-10:30 Migrant Women in Distress and the Intersectionality of Law and Jurisprudence

144.2 Sonja VAN WICHELEN, University of Sydney, Australia Futures of Legal Governance in Globalization: The Case of Family Life

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Devanayak SUNDARAM, University of Madras, India and Rashmi JAIN, University of Rajasthan, India Co-Chair: Susana NOVICK, Conicet-Instituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 142.1 Letizia MANCINI, University of Milan - Italy, Italy MGF Entre Derecho y Sociedad 142.2 Shikha SHARMA, ICSSR, New Delhi, India Dealing with Gender Vulnerabilities of Women Migrants:in Reference to Female Domestic Workers of New Delhi 142.3 Monica RAO, University of rajasthan, India and Mansi TRIVEDI, BA.LLB.(HONS), India Social Justice an Unfinished Agenda - QUEST for Amelioration of the Status of the Migrant Tribal Women in India

10:45-12:15 143

Studying Law and Society in the Context of Transdisciplinarity and Transnationality

144.3 Fatima KASTNER, Institute for World Society Studies, Germany Local Conflicts and Global Norms: Transitional Justice and the Struggle for a Better World 144.4 Walter FUCHS, Institute for the Sociology of Law and Criminology, Austria Challenges and Limits of Comparative Socio-Legal Research in a Post-National World: The Example of Adult Guardianship Law 144.5 Samantha ASHENDEN, Birkbeck College, United Kingdom Cross-Border Surrogacy, Conflicts of Law, and Conceptions of Perosnhood

16:00-17:30 145

Legal Ethology

Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Edoardo FITTIPALDI, University of Milan, Italy; Raffaele CATERINA, Università degli Studi di Torino, Italy and Giuseppe LORINI, Università  degli Studi di Cagliari, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Lawyers in Society – Comparative Perspectives

145.1 Edoardo FITTIPALDI, University of Milan, Italy Toward a General Concept of Norm for Sociology, Psychology, Ethology

Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Ole HAMMERSLEV, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 143.1 Hilary SOMMERLAD, University of Leeds, United Kingdom and Ole HAMMERSLEV, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark Lawyers in Society 30 Years on 143.2 Maria da Gloria BONELLI, Federal University of Sao Carlos, Brazil and Ivar HARTMANN, Law FGV Rio, Brazil Brazilian Lawyers and the Globalization of Legal Practice 143.3 Ekaterina KHODZHAEVA, European University at Saint Petersburg, Russia Monopoly of the Bar in Russia: Perspective and Support of Ordinary Members

145.2 Luigi COMINELLI, The University of Milan, Italy The Epigenetic Hypothesis and the Social Sciences: SocioLegal Implications 145.3 Radoslaw ZYZIK, Jesuit University Ignatianum, Poland Ideal of Love in Legal Policy. Evolutionary Perspective 145.4 Olimpia LODDO, University of Cagliari, Italy From Dispositions to Obligations: Do Animals Have Obligations? 145.5 Giuseppe LORINI, Universita’ degli Studi di Cagliari, Italy Towards an Ethology of Normativity

143.4 Adam CZARNOTA, International Institute for the Sociology of Law, Spain Polish Judges Self-Portraits

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Program Coordinator: Julia DAHLVIK, University of Vienna, Austria

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No. 145

RC12

No. 146

Tuesday 12 July

RC12 Tuesday 12 July

10:45-12:15 147

09:00-10:30 146

Sociology of Law

Program–Session Details

Working Group on Civil Justice and Dispute Resolution

Location: Hörsaal 24 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Luigi COMINELLI, The University of Milan, Italy

The Futures We Want in Numbers: Searching Legal Indicators for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal 24 (Main Building) Session Organizer: David RESTREPO-AMARILES, HEC Paris, France Co-Chair: Pedro Rubim BORGES FORTES, FGV, Brazil

ROUNDTABLES:

Discussant: Cristina GOLOMOZ, University of Oxford, United Kingdom

Roundt. A: Litigation and Negotiation Patterns

ROUNDTABLES:

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 146.1 Manuel GOMEZ, Florida International University College of Law, USA A “Crude” Reality? the Use of Documentary Films and Other Media in Aid of Transnational Litigation: Lessons from the Chevron-Ecuador Legal Saga 146.5 Jacek KURCZEWSKI, Chair in Sociology and Anthropology of Custom and Law, IASS, University of Warsaw, Poland and Malgorzata FUSZARA, Chair in Anthropology and Sociology of Custom and Law, IASS, University of Warsaw, Poland Dispute Patterns in Post-Communist Central-Eastern Europe 146.8 Wenjie LIAO, North Carolina State University, USA Dispute Resolution in Transitional China 146.11 Jan WINCZOREK, University of Warsaw, Poland Paths to Justice in Poland

Roundt. B: Dispute resolution and Social Justice ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 146.4 Paula CASALEIRO, Centre for Social Studies of the University of Coimbra, Portugal Child Custody Disputes: The Role of Social Workers 146.10 Paula CASALEIRO, Centre for Social Studies of the University of Coimbra, Portugal and Andreia SANTOS, Centre for Social Studies of the University of Coimbra, Portugal Family Disputes in Times of Austerity: The Growth of Family and Children Legal Disputes in Portugal 146.9 Marfisa BARROS, Faculdade de Ciencias Humanas de Pernambuco, Brazil Fundamental Social Rights, Access to Justice and the Democratic State of Law in Brazil 146.2 Duygu HATIPOGLU AYDIN, Ankara University Faculty of Law, Turkey Legal Aid for Women

Roundtable A ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 147.3 Bartolomeo CAPPELLINA, Sciences Po Bordeaux, France From Evaluation to Evidence-Based Policy. the Council of Europe, the EU, and the Construction of European Indicators on Judicial Systems. 147.1 Marcus DE CASTRO, University of Brasilia, Brazil From Numbers to Post-Logocentric Normative Craft : On the Use of Indicators and Comparable Constructs in Contemporary Legal Analysis

Roundtable B ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 147.2 Pedro FORTES, FGV, Brazil; Rolando GARCIA MIRON, Stanford Law School, USA and Diego GIL MCCAWLEY, Stanford Law School, USA Searching the Historical Origins of Legal Indicators: Revisiting the Stanford Studies in Law and Development (SLADE) 147.4 Julian MCLACHLAN, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium Transnational Legal Indicators in Legal Advice

14:15-15:45 148

Resisting Oppression, Fighting Violence and Transforming the Law and Politics: Women’s Action Across the World

Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Barbara G BELLO, University of Milano, Italy and Alexandrine GUYARD-NEDELEC, University Paris 1 PantheonSorbonne, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 148.1 Lucia Maria BRITO DE OLIVEIRA, University of Brasilia, Brazil Women and Law: (Re)Building Democracy and Justice

Roundt. C: ADR and Restorative Justice ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 146.7 Tatiana KYSELOVA, University of Turin, Italy Cultural and Institutional Impediments to Mediation in Post-Soviet Countries: Focus on Ukraine 146.6 Arianna JACQMIN, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy How Much Need for Truth within Conflict Resolution? 146.3 Luigi COMINELLI, The University of Milan, Italy Mediators with Italian Characteristics. Styles, Conflict Attitudes and Settlement Rates

148.2 Panchi PATHAK, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India and Pravinkumar SHIRSAT, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India Laws to Prevent Trafficking of Women and Children in Disaster Prone Areas in India 148.3 Barbara SIMOES, Faculdade de Direito do Sul de Minas, Brazil and Cicero LUZ, Faculdade de Direito do Sul de Minas, Brazil The Women’s Immigrants Workers Conditions and the Protection of Fundamental Rights in Brazil 148.4 Gloria VILA, University of Lausanne, Switzerland La Lutte Contre Les Violences De Genre En Espagne: à Dix Ans De La Loi Organique 1/2004, Quel Bilan ?

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RC12 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

149

151

The Living Legacy of Leon Petrażycki’s Legal Realism for Sociology of Law and Other Social Sciences

RC12

16:00-17:30

No. 152

Studying Law and Society in the Context of Transdisciplinarity and Transnationality II

Location: Arcade Courtyard (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Edoardo FITTIPALDI, University of Milan, Italy

Session Organizer: Julia DAHLVIK, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 149.1 Edoardo FITTIPALDI, University of Milan, Italy State As a Jural Phenomenon. a Critical Defense of Leon Petra?ycki’s Conceptions of State 149.2 Radoslaw ZYZIK, Jesuit University Ignatianum, Poland Scientific Legal Policy and Behavioral Law and Economics. Petrazycki’s Legacy 149.3 Krzysztof MOTYKA, Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawla II, Poland Petrazycki in Paris

Wednesday 13 July

151.1 Pablo CIOCCHINI, University of Liverpool, Singapore and Stefanie KHOURY, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom How to Study Courts? a Proposal for a Critical TransDisciplinary Approach 151.2 Aline PEREIRA, ZEF - Zentrum fur Entwicklungsforschung, University of Bonn, Germany Practices of Law and the Environment As a Common Good 151.3 Lucas KONZEN, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil What Is the Identity of Sociology of Law? 151.4 Cristiano MAIA, University of Bremen, Germany The Conflict Between the World Economic and the World Health Systems from a Systemic Approach: The Implementation of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control By the Parties and the Transnational Tobacco Industry

09:00-10:30 150

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Social and Legal Systems II

Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Germano SCHWARTZ, University of Lasalle, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 150.1 Marcelo MELLO, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil and Jose CALLEGARI, Programa de Pós-graduação em Sociologia e Direito, Brazil Procedural Narrative: Speech and Ruling 150.2 Marcos CATALAN, Professor no Mestrado em Direito e Sociedade do Unilasalle, Brazil La Fragmentación Del Derecho y El Deber De Reparar (o no) Daños Vinculados a La Concesión De Crédito a Sobreendeudados 150.3 Francisco BAEZ URBINA, Universidad de Playa Ancha, Chile La Destrucción De La Idea De Lo Colectivo y El Diseño Institucional Neoliberal: Fundamentos y Consecuencias De La Des-Colectivización En Chile. 150.4 David MCCALLUM, Victoria University, Australia Towards a ‘Science of Colour’: Health, Law, and Aboriginal Child Removal in Australia 150.5 Daniela CADEMARTORI, Unilasalle - Canoas (RS), Brazil and Sergio CADEMARTORI, Unilasalle - Canoas (RS), Brazil Dialogue on Democracy and the Environment from the Approaches Procedural and Substantial Democracy

10:45-12:15 JS-51 Women’s Migrant Worker : Have They Protected?

Committees: RC12 Sociology of Law (Host); RC32 Women in Society See Joint Session Details for JS-51.

16:00-17:30 152

Is There a “Quality of Justice” Standing Worldwide? Rights and Standards Across Cultural and National Borders

Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Luca VERZELLONI, Centro de Estudos Sociais (CES), Portugal and Daniela PIANA, University of Bologna, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 152.1 Helen HARTNELL, Golden Gate University, USA Assessing the Assessors: The World Justice Project’s “Rule of Law Index” 152.2 Christian MOUHANNA, Centre de recherches sociologiques sur le droit et les institutions penales (CESDIP), France and Benoit BASTARD, CNRS, France How Organization Transform Law- Sociological Thoughs on Judicial Work 152.3 Bartolomeo CAPPELLINA, Sciences Po Bordeaux, France From European Standard(s) to a European Space of Justice? Judicial Networks, Quality of Justice, and the EU. 152.4 Pablo CIOCCHINI, University of Liverpool, Singapore Quick and Dirty: Speeding up Criminal Procedures at the Cost of Defendants’ Rights 152.5 Rufat GULIYEV, Azerbaijanian Sociological Association, Azerbaijan The Role of the Court-Reforms in the Development of Modern Azerbaijan Society DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 152.6 Marcos MALISKA, Centro Universitario Autonomo do Brasil - UniBrasil, Brazil and Nataliia KYRYLIUK, Chernivtsi National University, Ukraine Eugen Ehrlich’s Notion about Justice and Concepts of Justice in Brazil and Ukraine

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Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

RC12

No. 153

Thursday 14 July

RC12 Thursday 14 July

154.4 Filip CYUNCZYK, University of Bialystok, Poland Law and Collective Memories after the Communism – Why the Post-Communist States Decided to Create Institutes of National Remembrance?

09:00-10:30 Location: Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

154.5 Alberto FEBBRAJO, UNIVERSITY OF MACERATA, Italy and Giancarlo CORSI, University of Modena-Reggio Emilia, Italy Sociology of Constitutions: A Paradoxical Perspective

Session Organizer: Rosemary AUCHMUTY, University of Reading, England

154.6 Jose Alberto DE MIRANDA, Unilasalle, Brazil Globalization, Law and Social Change in Latin America

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

154.7 Ralf ROGOWSKI, University of Warwick, United Kingdom Autopoietic Constitutional Courts

153 Sociology of Law

Program–Session Details

Legal Professions and Legal Education

153.1 Nancy MARDER, Chicago-Kent College of Law, USA In Their Own Words: Women Judges’ Reflections on Gender and Judging 153.2 Keiko SAWA, Kyoto Women’s University, Japan Gender Bias and Gender Diversity of Judiciary in Japan: What Makes It Difficult to Change 153.3 Heather ROBERTS, ANU College of Law, Australia From Oddities to Ordinary? the Legal Profession’s Changing Attitudes to Women Lawyers in Australia 153.4 Tobias EULE, University of Bern, Switzerland Law As Professional Field(s): Legal Education Between Narrow-Mindedness and Arbitrariness

10:45-12:15 154

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 154.8 Vikas JADHAV, JAWAHARLAL NEHRU UNIVERSITY, India Politics of Recognition and Its Intersection with Social Stigma - a Study of Construction of De-Notified Tribes in Post Colonial India

14:15-15:45 155

Legal Education and Legal Professions

Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Rosemary AUCHMUTY, University of Reading, England AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 155.1 Aryna DZMITRYIEVA, European University at St. Petersburg, Russia Legal Education in the Russian Federation

Social and Legal Systems I

Language: Spanish, English Location: Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Germano SCHWARTZ, University of Lasalle, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 154.1 Germano SCHWARTZ, University of Lasalle, Brazil and Renata COSTA, Unilasalle, Brazil Brazil, June One of 2013. a New Social Movement? 154.2 Ferdinando SPINA, University of Salento, Italy Legitimation of Jurisdiction in an Age of Disssent 154.3 Antonija PETRICUSIC, University of Zagreb, Croatia; Sinisa ZRINSCAK, Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb, Croatia and Ivana DOBROTIC, Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb, Croatia Interest Pressure Group and Legislation: Expansion of Veterans Welfare Legislation in Croatia

155.2 Olga KRELL, Federal University of Alagoas, Brazil Legal Education in Brazilian Public Schools and Its Impact on Social and Humanistic Training of Future Professionals 155.3 Chihara WATANABE, Ritsumeikan University, Japan Specialization and Stratification of Women Lawyers in Japan 155.4 Stefan MACHURA, Bangor University, United Kingdom The Prestige of German Lawyers 155.5 Sharyn ROACH ANLEU, Flinders University, Australia and Kathy MACK, Flinders Law School, Australia Judicial Performance and Emotion

16:00-17:30 156

RC12 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

134

www.isa-sociology.org

RC13 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Sociology of Leisure

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 The Meaning and Purpose of Leisure

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Karl SPRACKLEN, Leeds Beckett University, United Kingdom Co-Chair: Vicki HARMAN, Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 157.1 Robert STEBBINS, university of calgary, Canada Hedonism, Eudaimonia, and the Serious Leisure Perspective 157.2 Yoshitaka IWASAKI, University of Alberta, Canada Leisure and Meaning-Making: The Pursuit of a Meaningful Life through Leisure 157.3 Nai YANG, Chinese National Academy of Arts, China Rescue Our Kidnaped Leisure 157.4 Elias LE GRAND, Stockholm University, Sweden Conviviality and Belonging or Distinction and Exclusion? Neo-Tribal Leisure Practices in Contemporary Consumer Culture 157.5 Hiromi TANAKA, Meiji University, Japan and Saori ISHIDA, Meiji University, Japan The Meaning and Purpose of Leisure Activities of Manga/ Anime Fans Called “Fujoshi”: Contradictions and Ambivalences in Japanese Women’s Fan Community 157.6 Mira MALICK, Waseda University, Japan Good Craft, Bad Craft: Music, Leisure and Labour in Japan

158.2 Anju BENIWAL, Government Meera Girls College, India Leisure Time and Youth Well-Being 158.3 Zsuzsanna BENKO, University of Szeged, Juhász Gyula Faculty of Education, Hungary; Laszlo Lajos LIPPAI, Institute of Applied Health Sciences and Health Promotion, University of Szeged, Juhász Gyula Faculty of Education, Szeged, Hungary and Klara TARKO, University of Szeged, Hungary Programme-Based Lifestyle Counselling in Hungary – Network, Protocol and Training 158.4 Pranjal SARMA, Department of Sociology, Dibrugarh University, Assam, India, India Happiness, Well-Being, Health and Leisure: An Experience in Guijan Ghat, Tinsukia, Assam, India 158.5 Alcyane MARINHO, Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC), Brazil; Adriana Aparecida da Fonseca VISCARDI, Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC), Brazil; Daliana LECUONA, Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC), Brazil; Giandra Anceski BATAGLION, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (UFSC), Brazil; Jessica DIMON, Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC), Brazil; Juliana de Paula FIGUEIREDO, Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC), Brazil and Miraira Noal MANFROI, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (UFSC), Brazil Singing Group: Ludic As Part of Rehabilitation DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 158.6 Duru ARUN KUMAR, NSIT, DU, India and Garima GUPTA, IIIT Delhi, India Role of Technology in Leisure Activities Across Three Generations – an Exploratory Study

14:15-15:45 159

The Sociology of Video Gaming

Language: English, French Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Pascaline LORENTZ, Masaryk University, Czech Republic

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Co-Chair: Meredith NASH, University of Tasmania, Australia

157.7 Sanjay TEWARI, Indian Sociological Society, India Leisure through the Lenses of Sport in the Context of India

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

157.8 Robert BURNS, West Virginia University, USA; Arne ARNBERGER, Universität für Bodenkultur; Institut für Landschaftsentwicklung, Erholungs- und Naturschutzplanung, Austria; Jasmine MOREIRA, Ponta Grossa State University, Brazil and Eick VON RUSCHKOWSKI, Naturschutzbund Deutschland (NABU) e.V., Germany Anthropocentric Versus Bio-Centric Views of Parks and Protected Areas: A Comparison of Perspectives from Austria—Germany, Brazil and United States. 157.9 Season HO, Hong Kong Shue Yan University, Hong Kong To What Extent Can Nationalism Account for Resistance to Foreign Culture? a Comparative Study on the Penetration of the English Premier League in China and Japan

159.2 Tom BROCK, Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom and Renan PETERSEN-WAGNER, Coventry Unviersity, United Kingdom Man, Reflexivity and Gameplay: On Deriving a Sociology from Games 159.3 Tom BROCK, Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom Play As Craftsmanship in Computer Game Consumption: Towards a Sociology of Gaming As Craft Labour 159.4 Damian GALUSZKA, AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland The Parent-Child Relationship in the Light of Qualitative Research on the Role of Video Games in the Modern Family

10:45-12:15 158

159.1 Colin CREMIN, University of Auckland, New Zealand Exploring the Affective Dimensions of Videogame Play with Deleuze and Guattari: An Analysis of the Player’s Investments in Hegemonic Narratives

How to Become a Leisure Agent

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Klara TARKO, University of Szeged, Hungary

159.5 Vidushi VERMA, Delhi University, India The Sociology of VIDEO-Gaming: A Gamer’s Perspective

www.isa-sociology.org

135

Sociology of Leisure

Program Coordinator: Ishwar MODI, India International Institute of Social Sciences, India and Karl SPRACKLEN, Leeds Beckett University, United Kingdom

158.1 Raphaela STADLER, University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom and Allan JEPSON, University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom Festivals, Events and Family Well-Being – Short-Term Happiness, Long-Term Quality of Life?

RC13

Chair: Shintaro KONO, University of Alberta, Canada

RC13

157

No. 159

RC13

No. 160

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30 160

161.4 Frederike ESCHE, Free University Berlin, Germany Job Loss and Its Consequences on the Individual’s Subjective Well-Being: How Important Is Leisure?

Leisure, Community and Identity

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Maliga NAIDOO, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa Sociology of Leisure

RC13 Tuesday 12 July

Chair: Christianne GOMES, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, CNPq, FAPEMIG, Brazil, Brazil Co-Chair: Pirzada AMIN, Kashmir University, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 160.1 Randy BURTZ, Western Washington University, USA Organizational Cultural Competency and Leisure Delivery 160.2 Lindsay KALBFLEISCH, University of Waterloo, Canada; Steven MOCK, University of Waterloo, Canada and Margo HILBRECHT, University of Waterloo, Canada LGB Discrimination and Diminished Sense of Belonging: The Role of Community Leisure Facility Use As a Buffer 160.3 Alves ALVES, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Tania M.Freitas BARROS MACIEL, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Leisure: Pathways to Sustainability 160.4 Kanak Lata SAMAL, Ket’s V.G. Vaze College, India; Vatika SIBAL, St. Andrews College, Bandra, Mumbai, India and Geetha Mihir DUTTA, Groupon India Limited, India Leisure for Pleasure- Women from Mumbai Suburbs Earning Pleasure out of Their Leisure Time Activities. DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

161.5 Mark HAVITZ, University of Waterloo, Canada and Peter MORDEN, Concordia University, Canada Some Years Later – Perspectives on Diverse Worlds of Unemployed Adults: Consequences for Leisure, Lifestyle, and Well-Being 161.6 Lina GALVEZ, professor, Spain; Paula RODRIGUEZ, associate professor, Spain and Oriel SULLIVAN, Professor of Sociology of Gender, United Kingdom Unemployment and Free Time Patterns By Gender DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 161.7 Naina SHARMA, University of Rajasthan, India Relationship Between Leisure, Unemployment and Labour Force 161.8 Babita TEWARI, CSJM University, Kanpur City, India Affect of Unemployment on Leisure:a Study of Pregnant Women in Kanpur City 161.9 Pratima VERMA, higher education, India Traditional Leisure Activity V/S Occupation : Rural Women in India

10:45-12:15 162

Leisure, Liquidity and Virtuality - Ocio, Liquidez y Virtualidad

Language: English, Spanish

160.5 Ramon SPAAIJ, Victoria University, Australia Sport and Belonging in the Super-Diverse City

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

160.6 Misri Lal VERMA, VSSD (PG) College, CSJM University, Kanpur, India Traditional-Modern Continuum of Leisure in the RURAL India 160.7 Byung Sung LEE, Ph.D scholar, India Loss of Authenticity: A Case Study of Jeon-Ju Hanok Village(Korean Traditional House) in South Korea

Tuesday 12 July

Session Organizer: Christianne GOMES, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais / CNPQ / FAPEMIG, Brazil, Brazil Co-chairs: Mira MALICK, Waseda University, Japan and Richard JIMENEZ GUAMAN, National University of Colombia, Colombia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 162.1 Richard JIMENEZ GUAMAN, National University of Colombia, Colombia The Liquidity of Leisure Travel in Bogotá 162.2 Ahmed ELMEZENY, Technical University of Ilmenau, Germany and Jeffrey WIMMER, co-author, Germany Games without Borders: An International Look at Game Culture

09:00-10:30 Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

162.3 Tatiana GAVRILYUK, Tyumen State Oil and Gas University, Russia Hybrid Forms in Russian Cultural Space: Practices and Styles of «Neofolk» Movement

Session Organizer: Francis LOBO, Edith Cowan University, Australia

162.4 Spencer SWAIN, PhD Student, United Kingdom Khat Chewing and Dark Leisure

Chair: Rashmi JAIN, University of Rajasthan, India

162.5 Denise FALCAO, Postgraduao interdisciplinar em Estudos do Lazer/ UFMG - doctorado, Brazil Músicos Callejeros: La Liquidez Del Espacio-Tiempo Social En Un (sobre)Vivir Disfrutando y Disfrutar (sobre)Viviendo.

161

Leisure and Unemployment: Struggles for a Better World

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 161.1 Francis LOBO, Edith Cowan University, Australia Unemployment and Leisure: The Marienthal Legacy 161.2 Garima PAL, Kumaon university n symbiosis law school, India Unemployment a Social Menace: (A study conducted in Nainital ,Uttarakhand,India) 161.3 Margo HILBRECHT, University of Waterloo, Canada; Steven MOCK, University of Waterloo, Canada and Bryan SMALE, University of Waterloo, Canada Underemployment and Wellbeing Among Late Career Workers: What’s Leisure Got to Do with It?

162.6 Cesar CASTILHO, Paris-Sud University, France; Barbara EVRARD, Rouen University, France and Dominique CHARRIER, Paris-Sud University, France World Cup 2014: Brazilian Football Gentrification

14:15-15:45 163

The Environmental Implications of Leisure

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

136

www.isa-sociology.org

RC13 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

Co-Chair: Bhagwan S. BISHT, Department of Sociology, DSB Campus, Kumaun University, Nainital, Uttarakhand, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

163.2 Pirzada AMIN, Kashmir University, India Tourism and Development: Integrative Perspective in Kashmir Context 163.3 Sukant CHAUDHURY, Lucknow University, India Sociology of Leisure and Climate Change: Some Observations

165.2 Ye PING, Gannan Medical University, China; Zhang LIFANG, Gannan Medical University, China and Zeng XINHUA, Gannan Medical University, China On Leisure Education in Universities 165.3 Loredana TALLARITA, University Kore of Enna, Italy Sport and Luxury Leisure Services 165.4 Steven HENLE, Concordia University, Canada Experiential Educator at My Core DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

16:00-17:30 164

165.1 Pekka RASANEN, University of Turku, Finland; Aki KOIVULA, University of Turku, Finland and Arttu SAARINEN, University of Turku, Finland Associations Between Political Orientation and Attitudes Towards Leisure Activities

165.5 Gholamreza GHAFFARY, University of Tehran, Iran Linkage Between Leisure Time and Social Capital Among Iranian Youth

Leisure and/in the Cyberspace

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Gianna CAPPELLO, University of Palermo, Italy and Fabio Massimo LO VERDE, University of Palermo, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

165.6 Yuki TAJIMA, Doshisha University, Japan The Possibility of Japanese Idol Culture for the Regional Promotion

164.1 Nadina AYER, University of Waterloo, Canada and Ron MCCARVILLE, University of Waterloo, Canada Online Leisure Communities: The Case of Tennis Spectators

10:45-12:15

164.2 Jonathan HARTH, Universitat Witten/Herdecke, Germany The Advent of Massively Distributed Virtual Reality and Its Impact on Bodily Experiences and Identity Management

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

166

Leisure, Gender, Sexuality and the Body

Session Organizer: Antti HONKANEN, University of Eastern Finland, Finland

164.3 Fabio Massimo LO VERDE, University of Palermo, Italy To Have Fun for Sharing, to Share for Having Fun: Meanings and Practices of Leisure in Italy in a Time of Crisis

Chair: Smita AWACHAR, Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University, Aurangabad, India

164.4 Gianna CAPPELLO, Department of Cultures and Society - University of Palermo, Italy The Augmented Experience of Television “Watching” in the Web 2.0. a Marxist Critique

166.1 Basawaraj GULSHETTY, Chairman, International Institute of Social Science Reasearch Foundation, India Leisure and Wowens Political Leadership in Panchayatraj System of Karnataka:Acase Study of Bidar District.India

164.5 Elena PILIPETS, AAU Klagenfurt, Austria Seriality and/in Mediations of Leisure: On Netflix and Its Everyday Mobilities

166.2 Meredith NASH, University of Tasmania, Australia Gender on the Ropes: An Autoethnographic Account of Boxing in Tasmania, Australia

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

166.3 Aretha ASAKITIKPI, Southern Business School (SBS), South Africa Interrogating Gender, Sexuality and the Body through Selected Nigerian Musical Videos

164.6 Abbas FAGHIH KHORASANI, University of Tehran, Iran Leisure Time on Virtual World; A Battlefield to Create Virtual Capital 164.7 Tommaso BARBETTA, The University of Tokyo, Italy Problematizing Electronic Gambling

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 165

Let’s Talk about Who We Are: Envisioning Reflexive Global Leisure Scholarship

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Shintaro KONO, University of Alberta, Canada Co-Chair: Karl SPRACKLEN, Leeds Beckett University, United Kingdom

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

166.4 Shintaro KONO, University of Alberta, Canada Emotional Survival: A Drive for Boys’ Love Fans in Japan 166.5 Kazuma TAKEZAKI, University of Tsukuba, Japan Reviving Masculinity in Postwar Japan ¯ Emergent Bodybuilding Culture As a Form of Male Physical Culture ¯ 166.6 Vicki HARMAN, Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom Leading the Way? Male Ballroom and Latin American Dancers 166.7 Andrew SPIVAK, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA; Barbara BRENTS, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA; Christina PARREIRA, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA; Alessandra LANTI, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA; Olesya VENGER, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA and Jennifer WHITMER, St. Ambrose University, USA The Market for Sexual Leisure: Social and Attitudinal Deviance Among Customers of Legal Nevada Brothels and the Intersection of Leisure and Sexuality

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137

Sociology of Leisure

163.1 Munehiko ASAMIZU, Yamaguchi University, Japan Leisure and Environmental Education in Japan

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC13

Session Organizer: Lynne CIOCHETTO, College of Creative Arts, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand

No. 166

Sociology of Leisure

RC13

No. 167

Program–Session Details

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 166.8 Dilip KHAIRNAR, Deogiri College,Aurangabad(M.S.), India and Mansaram AUTADE, Deogiri College, Aurangabad, India “Leisure Pattern of RURAL and Urban Indian Housewives’ 166.9 Alice PACHER, Meiji University, Japan Sexless Couple Relationship of Modern Japan

Session Organizer: Ishwar MODI, India International Institute of Social Sciences, India Chair: Klara TARKO, University of Szeged, Hungary AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 167.1 Robert STEBBINS, University of Calgary, Canada Nonwork Obligation: Its (often troublesome) Place in the Study of Leisure 167.2 Christianne GOMES, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais / CNPQ / FAPEMIG, Brazil, Brazil Leisure in the Multi-Dimensional World of Existence: Limits and possibilities of women’s social status in contemporary Latin American films 167.3 Karl SPRACKLEN, Leeds Beckett University, United Kingdom Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Role of Leisure as a Map for a Better Future 167.4 Kenneth ROBERTS, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom How Leisure has become a Global Business. Is there an Alternative Future?

16:00-17:30

169.7 Petr GIBAS, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic At Home in the Garden: Urban Gardening As a Leisurely Activity, Homemaking Practice and Source of Health, Satisfaction, and Well-Being 169.8 Wolfram MANZENREITER, University of Vienna, Dept. of East Asian Studies, Austria Sport, Health and Subjective Wellbeing in Cross-National Comparison

10:45-12:15 170

Spirituality and Faith in and through Leisure

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Madhu NAGLA, M.D.University, India Chair: Anju BENIWAL, Government Meera Girls College, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 170.1 Pratap PINJANI, GOVT.COLLEGE, AJMER(RAJASTHAN) INDIA, India Defining Healing Aspect of Leisure through Spirituality 170.2 Rashmi JAIN, University of Rajasthan, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India, India ‘Knowing Oneself ‘ : A Case of Spiritual Tourism

170.4 Michael ELLIOTT, Towson University, USA The Religious Dimensions of Popular Culture: Experiencing the Sacred in the World of Comic-Con

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30 Happiness, Well-Being and Health

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Robert STEBBINS, University of Calgary, Canada Co-Chair: Lynne CIOCHETTO, College of Creative Arts, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 169.1 Francis LOBO, Edith Cowan University, Australia Leisure and Happiness: Strategies to Enhance Subjective Wellbeing 169.2 Yong Jay LEE, aSSIST, Seoul, South Korea Leisure Education Governance for Ageing Well: The Serious Leisure Perspective (SLP)

138

169.6 Nai YANG, Chinese National Academy of Arts, China Leisure and Happiness

170.3 Madhu NAGLA, Department of Sociology, M.D.University, Rohtak, India, India Leisure Providers and Consumers: A Case of Art of Living

RC13 Business Meeting

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

169

169.4 Mark CIESLIK, Northumbria University, United Kingdom ‘the Best of Times, the Worst of Times’: Making Sense of Young People’s Wellbeing?

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Leisure in the Multi-dimensional World of Existence. Presidential session

Location: Dachgeschoss (Juridicum)

168

169.3 Naina SHARMA, University of Rajasthan, India Role of Leisure Satisfaction in Health and Happiness

169.5 KoFan LEE, University of Mississippi, USA Internalizing Serious Leisure As a Means to Promote Well-Being

14:15-15:45 167

RC13 Thursday 14 July

170.5 Zuhal Yonca ODABAS, cankiri karatekin university, Turkey and Huseyin ODABAS, cankiri karatekin university, Turkey Celebration of Holy Ramadan: The Case of Turkey 170.6 Pranjal SARMA, Department of Sociology, Dibrugarh University, Assam, India, India Spirituality, Faith, Cultural Practices and Leisure: A Case Study of Azaan Pir’s (SAINT) Dargah(GRAVE), Saraguri Chapori, Assam, India 170.7 Sandhya CHAUDHURY, University of Lucknow, India Spirituality and Faith through Leisure: A Study of Two Cities in India DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 170.8 Sarit OKUN, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel Online Religious Communities: Spirituality and Faith through E-Leisure

www.isa-sociology.org

RC14 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture

Monday 11 July

172.1 Sarah LAGESON, Rutgers University-Newark, USA “Digital Punishment” in Online American Media 172.2 Ijung LIN, Osaka University of Economics, Japan The Television Policy about the Self-Control in Japan 172.3 Corinne DELMAS, University of Lille, CERAPS (UMR CNRS 8026), France Think Tanks and the French Political Game. 172.4 Petr KUBALA, Masaryk University, Faculty of Social Studies, Department of Sociology, Czech Republic “Intellectual Civil War”: Struggle for a Master Narrative in “Chomsky Affair” [email protected] 172.5 Igor PRUSA, The University of Tokyo, Japan Power, Corruption, and Media Scandal: The Case of Japan

09:00-10:30 Contemporary Communication Issues. Part A

Language: French, Spanish, English Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Luc BONNEVILLE, University of Ottawa, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

172.6 Margaret TALLY, State University of New York: Empire State College, USA Political Journalism in the Wake of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert: Assessing the Lasting Legacy of “the Daily Show” and “the Colbert Report” on American Culture

14:15-15:45 173

Pouvoirs Contemporains, Mises En Scène, Symbolismes Et Récits

171.1 Myrian SANTOS, UERJ, Brazil The Scandal of the Brazilian Medieval Prison System

Language: French

171.2 Paolo GIARDULLO, University of Padova, Italy and Federico NERESINI, University of Padua, Italy Medial and Political Agendas: Monitoring Issues, Assigning “Political Ownership”

Session Organizer: Christiana CONSTANTOPOULOU, Panteion University, Greece

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

171.3 Roy PANAGIOTOPOULOU, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Department of Communication and Media Studies, Greece Euroscepticism: Migration and the Challenge to European Solidarity

173.1 Christiana CONSTANTOPOULOU, Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, Greece and Laurence LAROCHELLE, University of Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris III, France Pouvoirs Contemporains, Mises En Scène, Symbolismes Et Récits : Introduction

171.4 Izabela KORBIEL, Vienna University, Austria and Katharine SARIKAKIS, Vienna University, Austria Governance of Content on Political Suicide in Times of Financial Crisis

173.2 Oksana LYCHKOVSKA, Odessa I.I. Mechnikov National University, Ukraine Pouvoirs Contemporains Et Deux Types Du Journalisme Dans L’espace Médiatique Et Politique Ukrainien

171.5 Natalia EROKHOVA, St.Tikhon’s Orthodox Humanitarian University, Russia International Information War: Reality or Irreality?

173.3 Daniela ROVENTA-FRUMUSANI, University of Bucharest, Romania Espace Public ET Vies Privees Sur Facebook Des Femmes Politiques Roumaines

171.6 Pasko BILIC, Institute for Development and International Relations, Croatia and Ivan BALABANIC, Catholic University Zagreb, Croatia New Media, Old Issues: Political Economy of Online News in Croatia

173.4 Luc BONNEVILLE, University of Ottawa, Canada Les Mises En Scène De La « Crise » à Travers Les Discours Publics Et Les Médias : Le Cas De La « Crise Décrétée » Des Services Publics Au Canada

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

171.7 Jorge CALLES-SANTILLANA, Benemerita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla, Mexico Ayotzinapa in the Mexican Press: Between a State Crime and a Mafia’s Grudge Match

173.5 Christiane WAGNER, Instituto de Artes - UNICAMP, Brazil Poïésis Entre La Raison Et La Sensibilité

16:00-17:30

10:45-12:15 172

Contemporary Power, Symbolisms and Narratives By the Media

174

Globalization, Communication and Social Transformation: Towards a Global Sociology of Communication

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Christiana CONSTANTOPOULOU, Panteion University, Greece

Session Organizer: Virendra Pal SINGH, University of Allahabad, India

www.isa-sociology.org

139

Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture

Program Coordinator: Christiana CONSTANTOPOULOU, Panteion University, Greece and Luc BONNEVILLE, Université d’Ottawa, Canada

RC14

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC14

171

No. 174

Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture

RC14

No. 175

Program–Session Details

ROUNDTABLES:

174.6 Sudeshna DEVI, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India News Channels and Democracy: A View from India

Roundtable A ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 174.1 Parvez Ahmad ABBASI, VNSG University, Surat, India Family and Social Media: A Study of Patterns of Interaction Among Family Members on Facebook 174.7 Abha CHAUHAN, University of Jammu, India Food Culture, Identity and Globalization: The Dogra Weddings of Jammu in Northwest India 174.5 Piya PONGSAPITAKSANTI, University of Nagasaki, Thailand Gender Roles in Television Commercials in Asia: A Comparison of Japan, Korea, China, Taiwan, Thailand, and Singapore 174.10 Padma RANI, School of communication, Manipal University, Manipal, Karnataka, India and VIJAYKUMAR, School of communication, Manipal University, Manipal,Karnataka, India Globalization ,Popular Culture,Consumer Culture : A Study of Bollywood FILMS 174.13 Manu GOURAHA, Vikram University, India; Jyoti UPADHYAY, Vikram University, India and Showkat KOKA, Government Degree College, Anantnag, India Impact of Television on Muslim Culture: Anantnag District in Question

174.9 Gustavo CORTES SUAZA, Pedagogical and Technological University of Colombia, Colombia; Maria Gabriela OCAZIONEZ, Research Group of sociocultural Studies, Colombia and Martha Isabel CORTES OCAZIONEZ, National University of Colombia, Colombia The Boom in Latin American Literature and the Beginnings of Globalization

Tuesday 12 July 10:45-12:15 175

Fiction of Worlds and Struggles/Fictions des Mondes et de Leurs Luttes

Language: English, French Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Olivier CHANTRAINE, Universite de Lille 3, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 175.1 Larisa FIALKOVA, The University of Haifa, Israel Railway Dystopian Motifs in Late Soviet and Post-Soviet Russian and Ukrainian Literature 175.2 Fiona NELSON, University of Calgary, Canada Dead Girls: In Fiction As in Life?

Roundtable B ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 174.4 Arvind CHAUHAN, Department of Sociology, Barkatullah University, Bhopal, (M.P), 462026, India, India Communicating through Internet in India: Some Formulations on Understanding Change 174.8 Ali Erdem AKGUL, Adnan Menderes University, Turkey Freedom or Safety, the Dilemma of Technology-Based Surveillance Systems in the Context of E-Government Applications: A Case Study of Citizens’ Perceptions on the Surveillance in Aydin– Turkey 174.3 Mireille MANGA, IRIC, Cameroon New Communication Technologies, Virtuality and Deterritorialised Public Spheres : How Delocalisation Affects National Identities. a Review of the Methodological Nationalism through an Analysis of the Global Political Participation 174.12 Elena CHANKOVA, Russian State Social University, Russia The Reflexivity of Modern Communication As a Factor of Socio-Cultural Changes

175.3 Maki SUZUKI, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Information Studies, The University of Tokyo, Japan Struggles for Social Status of Manga: The Analysis of Joint Works By the Manga-Artist Group in “Asahi Graph” in the 1930s. 175.4 Bernard CONVERT, CNRS, Université de lille, France and Lise DEMAILLY, Universite de Lille, CLERSE-CNRS, France Les Firmes Et Leur Management à Travers La Science Fiction /Science Fiction Stories of the Firm and Its Management 175.5 Yuko OBI, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Information Studies. The university of Tokyo, Japan The Iconoclastic Spirit of Literature and Art: The Case Study of the Street-Propaganda(gaitousenden) Performances in 1920s Japan. 175.6 Petr KUBALA, Masaryk University, Faculty of Social Studies, Department of Sociology, Czech Republic Avant-Garde Inscribed into a Space; A Space Inscribed in an Avant-Garde [email protected]

14:15-15:45 176

Roundtable C ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 174.2 Seema JAIN, Raghunath Girls Post Graduate College, Meerut-250 001 India, India Globalization, Media and Literature: An Enquiry into the Role of Media and Literary Institutions with Special Reference to English Language and Translation Practice 174.11 Evelyn HONEYWILL, Macquarie University, Australia Network Character: Social Character of the Network Society

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RC14 Tuesday 12 July

Media Activism, Emergent Journalism Practices, Participative Media and Struggles for Better Worlds.

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Olivier CHANTRAINE, Universite de Lille 3, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 176.1 Luiz Carlos MURAKAMI, universidade federal do ceara, Brazil; Israel CORDEIRO, universidade federal do ceará, Brazil; Stella MORIGUCHI, Universidade Federal de Uberlandia, Brazil and Hugo REINALDO, univeridade federal do ceará, Brazil The Hyperreality of the Trailers As a Communication Strategy: A Reflection on Simulation Approach

www.isa-sociology.org

RC14 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

176.4 Padma RANI, School of communication,Manipal University,Manipal,Karnataka, India A Study on Alternative MEDIA Promoting Intracultural Communication through News Websites 176.5 Alexander RUSER, Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen, Germany, Germany What to Think about Think Tanks - Towards a Conceptual Framework of Strategic Think Tank Behavior

16:00-17:30

178

Visibility and Social Orders. on the Construction of Boundaries and Knowledge in the Contemporary Technological Condition

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Boris TRAUE, Leuphana University Lueneburg, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 178.1 David HERBERT, Kingston University London, United Kingdom and Janna HANSEN, University of Agder, Norway Social Media and Multicultural City: A North European Comparison 178.2 Gianna CAPPELLO, Department of Cultures and Society - University of Palermo, Italy Digital Labour and the “Social” of Social Media. a Marxist Critique

JS-47 Expertise and Interests: For a Sociology

178.3 Babette KIRCHNER, Institute of Sociology, Germany The Visibility of (Gendered) Competence in Sport Climbing

Committees: RC18 Political Sociology (Host); RC14 Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture

178.4 Julia WUSTMANN, Technical University Dortmund, Germany To See Is to Believe? the Visibility of Aesthetic-Plastic Surgery As a New Mode of Communitarization

of Think Tanks

See Joint Session Details for JS-47.

178.5 Paula RESTREPO, Universidad de Antioquia, Colombia and Juan VALENCIA, Universidad Javeriana, Colombia Audiovisual Activists from the Heart of the World: Interculturality and Knowledge Otherwise

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 177

A Return to the People? Popular Democracies and/or Populism in the 2.0 Public Sphere

Language: French, English

178.6 Helena CHMIELEWSKA-SZLAJFER, Kozminski University, Poland Votes and Visibility on Social Media. the Case of Poland’s 2015 Surprising Presidential Elections

14:15-15:45

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Daniela ROVENTA-FRUMUSANI, Bucharest University, Romania and Adriana STEFANEL, University of Bucharest, Romania AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 177.1 Virag MOLNAR, The New School for Social Research, USA Civil Society and the Right-Wing Radicalization of the Public Sphere in Hungary 177.2 Karol FRANCZAK, University of Lodz, Poland Circulation of Knowledge in the Public Discourse – Between ‘popularization’ and ‘populization’ 177.3 Adriana STEFANEL, University of Bucharest, Romania The Rise of a New Populist: Monica Macovei’s 2.0 Electoral Campaign 177.4 Jo KATAMBWE, Universite du Quebec a Trois-Rivieres, Canada Le Néopopulisme Comme Pratique Sociomatérielle Organisée: Une Analyse De L’effet D’embrayage Des Médias Du Web 2.0. 177.5 Valeriya VASILKOVA, Saint Petersburg State University, Russia and Zinovyeva NADEZHDA, Saint Petersburg State University, Russia Internet Memes in Designing of New Meanings: Structural Transformations and Social Interpretations 177.6 Abbas FAGHIH KHORASANI, University of Tehran, Iran; Mohammad Reza JAVADI YEGANEH, University of Tehran, Iran and Mohammad TAVAKOL, University of Tehran, Iran The Increase in Human Capital through Sharing Images on Virtual Space

179

RC14 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

16:00-17:30 180

Are Mobility and Hybridization Possibilities for a Better World?

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Fiorenza GAMBA, University of Sassari, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 180.1 Indhu RAJAGOPAL, York University, Canada Nomads and Societies of Control: Role of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in a Global Refugee Crisis 180.2 Yury ASOCHAKOV, St.Petersburg State University, Russia Digital Liberation and Inequality: How New Is the New Digitalized World? 180.3 Delia DUMITRICA, Erasmus University, Netherlands Facebook’s Global Imaginary: The Symbolic Production of the World through Social Media 180.4 Andreas HUDELIST, Alpen-Adria-Universitat Klagenfurt, Austria and Matthias WIESER, Department of Media & Communications, Austria Mobilities and Representation. (un)Documented Migrants in Art

www.isa-sociology.org

141

Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture

176.3 Zanetta JANSEN, University of South Africa, South Africa Interrogating the Concept of ‘Citizens’ Media’: Do We Know All We Need to Know about It and Its Impact?

10:45-12:15

RC14

176.2 Ruth LEWIS, University of Northumbria, United Kingdom; Mike ROWE, University of Northumbria, United Kingdom and Clare WIPER, University of Northumbria, United Kingdom Feminist Online Activism: An Alternative Utopia or Same Old, Same Old?

No. 180

Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture

RC14

No. 181

Program–Session Details

180.5 Olga LOGUNOVA, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia Digital Literacy in Russian Regions Digital Literacy in Russian Regions Digital Literacy in Russian Regions 180.6 Wilson BEKESAS, ESPM-SP, Brazil and Renato MADER, ESPM-SP, Brazil Hybrid Cultural Consumption of Young Brazilians: Mechanisms of Cosmopolitan Encounters within Digital Media

10:45-12:15 JS-65 The Complex Discursivity of Global

Futures in the Making: Analyzing Transnational Orders of Discourse 1

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC14 Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture and WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-65.

Thursday 14 July

14:15-15:45

09:00-10:30

182

181

Contemporary Communication Issues. Part B

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Michael BLAIN, Boise State University, Sociology, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 181.1 Olivier CHANTRAINE, Universite de Lille 3, France French “Chrononym” “Spirit of January Eleven”, State Propaganda and Society 181.2 Joseph DEANGELIS, University of Idaho, USA and Brian WOLF, University of Idaho, USA Accountability, the War on Terror, and U.S. Police Criminal Intelligence Units 181.3 Joane SERRANO, UP Open University, Philippines and Sherry MARASIGAN, University of the Philippines Los Banos, Philippines Emerging Communication Technologies: Cutting Across Nation-State Boundaries 181.4 Abhas GANDA, Central University of Gujarat, India The POWER of Knowledge: A Threat in Making a Better WORLD 181.6 Elisa KLUGER, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil Think Tanks and Economic Policy Debate in the Brazilian 2014 Presidential Election DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 181.5 Pedro NAVARRO, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain Lobbying As a Systemic Social Force: An Analysis of Spanish Policymaking System.

142

RC14 Thursday 14 July

Aportaciones de la Investigación en Comunicación al Desarrollo Social

Language: Spanish Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jose A. RUIZ SAN ROMAN, Universidad Complutense Madrid, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 182.1 Maria Eugenia Sanchez Ramos SANCHEZ RAMOS, UNIVERSIDAD DE GUANAJUATO, Mexico and Diana del Consuelo CALDERA GONZALEZ, Universidad de Guanajuato, Mexico El Diseño De Plataformas Educativas Multimedia Para Comunidades Emergentes En México 182.2 Sonia URUBURU GILEDE, Universidad Santo Tomas, Colombia and Yaneth ORTIZ, Universidad Santo Tomas, Colombia Comunicación, Desarrollo y Participación: El Caso Del Grupo De Trabajo Intergeneracional Para La Transmisión De Los Saberes Tradicionales, Creado Por Las Abuelas Indígenas Ticuna De San Sebastián De Los Lagos-Amazonas-Colombia. 182.3 Sue ARAN-RAMSPOTT, Universidad Ramon Llull, Spain; Monica FIGUERAS, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain and Marcel MAURI, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain Ética 2.0. El Caso De Las Facultades De Comunicación En España 182.4 Leticia PORTO PEDROSA, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain Jóvenes, Emprendedores y Solidarios. Procesos De Participación y Comunicación a Partir De Un Estudio Cualitativo En La Comunidad De Madrid 182.5 Jose A. RUIZ SAN ROMAN, Universidad Complutense Madrid, Spain and ZhiYing LI, Universidad Complutense Madrid, Spain Estudio De Estrategias Persuasivas Para La Mejora De La Opinión Pública Sobre China

www.isa-sociology.org

RC14 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

183

183.4 Ana AZURMENDI, University of Navarra, Spain Audience’s Participation in Regional Televisions: An Essential, but Still to See, Element for the Gobernance of Public Tvs

Aportaciones de la Comunicación a los Procesos de Participación Social

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jose A. RUIZ SAN ROMAN, Universidad Complutense Madrid, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 183.1 Virginia LINARES RODRIGUEZ, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain and Paloma ABEJON MENDOZA, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain Las Claves De La Marca Obama: Organización y Comunicación 2.0

183.6 Violante MARTINEZ QUINTANA, UNED (National Education Distance University), Spain; Maria SANAGUSTINFONS, UNIVERSITY OF ZARAGOZA, Spain and Rocío BLANCO GREGORY, UNIVERSITY OF EXTREMADURA, Spain El Proyecto Europeo: Grail Project. análisis Sociológico De La Transferencia y Diseminación De Los Resultados.

183.2 David MORAL MARTIN, Universidad Rovira i Virgili, Spain and Ignasi BRUNET, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain Procesos De Participaci”N Y Formaci”N Profesional EN La Uni”N Europa. 183.3 Gema MEDERO, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain and Bernabe ALDEGUER CERDA, Universidad de Alicante, Spain Las Tic Como Herramienta De Comunicación y Participación Ciudadana En Los Partidos Políticos Españoles. Regeneración Democrática o Marketing Político?

183.7 Julianna Paola RAMIREZ LOZANO, Universidad de Lima, Peru La Responsabilidad Social En Las Empresas De Comunicación y El Impacto De Las Campañas Sociales En La Sociedad Peruana

NOTES

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ www.isa-sociology.org

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Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture

183.5 Ainara LARRONDO, UNIVERSITY OF THE BASQUE COUNTRY (UPV/EHU), Spain; Meso MESO, UNIVERSITY OF THE BASQUE COUNTRY (UPV/EHU), Spain and Irati AGIRREAZKUENAGA, University of the Basque Country (UPV/ EHU), Spain Oportunidades Para Un Nuevo Tipo De Diálogo Con Los Públicos De La Organización. análisis De La Adaptación De Las Organizaciones Políticas De ámbito Regional

Language: Spanish

RC14

16:00-17:30

No. 183

Sociology of Health

RC15

No. 184

Program–Session Details

12:30-14:00

RC15

JS-12 Aging, Health and Life Course:

Sociology of Health Program Coordinator: Guido GIARELLI, University ‘Magna Graecia’ - Catanzaro, Italy and Amelie QUESNEL-VALLEE, McGill University, Canada

Sunday 10 July

Theoretical Issues and Methodological Problems. Joint Special Session of the Global Health Sociology Network: ISA RC15, ESA RN16 and ESHMS

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health (Host); RC11 Sociology of Aging See Joint Session Details for JS-12.

14:15-15:45 JS-19 Drug Use and Local and Global Public

09:00-10:30 184

RC15 Sunday 10 July

On Social Plasticity: The Transformative Power of Pharmaceuticals on Health, Nature and Identity

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Johanne COLLIN, University of Montreal, Canada Chair: Philippe LE MOIGNE, INSERM, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 184.1 Johanne COLLIN, University of Montreal, Canada Social Plasticity and Pharmaceuticalisation 184.2 Caroline ROBITAILLE, Universite de Montreal, Canada Psychostimulants in the Digital Space: An Insight into Pharmaceuticalisation 184.3 Shirley HsiaoLi SUN, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Capitalizing on Being Othered: Genomic Medicine, Racial Identities and a Globalized Pharmaceutical Industry 184.4 Ikuko TOMOMATSU, Eagle Matrix Consulting Co. Ltd, Japan How Do Patients Construct Their Identities Under Medicalised and Pharmaceticalised Conditions?

Policies of Health: New Tensions, Complementation or Changes for Not Change?

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology (Host); RC49 Mental Health and Illness and RC15 Sociology of Health See Joint Session Details for JS-19.

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 JS-26 The Future Heath Workforce We Need:

Professions, Policy and Planning. Part I

Committees: RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups (Host); RC15 Sociology of Health See Joint Session Details for JS-26.

10:45-12:15 JS-31 The Future Heath Workforce We Need:

Professions, Policy and Planning. Part II

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health (Host); RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

See Joint Session Details for JS-31.

184.5 Brigida RISO, CIES-University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal Before Pharma: Transforming Samples into Bio-Objects

14:15-15:45

184.6 Maud ARNAL, EHESS, McGill - IRIS, EHESS, SSOM, France Le Traitement Médicamenteux Des Douleurs De L’accouchement, Une Boîte De Pandore ?

Committees: RC25 Language and Society (Host); RC15 Sociology of Health

184.7 Paulo MONTEIRO, Lisbon University Institute (ISCTEIUL), Portugal Proto-Medicalised Practices. the Role of Functional Foods.

16:00-17:30

Aging Society and New Welfare Policies

Committees: RC11 Sociology of Aging (Host); RC15 Sociology of Health See Joint Session Details for JS-9.

144

See Joint Session Details for JS-33.

185

10:45-12:15 JS-9

JS-33 Language on Health and Disease

Towards a Comparative Perspective on Citizens’ and Civil Society Organizations’ Participation in Healthcare

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Benjamin MARENT, University of Brighton, United Kingdom

www.isa-sociology.org

RC15 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

185.1 Pam CARTER, University of leicester, United Kingdom Participation, Involvement and Engagement – More Than a Question of Semantics

185.3 Guido GIARELLI, University ‘Magna Graecia’ Catanzaro, Italy The Challenge of Biological Citizenship and the Role of Civil Society Organizations: A Framework for the Analysis 185.4 Daniela ROJATZ, University of Vienna, Institute of Sociology, Austria and Rudolf FORSTER, University of Vienna, Institute of Sociology, Austria Opportunities and Tensions in Self-Help-Organizations As a Consequence of Participation Practices – Results from a Multiple Case Study in Austria 185.5 Julia FISCHER, University of Innsbruck, Austria and Hester M. BOVENKAMP, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands The Democratic Value of Citizens’ and Civil Society Organizations: A Comparative Study of Rare Disease Organizations and Their Representative Claims DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 185.6 Melanie GOISAUF, University of Vienna & Life Science Governance Institute, Austria; Johannes STARKBAUM, Department of Political Science, University of Vienna, Austria and Anna DURNOVA, University of Vienna & Life Science Governance Institute, Austria Engaging Consent: Exploring Public Participation and Informed Consent in Biobanking 185.7 Brigida RISO, CIES-University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal Good Citizens: Citizen’s Participation in Biomedical Research Biobanks

186.5 Monique CARON BOUCHARD, UQAM (Universite du Quebec), Canada Quest of Information on Health Issues through Social Networking on-Line and Off-Line, Among 18-34 Years Old.

10:45-12:15 187

Migration of Physicians and Nurses: Global Health (Non) Governance?

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Joana SOUSA RIBEIRO, Center for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, Portugal and Yuko HIRANO, Nagasaki University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 187.1 Susan BELL, Drexel University, USA Different Routes out, Different Routes in: Practicing Health after Arriving in the US 187.2 Gabriele VOGT, University of Hamburg, Germany Health-Caregivers on the Global Labor Market: A Comparative Study of Japan’s Economic Partnership Agreements and Germany’s Triple Win Program 187.3 Lesleyanne HAWTHORNE, University of Melbourne, Australia Factors Influencing Foreign Qualification Recognition for Migrant Health Professionals in Australia, Canada and New Zealand 187.4 Francesca SIRNA, CNRS, France Economic Crisis and International Mobility of European and Non-European Health Workers in the South-East of France: Citizenship and Gender

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 186

186.4 Benjamin MARENT, University of Brighton, United Kingdom; Mary DARKING, University of Brighton, United Kingdom and Flis HENWOOD, University of Brighton, United Kingdom Healthcare in the Society of the Internet: A Multi-Site Case Study of the Introduction of M-Health Technologies for HIV Care

E-Health (Electronic Health) and Informaticization of Medicine

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Gul SECKIN, University of North Texas, USA

187.5 Yoshichika KAWAGUCHI, University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan Reskilling Vietnamese Nurses Under the Japan-Vietnam Economic Partnership Agreement: An Analysis of Practice Examination of Japan’s National Board Examination for Nurses Given in Vietnamese Language

Chair: Cynthia CREADY, University of North Texas, USA

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

187.6 Susiana NUGRAHA, Jenderal A. Yani School of Health Science, Indonesia and Yuko HIRANO, Nagasaki University, Japan The Extent of Competency in Socio Cultural Adaptation in Maintaining Psychological Well-Being of Indonesian Migrant Nurses in Japan

186.1 Renata KOKANOVIC, Monash University, Australia; Kate JOHNSTON ATA’ATA, Monash University, Australia; Nicholas HILL, Monash University, Australia and Caroline HART, Monash University, Australia Personal Experiences of Health and Illness on the Internet: Dipex International Collaboration and Healthtalk Australia (healthtalkaustralia.org) 186.2 Dimitra PETRAKAKI, University of Sussex, United Kingdom and Eva HILBERG, university of sussex, United Kingdom The Power of Information Technology: Governing Patients through Technology

187.7 Yuko HIRANO, Nagasaki University, Japan and Kunio TSUBOTA, Meiji University, Japan Socio-Economic Implications of Japanese Hospitals Accepting Foreign Nurses Under Bilateral Agreements: Analysis of the Cognitive Burdens of the Hospitals

www.isa-sociology.org

145

Sociology of Health

185.2 Flis HENWOOD, University of Brighton, United Kingdom; Mary DARKING, University of Brighton, United Kingdom and Benjamin MARENT, University of Brighton, United Kingdom Participation in Mhealth Evaluation: The Case of a Smartphone App for HIV Patients

186.3 Katarzyna ABRAMCZUK, University of Warsaw, Poland The Lay Users’ Evaluations of Credibility of Medical Information on the Web

RC15

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

No. 187

RC15

No. 188

Program–Session Details

Wednesday 13 July

14:15-15:45 188

Constrained Choice and Health Disparities

09:00-10:30

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Sociology of Health

RC15 Wednesday 13 July

Session Organizers: Chloe BIRD, RAND, USA and Patricia RIEKER, Boston University, USA Chair: Patricia RIEKER, Boston University, USA

190

Exploring the Nexus of Health, Religion/ Spirituality and Healing

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

Co-Chair: Chloe BIRD, Pardee RAND Graduate School, USA

Session Organizer: Alex ASAKITIKPI, Monash South Africa, South Africa

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

188.1 Jen’nan READ, Duke University, USA Constrained Choices: Migrant Workers’ Access to Care in Qatar 188.2 Michael VUOLO, The Ohio State University, USA; Joy KADOWAKI, Purdue University, USA and Brian C. KELLY, Purdue University, USA A Multilevel Test of Constrained Choices Theory: The Case of Tobacco Clean Air Restrictions 188.3 Patricia RIEKER, Boston University, USA Constrained Choice, Race, Gender and Health: The Divergent Pathways of Twins 188.4 Sigrun OLAFSDOTTIR, Boston University, USA The Freedom of Making a Choice: How Social Policies Shape the Possibilities for Healthy Lives and Positive Health Outcomes Across 32 Nations 188.5 Chloe BIRD, Pardee RAND Graduate School, USA and Allen FREMONT, RAND, USA Constrained Choice: Gender Bias and Quality of Routine Care for Cardiovascular Disease DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 188.6 Paula FEDER-BUBIS, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel and Lea HAGOEL, Department of Community Medicine and Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Technion, Israel Lifestyle Routine in the Structure/Agency Dynamics: Health Behaviors Enabled or Constrained, Cancer Screening As an Example 188.7 Angela MOE, Western Michigan University, USA and Catherine KOTHARI, Western Michigan University, USA Constrained Choice, Perinatal Health, and Intimate Partner Victimization (IPV)

16:00-17:30 189

RC15 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

190.1 Vincenzo GIORGINO, University of Torino, Italy Beyond the Divisive Approach in Sociology of Health. an Introduction to an Enactive Perspective in Health and Well-Being. 190.2 Sandra SULZER, Xavier University of Louisiana, USA; Lindsey HAYNES-MASLOW, Union of Concerned Scientists, USA and Christine SMITH, Xavier University of Louisiana, USA Linking Faith and Complementary Therapies in Cancer Care for African-Americans 190.3 Lorena NUNEZ, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa; Peter KANKONDE, African Center for Migration and Society- Wits, South Africa and Melekias ZULU, African Centre for Migration and Society - Wits, South Africa Migration, Insecurity, and the Steaming Body: Healing Rituals in Johannesburg 190.4 Anahi VILADRICH, Queens College & The Graduate Center, City University of New York, USA Botanicas Unplugged: Latinos’ Religious Healing and the Impact of the Immigrant Continuum 190.5 Aretha ASAKITIKPI, Southern Business School (SBS), South Africa An Analysis of Online Testimonies of Healing and Cure By Members of Nigerian Based Religious Bodies 190.6 Ojo Melvin AGUNBIADE, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa and Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria, Nigeria and Funmilayo AFOLABI, Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria Elderly Abuse and Stigma Avoidance through Religious Involvement Among Elderly People in a Yoruba Community, Southwest Nigeria 190.7 Damilola OYEWOLE, Nottingham Trent University, United Kingdom The Role of Culture and Health Beliefs in Diabetes SelfManagement Among Black African Community in the UK DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 190.8 Alex ASAKITIKPI, Monash South Africa, South Africa Complementary and Alternative Medicines: Towards a Holistic Healthcare System in Africa

10:45-12:15 191

Gender, Health and Migration in Transnational Context. Rights, Policies, Accessibility

Language: English, French Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Lia LOMBARDI, University of Milan, Italy and Mara TOGNETTI, University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 191.1 Simeng WANG, Ecole Normale Superieure, France Les Troubles Genrés De La Vie Psychique : L’exemple Des Migrant(e)s Chinois(es) En Région Parisienne

146

www.isa-sociology.org

RC15 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

191.4 Lesleyanne HAWTHORNE, University of Melbourne, Australia The Impact of Employer Preference on Migrant Health Professionals’ Labour Market Integration - Key Trends in Australia, Canada and New Zealand 191.5 Anna MORERO BELTRÁN, Departament de Sociologia i An� lisi de les Organitzacions, USA and Ana BALLESTEROS PENA, University of Barcelona, Spain Sexual and Reproductive Health of Immigrant Women in Catalonia: Consequences of the Application of the Royal Law Decree 16/2012 for Sanitary Regulation DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 191.6 Lia LOMBARDI, University of Milan, Italy Health and Well-Being of Immigrant People in Lombardy. Lifestyles and Economic Crisis

192

RC15 Roundtable session 2

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Claus WENDT, University of Siegen, Germany ROUNDTABLES:

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 192.14 Karen WILLIS, Australian Catholic University, Australia; Fran COLLYER, The University of Sydney, Australia; Sophie LEWIS, University of Sydney, Australia; Ian FLAHERTY, University of Sydney, Australia; Jonathan GABE, Royal Holloway, University of London, United Kingdom and Michael CALNAN, University of Kent, United Kingdom Navigating Healthcare in a Public/Private System – the Inequalities of Choice 192.12 Anat KLIN, Western Galilee Academic College, Bar-Ilan University, Israel and Yovav ESHET, Zefat Academic College, Israel Press in the Service of the Pharmaceutical Industry: Medication Coverage in Israeli Online Newspapers 192.16 Alejandra SAUCEDO TAPIA, Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico Stratified Access to Health Systems: The Case of “Bolsa Familia” (Brazil) and “Oportunidades”(Mexico) Programs. 192.3 Lindsey RICHARDSON, Department of Sociology, University of British Columbia, Canada Welfare and Health Care Systems at Cross-Purposes: Interactions Between Institutional Capacity and Institutional Design As Impediments to Reducing Social Inequalities in Health 192.9 Dani FILC, Department of Politics and Government BenGurion University, Israel Welfare Regime, Ethno-Class and Inequalities in Health: The Israeli Case 192.6 Monica BUDOWSKI, University of Fribourg, Switzerland and William VERA, Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaiso, Chile Wellbeing, Health, and Welfare Regime: A Qualitative Analysis of Dealing with Health Problems Temuco, Chile and San Jose, Costa Rica.

Roundtable A Roundtable C

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 192.11 Rira SONG, Chung-Ang university, South Korea and Min-Ah LEE, Chung-Ang University, South Korea Childhood Abuse and Depressive Symptoms in Adulthood: The Mediating Effects of Personality Traits 192.7 Saeko KIKUZAWA, Hosei University, Japan; Bernice PESCOSOLIDO, Indiana University, USA; Mami KIRITANI, The University of Tokyo, Japan; Tomoko MATOBA, Toyo University, Japan; Chikako YAMAKI, National Cancer Center, Japan; Katsumi SUGIYAMA, Aomori University of Health and Welfare, Japan and Toshihiko YAMAZAKI, Nihon Fukushi University, Japan Cultural Constraints for Mental Health Care in Japan: Patterns and Correlates

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 192.10 Catarina DELAUNAY, CICS.NOVA - Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences, Portugal Between Secret and Public Exposure through Patients’ Organisations: The Double Moral Injunction of Infertile Couples Using Medically Assisted Procreation with a ThirdParty Donor 192.13 Ijlal NAQVI, Singapore Management University, Singapore and Federico ROSSI, National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), Argentina Comparative Dynamics of State-Society Relations for Health Provision in Argentina, Pakistan and Singapore

192.5 Anthony AJAYI, University of Fort Hare, South Africa; Wilson AKPAN, University of Fort Hare, South Africa and Oladele Vincent ADENIYI, Cecilia Makiwane Hospital, South Africa Maternal Outcomes in the Context of Free Maternal Healthcare: Perception and Realities in Nigeria

192.4 Lenka FORMANKOVA, Institute of Sociology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic; Eva HEJZLAROVA, Institute of Public Policy Prague, Czech Republic and Anna DURNOVA, University of Vienna, Austria Empowerment through Intimacy: The Case of Czech Homebirth Controversy

192.1 Marine AL DAHDAH, Paris Descartes University (CEPED, UPD-IRD), France Mhealth and Maternal Care: A Winning Combination for Healthcare in the Developing World ?

192.8 Thurid EGGERS, University of Hamburg, Germany Moving Towards Participatory Senior Care. Explaining Cross-National Differences in the Participatory Rights of Senior Care Recipients

192.15 Neil SMALL, University of Bradford, United Kingdom Shifting Social Solidarities and Genetic Risk in Communities Where Cousin Marriage Is Commonplace.

192.2 Mauro SERAPIONI, Centre for Social Studies, Portugal and Ana Raquel MATOS, Centre for Social Studies, Portugal The Challenge of Citizens’ Participation in Southern European Health Systems

192.17 Koichi MIKAMI, Science, Technology and Innovation Studies, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom Under the Umbrella?: A Socio-Historical Analysis of Umbrella Organisations for Rare Diseases

www.isa-sociology.org

147

Sociology of Health

191.3 Marie-Jo BOURDIN, Centre F. Minkowska, France Santé Mentale, Migration, Et Violences Faites Aux Femmes: L’accompagnement Psycho-Social Des Femmes Excisées Au Centre Françoise Minkowska (Paris)

Roundtable B

RC15

191.2 Yolanda GONZALEZ-RABAGO, University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Spain; Unai MARTIN, University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Spain; Luisa N. BORRELL, Lehman College, CUNY, Department of Health Sciences, USA and Elena RODRIGUEZ, University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Spain Inequalities in induced abortion according to birthplace and educational attainment in a Southern European region (Basque Country)

No. 192

RC15

No. 193

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45 193

RC15 Roundtable session 1

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

Sociology of Health

Session Organizer: Peter KRIWY, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany Chair: Peter KRIWY, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany ROUNDTABLES:

Roundtable A ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 193.1 Reinhard SCHUNCK, Bielefeld University, Germany Boundaries and Health: Perceived Discrimination and Health Inequalities Between Immigrants and NonImmigrants in Europe. 193.6 Carol BOYER, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, USA and Virginia TANGEL, Weill Cornell Medical College, USA Cross-National Public Support for Mental Health Policies: The Influence of Stigma, National Culture and Political Landscape 193.11 Amy CLAIR, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Housing As a Social Determinant of Health: Its Impact on Health Inequalities Across Europe

193.18 Angel R ZAPATA MOYA, Centre for Urban Political Sociology and Policies. Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Sevilla (CSPL-UPO), Spain and Piet BRACKE, Health and Demographic Research. Ghent University (Hedera-UGent), Belgium Towards to Better Understanding the Persistent Association Between SES and Health: The Intersections Between Fundamental Cause, Diffusion of Innovations and Cultural-Health Capital Theories 193.10 Cholnapa ANUKUL, ๋Center of Just Society Network, Thailand Welfare State Is Not Enough: Health Care Disparities of Homeless People and Informal Workers in Thailand

Roundtable D ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 193.7 Ivaylo VASSILEV, University of Southampton, United Kingdom; David CULLIFORD, University of Southampton, United Kingdom and Rosanna ORLANDO, University of Southampton, United Kingdom Enabling Social Networks a Response to Constrained Individual Agency Approaches to Long Term Condition Management Under Neo-Liberalism 193.4 Cosmina Elena POP, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romanian Academy, Romania Health and Health Choices of People Living in Precarious Prosperity in Romania 193.13 Fabio LUCCHINI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy Problem Gambling and Social Stratification in Italy

Roundtable B ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 193.3 Nisha MANANDHAR, B P Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Nepal; Paras K POKHAREL, B P Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Nepal; Surya Raj NIRAULA, B P Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Nepal; Rubina RAI, B P Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Nepal and Suman B SINGH, B P Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Nepal Factors Associated with Choice of Home, Public or Private Sector Delivery in Eastern Nepal 193.8 Suwatin MIHARTI, University of Groningen, Netherlands; Ronald HOLZHACKER, University of Groningen, Netherlands and Bart LOS, University of Groningen, Netherlands Organizational and Regional Determinants of Health Care Organizations’ Efficiency: The Case of Infant Mortality and Community Health Centres in Indonesia 193.17 Mario SANTOS, University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal Raising the Issue of Inequality: Comparing Home Birth Policies and Practices in Portugal and Denmark 193.14 Victoria DUDINA, St. Petersburg State University, Russia Subjective Inequality, Social Cohesion and Political Reforms: An Example of Russia

Roundtable C ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 193.12 Siddharth AGARWAL, Urban Health Resource Centre, India; Shrey GOEL, UC Berkeley Blum Center Global Poverty, USA and Neeraj VERMA, Urban Health Resource Centre, Indore, India, India Identifying and Reducing Social Inequalities in Health: Community Informed Qualitative Adaptation of Who’s Urban Health Assessment and Response Tool with Focus on Action 193.5 Premananda BHARATI, Indian Statistical Institute, India and Susmita BHARATI, Indian Statistical Institute, India Socio-Economic Background of Households and Health Status of Pre-School Children in India

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RC15 Wednesday 13 July

193.19 Jens HOEBEL, Robert Koch Institute, Germany; Lars E. KROLL, Robert Koch Institute, Germany; Jonas D. FINGER, Robert Koch Institute, Germany and Thomas LAMPERT, Robert Koch Institute, Germany Widening Educational Inequalities in Smoking and Physical Inactivity Among Adults in Germany Between 2003 and 2012

Roundtable E ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 193.2 Lynda SIFER-RIVIÈRE, Centre of sciences, medicine, health, mental health and society, France Elderly People with Cancer and “Young People” with Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders: Social Issues and Challenges of Two Recently Identified Target Population in Western Societies. 193.16 Kate O’LOUGHLIN, The University of Sydney, Australia; Sue YEANDLE, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom; Janet FAST, University of Alberta, Canada and Judith PHILLIPS, Swansea University, United Kingdom Older Workers and Caregiving in a Global Context: A Theoretical Analysis of Pressures Towards Convergence and Differentiation 193.20 Erwin STOLZ, Medical University of Graz, Austria Socio-Economic Inequalities in Health Deficit Accumulation in Old Age. Cross-National Evidence from Growth Curve Models Using Share Panel Data (2004-2013) from 10 European Countries 193.9 Karl KRAJIC, University of Vienna, Department of Sociology, Austria; Viktoria QUEHENBERGER, University of Vienna, Department of Sociology, Austria and Martin CICHOCKI, FORBA - Working Life Research Center, Austria Transforming Residential Aged Care into a Health Promoting Setting? Results from a Follow up Study on the Austrian Pilot Project “Health Has No Age” 193.15 Alan MORRIS, Institute for Public Policy and Governance, University of Technology Sydney, Australia ‘I Really Have Thought This Can’t Go on’: Housing Tenure and the Health of Older Australians Dependent on the Age Pension

www.isa-sociology.org

RC15 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

JS-57 Health Inequalities in Comparative

195

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

Perspective

Session Organizer: Justin DENNEY, Rice University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30 194

Families and Health: An Emphasis on Same Sex Families

Missing in Action? Sociological Analysis and the Provision of Public/Private Healthcare

195.1 Debra UMBERSON, University of Texas at Austin, USA; Corinne RECZEK, Ohio State University, USA; Rhiannon KROEGER, Louisiana State University, USA; Rachel DONNELLY, University of Texas at Austin, USA and Brandon ROBINSON, University of Texas at Austin, USA Stress and the Provision of Social Support in Gay, Lesbian, and Heterosexual Marriages

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

195.2 Bridget GORMAN, Rice University, USA Does Sexual Orientation Complicate the Relationship Between Marital Status and Self-Rated Health?

Session Organizers: Fran COLLYER, The University of Sydney, Australia and Karen WILLIS, Australian Catholic University, Australia

195.3 Nicole CIVETTINI, Winona State University, USA Same-Sex Marriage, General Health, and Health-Risk Behaviors in the U.S.

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 194.1 Fran COLLYER, The University of Sydney, Australia and Karen WILLIS, Australian Catholic University, Australia Missing in Action? Sociological Analysis and the Provision of Public/Private Healthcare 194.2 Dani FILC, Department of Politics and Government BenGurion University, Israel and Nadav DAVIDOVICH, Department of Health Systems’ Management Ben-Gurion University, Israel Commodification of Health Under Neoliberalism: A Comparison of the Israeli and the Spanish Cases 194.3 Anne ROGERS, University of Southampton, United Kingdom How the Market Influences Formal and Patient Systems of Support for Long Term Condition Management: Stakeholder Accounts of Commonalities and Differences Across Six European Countries 194.4 Vid CALOVSKI, University of Kent, United Kingdom The Growing ‘Blurred Lines’ of Health Care Provision in the English NHS DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

195.4 Kathryn ALMACK, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Navigating Personal Networks: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Older People’s Networks of Support Towards the End of Life 195.5 Joao FERREIRA DA SILVA, Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil; Keika INOUYE, Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil; Sofia Cristina PAVARINI, Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil and Fabiana de Souza ORLANDI, Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil HOPE and Quality of Life of Aging People WHO Have a Relationship with Same Sex People in Brazil DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 195.6 Ruth NENGNEILHING, Women Studies and Research Centre, Rajiv Gandhi University, India and Saleem MIR, Cluster Innovation Centre, India Sociological Analysis of Maternal Healthcare in Madhya Pradesh India

16:00-17:30

194.5 Monica FREITAS, Faculty of Social Science, Nova University of Lisbon, Portugal; Maria Joao SANTOS, High Institute of Economics and Management, University of Lisbon, Portugal and Rui SANTOS, Faculty of Social Science and Humanities, Nova University of Lisbon, Portugal Social Responsibility and Hospitals: An Overview about Values, Programs and Networks of Partnerships

196

194.6 Ryozo MATSUDA, Ritsumeikan Univesity, Japan Exploring a Public/Private Nexus of Health Care Provision: Ideas, Regulatory Frameworks, and Adaptability

Chair: Nicola GALE, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom

194.7 Gulin KAYHAN, Waseda University, Graduate School of Asia Pacific Studies, Japan Neoliberalism and Work Ethos: The Transformation of Primary Health Care in Turkey

10:45-12:15 JS-64 Welfare States and Health Care Systems: In Search for Solutions to Social Inequalities in Health

Integrating Complementary and Alternative Medicine in Healthcare

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Michael SAKS, University Campus Suffolk, United Kingdom; Nelson BARROS, Associated Professor, Brazil and Nicola GALE, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 196.1 Simeng WANG, Ecole Normale Superieure, France Chinese Migrants and Their Medicine in France (1976-2015) : Circulation of Knowledge in a Globalizad World 196.2 Bianca RODRIGUES, Unicamp, Brazil; Marcia Cristina OLIVEIRA, Unicamp, Brazil; Edmundo GRABALLOS JR, Unicamp, Brazil; Marlon BEISIEGEL, Unicamp, Brazil and Nelson BARROS, Associated Professor, Brazil The Positive Directions of the Complementary and Alternative Medicine Offer to the Managers of Primary Healthcare Services in Brazil

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health (Host); RC19 Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy See Joint Session Details for JS-64.

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149

Sociology of Health

See Joint Session Details for JS-57.

RC15

16:00-17:30

No. 196

Sociology of Health

RC15

No. 196

Program–Session Details

196.3 Joana ALMEIDA, School of Law, Criminology and Sociology, Royal Holloway, University of London, United Kingdom and Assaf GIVATI, School of Health Sciences & Social Work, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom The ‘Localised’ Dimension of Professionalisation: A Comparative Analysis of Acupuncture and Homeopathy in the UK and Portugal

RC15 Thursday 14 July

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 196.7 Jerome DEBONS, University of Fribourg, Switzerland Integrating CAM in General Practice: A Case-Study on Homeopath Physicians

196.4 Betina FREIDIN, CONICET and University of Buenos Aires, Argentina Medical Doctors Practicing CAM in Buenos Aires: Taking Advantage of Market Opportunities and Carving out Niches of Integration into the Health System 196.5 Linda LOMBI, Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Italy and Davide GALESI, University of Trento, Italy Consumption of Conventional and Non-Conventional Medicines in an Italian Province: Between SocioDemographic Factors and Health Beliefs

196.8 Pamela SIEGEL, State University of Campinas, Brazil and Nelson BARROS, Associated Professor, Brazil Cancer Patients Perceptions on CAM and Their Physical, Emotional, Social and Spiritual NEEDS 196.9 Daniela RISAFI DE PONTES, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg; Ebramec, Brazil Acupuncture in Brazil - an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity under pressure

196.6 Jae-Mahn SHIM, University of Seoul, South Korea The Institutionalization of Traditional East Asian Medicine in Three East Asian Countries

NOTES

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150

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RC16 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

199

Sociological Theory

Monday 11 July

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Chair: Stephen KEMP, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 199.1 Sam HAN, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Response and Responsibility in the Post-Human Present: Teilhard De Chardin As New Materialist 199.2 Rudi LAERMANS, Centre for Sociological Research, University of Leuven, Belgium Ontology or ‘Virtuology’? On the Nature of the Social

09:00-10:30 Methodological and Philosophical Foundations of the Theory of Action

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Victor LIDZ, Drexel University College of Medicine, USA and Helmut STAUBMANN, University of Innsbruck, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 197.1 Davorka MATIC, University of Zagreb, Croatia Sociology in 21st Century: Value-Detached Science or Morally Inspired Search for Just Society? 197.2 Ezgi BAGDADIOGLU, University of Campinas, Brazil Cognitive Rationality As a Cultural Issue Versus One-Linear Evolutionary Approach 197.3 Dilbar ALIEVA, Institute of Sociology of the Slovak Academy of Science, Slovakia Theory of Action: Post-Parsonian Development 197.4 Jiri SUBRT, Charles University, Czech Republic The Theory of Action and the Problem of Homo Duplex DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 197.5 Simon SUSEN, City University London, United Kingdom The Sociological Challenge of Reflexivity in Bourdieusian Thought

199.3 Emanuele LEONARDI, Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, Portugal Biopolitics As Method 199.4 Christianus VAN KOPPEN, Wageningen University, Netherlands The Ontological Turn in Sociology and the Concept of Lifeworld: A Critical Reappraisal DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 199.5 Jorge GALINDO, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Cuajimalpa, Mexico The Social Reduction of Contingency. Outline of a Social Theory

16:00-17:30 200

RC16 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 201

10:45-12:15 198

New Ontologies and the Theoretical Heritage

Filling the Gap(s). Turn 1: The Potential of Diversity for the Future of Sociological Theory

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

Ontologies of Time and HumanNonhuman Relations

Session Organizers: Dominik BALDIN, Technical University of Munich, Germany and Laura DOBUSCH, MPI for Social Law and Social Policy, Germany

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Luigi PELLIZZONI, University of Trieste, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Chair: Dominik BALDIN, Technische Universitat Munchen, Germany

198.1 Lisa ADKINS, University of Newcastle, Australia Speculative Futures in the Time of Debt

Co-Chair: Fabian KARSCH, Technische Universitat Munchen, Germany

198.2 Tommaso BARBETTA, The University of Tokyo, Italy A Posthumanist Approach to Electronic Gambling

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

198.3 Rebecca COLEMAN, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom Temporalities and the Ontological Turn: Futurity and Potentiality in Amazon’s System of Speculative Shipping 198.4 Aristeidis PANAGIOTOU, HAEF, Greece The Human/Non-Human Imbalance in Science and Technology Studies: From Anathema to Exegesis. DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 198.5 Nildson ALVARES MUNIZ, Independent Researcher, Brazil Albert Einstein’s Enigma of Relative Space- Time:a Sociological Approach

201.1 Michael NOLLERT, University of Fribourg, Switzerland Does Diversity Enrich or Jeopardize Society?: A Critical Answer to an Oversimplified Question 201.2 Laura DOBUSCH, MPI for Social Law and Social Policy, Germany Sociological Relevance of the Diversity Concept(s)? for a More Careful Debate 201.3 Paolo BOCCAGNI, University of Trento, Italy New Wine in New Wineskins? the Emergence of Superdiversity and Its Mixed Potential for Theory, Policy and Research

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151

Sociological Theory

Program Coordinator: Patrick BAERT, Cambridge University, United Kingdom and Agnes KU, Hong Kong University, Hong Kong

RC16

14:15-15:45

RC16

197

No. 201

Sociological Theory

RC16

No. 202

Program–Session Details

RC16 Wednesday 13 July

201.4 Minako KONNO, Tokyo Woman’s Christian University, Japan “Reasonable Pluralism”: A Concept of Diversity for a Free and Just Society

16:00-17:30

201.5 Giovanni PICKER, European University Viadrina, Germany Racial Inequalities in Continental European Cities: Expanding Diversity

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

201.6 Yvonne KUHNKE, Technische Universitat Munchen, Germany Intersecting (Dis)Ability Studies and Racism Research – Potential for Mutual Learning 201.7 Aldon MORRIS, Northwestern University, USA W. E. B. Du Bois: Erasure from Classical Sociological Theory

10:45-12:15 202

Session Organizer: Christopher SCHLEMBACH, University of Vienna, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 204.1 Tomohiro UOZUMI, The University of Tokyo, Japan Intrinsic Crisis of Democracy: Fromm’s Authoritarian Personality Theory Revisit 204.2 Uta GERHARDT, Heidelberg University, Germany The Hidden Political Agenda of Talcott Parsons’s The Structure of Social Action

Wednesday 13 July

Chair: Christianus VAN KOPPEN, Wageningen University, Netherlands AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 202.1 Thomas LEMKE, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany Political Ontologies. Perspectives and Problems of New Materialist Scholarship 202.2 Luigi PELLIZZONI, University of Trieste, Italy Speeding up, Slowing Down: On the Critical Limits of Nondualist Ontologies 202.3 Marcelo ROSA, University of Brasilia, Brazil The Ontological Politics in the Theories of the South 202.4 Ingmar LIPPERT, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark Erroneous Realities: Criticising Ontological Achievements DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 202.5 Tiago PIRES MARQUES, Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, Portugal Life Ongoing. Shades and Blows of the Real in the Lives of Persons with Mental Illness

14:15-15:45 Ontologies of Difference and Identity

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building) Chair: Lisa ADKINS, University of Newcastle, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 203.1 Sofia ABOIM, University of Lisbon, Portugal Identity Politics or the Politics of Identity? Strategic Essentialisms and the Imaginaries of Disembodied Communities 203.2 Wendy BOTTERO, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Ontology and the Subjectivities of Inequality 203.3 Cheng-Heng CHANG, National Taiwan University, Taiwan The Emergence of Rhizomatous Community: Toward an Ontological Turn in Community Studies 203.4 Ilya KATERNY, MGIMO-University, Russia Morphogenesis of Neo-Social Relations: Normative Dimensions of Trans-Mobility and Mixed Communications DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 203.5 Lee THORPE, The New School for Social Research, USA The Ontology of Lgbtq People of Color

152

Re-Thinking Democracy 1: The Hidden Political Agenda of Modern Sociology

204.3 Andreas HESS, University College Dublin, Ireland Totalitarianism and Collective Memory

Materialities and Politics

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

203

204

09:00-10:30 205

Morality and Freedom

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Mariolina GRAZIOSI, University of Milan, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 205.1 Thomas CAMPBELL, University of Leed, United Kingdom and Mark DAVIS, University of Leed, United Kingdom Freedom and Morality in Indebted Societies 205.2 Augusto DE VENANZI, Indiana University -Purdue University Fort Wayne, USA Corruption and Cheating As the Tragedy of Modern Culture 205.3 Daria LUCKA, Jagiellonian University, Institute of Sociology, Poland The Moral Revival of Communities: Possibilities and Problems. the Communitarian Approach 205.4 Mariolina GRAZIOSI, Università  Degli Studi di MilanoStatale, Italy Morality and Freedom in Contemporary Society: Crisis of Values and a New Idea of Freedom 205.5 Maxim KUPOVYKH, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands The Return of “Moral Progress”? a Proposal 205.6 Yoshihiko SHIRATORI, Kobe University, Japan Morality and Individualism - Suggestion Form Durkheim’s Theory

10:45-12:15 206

Global Sociology and the Strong Program in Cultural Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Nelson ARTEAGA, FLACSO, Mexico and Carlo TOGNATO, National University of Colombia, Colombia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 206.1 Javier ARZUAGA MAGNONI, Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Mexico, Mexico and Nelson ARTEAGA, FLACSO, Mexico, Mexico Between Liturgy and Performance: A Dispute over the Symbolic Space in Mexico.

www.isa-sociology.org

RC16 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

206.3 Gemma PUIG LATORRE, FLACSO Mexico, Mexico Exploring How the Platform for People Affected By Mortgages Is Building a Civil Discourse

206.5 Miguel MALO, Fundación Arturo Rosenblueth para el Avance de la Ciencia, Mexico and Ligia TAVERA FENOLLOSA, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Mexico The Strong Program in Cultural Sociology and Social Movement Theory: Reflections from Latin America

208.5 Svetlana BANKOVSKAYA, National Research UniversityHigher School of Sociology, Russia Living in-Between: The Ontological Turn Via Other-StrangerMarginal Nexus 208.6 Yu-cheng LIU, Nanhua Univesity, Taiwan Analytical Sociology and Ethnomethodology: Social Ontology Reconsidered in the Cases of Secrecy and Routineness

10:45-12:15 209

Theoretical Contours of Global Social Change

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

14:15-15:45

Session Organizer: Zohreh BAYATRIZI, University of Alberta, Canada

207

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Rethinking Youth: Brics Perspectives, Conceptualizations, and Theories

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Tom DWYER, University of Campinas, Brazil and Guangjin CHEN, Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 207.1 Mokong Simon MAPADIMENG, University of Limpopo, South Africa Youth Theory in South Africa – an Indigenous African Perspective 207.2 Kiran ODHAV, North West University, South Africa and Nyna AMIN, University of Kwazulu Natal, South Africa Theorizing the History of Youth and Being Young in South Africa DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 207.3 Tom DWYER, University of Campinas, Brazil Confidence, Social Linkages, Power, Inequalities and Fear in a World in Rapid Transformation – a Brazil-China Dialogue

Thursday 14 July

Sociological Theory

206.4 Fernando CASTANOS, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico Forms of Representation As Socio-Discursive Formations: The Case of Mexican Democracy Deficits

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

209.1 Marcos GONZALEZ HERNANDO, Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom The Fluctuating Relationship Between Sociology and Politics in Chilean History (1950-2011) 209.2 Philipp RHEIN, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen, Germany Global Fields and the Global Social Structure 209.3 Kresimir ZAZAR, University of Zagreb, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Croatia The Search for an Adequate Denominator of the Current Social World: Theoretical Considerations of Providing Conceptual Labels to Contemporary Societies 209.4 Virendra Pal SINGH, Centre for Globalization and Development Studies, IIDS, University of Allahabad=211002, India Glocalization: Conceptual and Methodological Issues DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 209.5 Kokichi SHOJI, University of Tokyo, Japan Proposing a Global Sociology Based on Japanese Types of Theories

16:00-17:30

09:00-10:30

210

208

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

Expanding (On) the Ontological Turn

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Luigi PELLIZZONI, University of Trieste, Italy Chair: Ingmar LIPPERT, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 208.1 Till JANSEN, University of Witten/Herdecke, Germany Beyond the Ontology of the Ontological Turn 208.2 Stephen KEMP, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom Puzzling about Realism and Contradiction in the Ontological Turn 208.3 Paul KOTZE, University of the Free State, South Africa Against Wrong Turns and Dead Ends: Ensuring That the Ontological Turn Is Indeed a Turn to the Real 208.4 Gilles VERPRAET, University Paris OUest Nanterre, France and Shin-Ock CHANG, JEJU National University, South Korea Limits of Ontologies Constructing Sustainable Development

Re-Thinking Democracy 2

Chair: Uta GERHARDT, Heidelberg University, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 210.1 Ingeborg HELLING, Independent Writer, Germany Social Theories and Methodology in the 1930s and 1940s in Austria and the US: The Case of Felix Kaufmann 210.2 Yukichi HONJI, Univerity of Tokyo, Japan Family As an Elementary Unit of the Nation-State: Crisis of Democracy and Founders of Sociology in 1930s Japan 210.3 Christopher SCHLEMBACH, University of Vienna, Austria The Du-Problem and the Modern Democratic Kosmion 210.4 Marek SKOVAJSA, Charles University Prague, Czech Republic Was There a Third Way? H. O. Ziegler’s Quest for an Alternative to National Democracy and the Total State

www.isa-sociology.org

RC16

206.2 Zeinab SHUKER, University of California-Riverside, USA Oil, Polity, and Civil Society: The Construction of the Hegemonic Apparatus in Iraq

No. 210

153

Sociology of Organization

RC17

No. 211

Program–Session Details

10:45-12:15

RC17

212

Sociology of Organization Program Coordinator: Robert VAN KRIEKEN, University of Sydney, Australia and Kathia SERRANO-VELARDE, Heidelberg University, Germany

14:15-15:45

Location: Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Leopold RINGEL, University of Bonn, Germany; Georg REISCHAUER, Hertie School of Governance, Germany and Petra HILLER, Nordhausen University of Applied Sciences, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

212.2 Nils BRUNSSON, Uppsala University, Sweden Organization Among Organizations

JS-21 Professional Occupations and Organizations. Part I

Committees: RC17 Sociology of Organization (Host); RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups See Joint Session Details for JS-21.

212.3 Juha TUUNAINEN, University of Oulu, Finland and Kari KANTASALMI, University of Helsinki, Finland Hybridization of University and Its Societal Environment: Reflections on the Triple Helix Model and Ways Forward 212.4 Renate E. MEYER, WU Wien, Austria Organizational Boundaries Revisited

Monday 11 July

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 Advances in Organization Theory

Location: Seminar 31 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Dean PIERIDES, University of Manchester, United Kingdom and John HASSARD, University of Manchester, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 211.1 Stewart CLEGG, University of Technology Sydney, Australia and Danielle LOGUE, University of Technology Sydney, Australia Social Organization, Classificatory Analogies and Logics: Institutional Theory Revisits Mary Douglas 211.2 Piotr PROKOPOWICZ, Jagiellonian University, Poland Nobody Needs Sociology of Organizations. On the Dwindling Impact of Sociological Reflection on Organizational Theory and Practice. 211.3 Frank MEIER, University of Bremen, Germany and Uli MEYER, Technical University of Berlin, Germany What’s the Problem with Complexity 211.4 Cristina BESIO, Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg, Germany and Michael GROTHE-HAMMER, Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg, Germany From Micro to Meso to Macro and Back: A SystemsTheoretical Framework for Understanding the Relation Between New Organizational Forms (NOFs) and Society 211.5 Sven KETTE, University of Lucerne, Switzerland Neglected Money. How to Grasp the Organizational Problem of Money Supply?

154

Increasing Permeability of Organizational Boundaries?

212.1 Maja APELT, Univeristy of Potsdam, Germany Permeable Boundaries Between German Federal Police and Airport Operating Company?

Sunday 10 July

211

RC17 Sunday 10 July

212.5 Janosch BAUMANN, University of Kassel, Germany; Christian SCHNEIJDERBERG, University of Kassel, Germany; Georg KRUCKEN, University of Kassel, Germany and Isabel STEINHARDT, INCHER Kassel, Germany Dynamic and Regulated: About the Permeability of University Boundaries Via the Governance of Studying and Teaching 212.6 Andre ARMBRUSTER, Helmut Schmidt University, Germany; Cristina BESIO, Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg, Germany and Uli MEYER, Technical University of Berlin, Germany Religious Universities Between Gaining Legitimacy and Maintaining Identity 212.7 Michael GROTHE-HAMMER, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany The Non-Addressable Meta-Organization and Its Contribution to High Reliability 212.8 Frauke MOERIKE, Heidelberg University, Germany Blurred Boundaries? System/Environment Interactions in a Multinational Consulting Firm in Mumbai/India

14:15-15:45 JS-34 Professional Occupations and Organizations. Part II

Committees: RC17 Sociology of Organization (Host); RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups See Joint Session Details for JS-34.

www.isa-sociology.org

RC17 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

Tuesday 12 July

215

Celebrity and Organizations

Location: Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

Session Organizers: Uli MEYER, Technical University of Berlin, Germany; Cornelius SCHUBERT, Universität Siegen, Germany; Arnold WINDELER, TU Berlin, Germany and Robert JUNGMANN, TU Berlin, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 213.1 Malte DOEHNE, LMU Munich, Germany Market Structure and the Unintended Consequences of Quality-Related Innovations: The Use of Screwcaps on German Wines 213.2 Patricia GRAF, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany; Heike JACOBSEN, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany and Franziska BLAZEJEWSKI, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany From Digitalization to “Disruption”? Service Networks in the German Energy Sector 213.3 Dennis ZUEV, CIES-ISCTE, Portugal The “Bads” and “Goods” of E-Bike Mobility Development in China DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 213.4 Petr MEZIHORAK, Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University, Czech Republic Shared Services Implementation and Its Impact on Employees

Session Organizer: Robert VAN KRIEKEN, University of Sydney, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 215.1 Olivier DRIESSENS, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Digital Media and the Reshaping of Power Structures, Public/Private Boundaries and Intimacy in Celebrity Culture 215.2 Georg FRANCK, Vienna University of Technology, Austria Vanity Fairs Competition in the Service of Self-Esteem. on Modern Science and Post-Modern Media Culture 215.3 Tristan MAY, EMLYON Business School, France While My Guitar Gently Weeps: Iconic Guitarists and Their Organizational Turnaround 215.4 Tracy Xavia KARNER, University of Houston, USA Constructing Status and Reputation: Celebrated Leaders By Their Own Design

16:00-17:30 216

Location: Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 217

10:45-12:15 The Global Financial Class: Global Class Formation at the Juncture of Organizations, Places and Markets

Location: Seminar 31 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Lukas HOFSTAETTER, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 214.1 Lukas HOFSTAETTER, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany and Sighard NECKEL, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany Researching the Global Financial Class 214.2 Conny PETZOLD, Goethe-Universitat Frankfurt, Germany; Verena SCZECH, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, Germany and Marco HOHMANN, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, Germany Global Cities and the Financial Class 214.3 Norbert EBERT, Macquarie University, Australia Global Financialization: Class and Precarity

RC17 Business Meeting

Organizing at a Global Level: Contributions from Ethnography

Location: Seminar 31 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Damian O’DOHERTY, University of Manchester, United Kingdom and John HASSARD, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Chair: Eileen M. OTIS, University of Oregon, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 217.1 Deniz SEEBACHER, University of Vienna, Austria “Project to Become a UN Case Study”. Myth and Excitement in the Creation of the Global Idea of CSR 217.2 Irene SKOVGAARD-SMITH, Anglia Ruskin University, United Kingdom Globalization Writ Small: Ethnographic Fieldwork in Multicultural Social Spaces 217.3 Frauke MOERIKE, Heidelberg University, Germany Multi-Sited Ethnographic Fieldwork in Complex Organizations: On the Quest for the “Employees’ Points of View” Across Three Offices of a Multinational Consulting Firm in Mumbai/India

214.4 Natalia BESEDOVSKY, University of Bremen, Germany and Sebastian BOTZEM, University of Bremen, Germany The Changing Face of the Global Financial Elite a Relational Perspective on Power Configurations in Transnational Finance 214.5 Karen DOUGLAS, Sam Houston State University, USA and Gideon SJOBERG, University of Texas at Austin, USA Corporations, the Managerial Elite and Social Stratification

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155

Sociology of Organization

The Unintended Consequences of Innovation. Organizational Dilemmas in Innovation Societies

Location: Seminar 31 (Juridicum)

214

RC17

14:15-15:45

09:00-10:30 213

No. 217

RC17

No. 218

Program–Session Details

10:45-12:15 218

218.4 Evelyn MOSER, University of Bonn, Forum Internationale Wissenschaft, Germany and Anna SKRIPCHENKO, University of Bonn, Germany Endangered Legitimacy: Survival Strategies of Russian NonGovernmental Organizations Under the “Foreign Agents” Law

How Responsible Are Nonprofits? Investigating the Relation Between Nonprofits and Their Stakeholders

Location: Seminar 31 (Juridicum) Sociology of Organization

RC17 Wednesday 13 July

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Session Organizers: Kathia SERRANO-VELARDE, Heidelberg University, Germany; Cristina BESIO, Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg, Germany and Uli MEYER, Technical University of Berlin, Germany

218.5 Hanna LAITINEN, Humak University of Applied Sciences / University of Jyvaskyla, Finland Finnish National Level Youth Organizations and Legitimacy

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 218.1 Sven KETTE, University of Lucerne, Switzerland Are Customers the Better Donators? Financing Dilemmas of Non-Profit-Organizations 218.2 Marta HERRERO, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom Cultural Foundations and Luxury Brands: The Case of Brand Philanthropy 218.3 Liesbet HEYSE, University of Groningen, Netherlands and Fernando NIETO MORALES, El Colegio de México, Mexico Mission Impossible? Meeting Donor Demands and Beneficiary Needs in Nongovernmental Humanitarian Aid Projects

218.6 Miqueli MICHETTI, Fundacao Getulio Vargas - Escola de Administracao de Empresas de Sao Paulo - FGV, Brazil Nonprofit Organizations of Culture in Contemporary Brazil: Ambiguous Relations with the State and Adjacency to Founding Companies 218.7 Christine KELLY, University of Ottawa, Canada Towards Crip Futures: Non-Profit Disability and Health Organizations in Ottawa, Canada 218.8 Clemens STRIEBING, Heidelberg University, Germany and Sarah FORSTER, Hertie School of Governance, Germany The Transparency of Philanthropic Foundations

NOTES

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www.isa-sociology.org

RC18 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

Political Sociology

Sunday 10 July 09:00-10:30 Elites, the Poor and the Welfare State in Unequal Democracies

Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); RC18 Political Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-2.

219.10 Giuseppe REALE, University of Catania, Italy and Davide ARCIDIACONO, University “Sacro Cuore” of Milan, Italy The Open Data Challenge: Data Disclosure Between Citizen Empowerment and Digital Economy

10:45-12:15 JS-30 Economic Inequality, Distributive

Preferences and Political Outcomes. Part I

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology (Host); RC18 Political Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-30.

Monday 11 July 219

219.9 Daniel MIRANDA, P. Catholic University of Chile, Chile Youth Citizenship Participation: An Empirical Test of a Conceptual Model

Citizenship: Dynamics of Choice, Duties and Participation

Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Jurate IMBRASAITE, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania Discussant: Markus HADLER, University of Graz, Austria

14:15-15:45 220

Futures and Pasts in the Future of Political Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Robert M. FISHMAN, Carlos III University in Madrid, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 219.1 Jennifer BRICHZIN, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany Democratic Citizenship: Beyond Payer’s Privilege and Nation’s Unity 219.2 Markus HADLER, Macquarie University, Australia and Anaid FLESKEN, University of Bristol, United Kingdom The Ideal Compatriot’ – the Influence of Global Ideas, Elite Discourse, and Changing National Contexts on Individuals’ Perceptions of the Ideal Citizen

220.1 John R. HALL, University of California, Davis, USA Phenomenology of the Future: The Politics of Time, Institutions, and Collective Action 220.2 John MARKOFF, University of Pittsburgh, USA Visions of Past and Future in the Past, Present, and Future (if any) of Democracy 220.3 Ann MISCHE, University of Notre Dame, USA Futures in Contention: Projective Deliberation and Transformative Politics in the Global Arena.

219.3 Maya HADAR, University of Konstanz, Germany Social Identification and Group Performance: The Effect of Different War Outcomes on National Pride, the Sense of Belonging and the Sense of Community Among Citizens

Tuesday 12 July

219.4 Sarah KUMNIG, Department of Political Science, University of Vienna, Austria and Andreas EXNER, Department of Political Science, University of Vienna, Austria Urban Gardening and Collective Agriculture in Vienna Citizen Partizipation As Neoliberal Strategy?

221

219.5 Chantal MAGNIN, Institut fuer Sozialforschung, Germany Transformation of Citizenship? Direct Participation within Urban Planning Projects DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 219.6 Anna RADIUKIEWICZ, Institute of Political Studies ot the PAS, Poland Meanings of Civic Activity By Polish Activists 219.7 Derek MCGHEE, University of Southampton, United Kingdom From Privileged to Thwarted Stakeholders - Polish Migrants’ Perceptions of the Scottish Independence Referendum 2014 and the UK General Election in 2015.

09:00-10:30 Is Political Inequality Rising, Falling or Staying the Same?

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Joshua DUBROW, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 221.1 Ricardo COSTA DE OLIVEIRA, Universidade Federal do Paraná, Brazil Political Families in Brazil and India. Social Structure and Hereditary Power 221.2 Joanna KONIECZNA-SALAMATIN, University of Warsaw, Institute of Sociology, Poland and Kateryna PRYSHCHEPA, Polish Academy of Sciences, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Poland The Efficiency of Patronage Networks in Post-Maidan Ukraine

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157

Political Sociology

Program Coordinator: Laurence MOREL, University of Lille/Sciences po Paris (CEVIPOF), France

RC18

219.8 Cibele RIZEK, Studies on Right of Citizenship Center (CENEDIC - USP), Brazil Brazilian Popular Organizations and Associations in Housing Policy: From Social Movements to Social Policy Tools

RC18

JS-2

No. 221

Political Sociology

RC18

No. 222

Program–Session Details

221.3 Rene VALDIVIEZO-SANDOVAL, Benemerita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla, Mexico and Rene VALDIVIEZO-ISSA, Benemerita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla, ICGDE, Mexico Mexico: Political and Economic Inequality in the States

RC18 Wednesday 13 July

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30

10:45-12:15

224

222

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

Parties As Membership Organizations : A Longitudinal Perspective

The Political Consequences of Precarious Employment

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Session Organizer: Giedo JANSEN, University of Twente, Netherlands

Session Organizer: Giulia SANDRI, Université Catholique de Lille, France

Chair: Giedo JANSEN, University of Twente, Netherlands

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 222.1 Giulia SANDRI, Universite Catholique de Lille, France and Antonella SEDDONE, Université Catholique de Lille, France New Leaders, New Members? the Impact of Party Leadership Renewal on Party Membership 222.2 Tim SPIER, University of Siegen, Germany Trends and Cycles. the Dynamics of Party Membership in the Multi-Level System of Germany, 1991-2015 222.3 Pedro J. FLORIANO RIBEIRO, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom and Luis LOCATELLI, Federal University of Sao Carlos, Brazil Party Membership in Brazil: Age and Polity Size in a Longitudinal Perspective (1980-2014) 222.4 Ofer KENIG, Ashkelon Academic College, Israel and Gideon RAHAT, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel Does the Adoption of Inclusive Selectorates Influence Party Membership? 222.5 Sorina SOARE, University of Florence, Italy and Alexandra IONASCU, University of Bucharest, Romania Shaping New Parties’ Legitimacy: Members and Organization in Post-Accession Countries. Insights from Hungary and Romania

224.1 Paul MARX, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark Occupational Unemployment and Party Choice 224.2 Amy HEALY, Maynooth University, NUIM, Ireland and Sean O RIAIN, Maynooth University, Ireland Predicting Welfare Attitudes By Precarity of Work Regime Using the European Social Survey and the European Working Conditions Survey 224.3 Peter ROBERT, Institute for Political Science, Centre for Social Sciences, HAS, Budapest, Hungary Institutional Trust and Political Involvement in Comparative Perspective. the Variation in the Impact of Precarious Employment 224.4 Giedo JANSEN, University of Twente, Netherlands Neither “Petty Bourgeois” Nor “Outsiders”: SelfEmployment Heterogeneity and Political Alignments

10:45-12:15 225

The Right in the Southern Cone: Power Dynamics within Political Parties in Brazil, Chile and Argentina

Language: French, Spanish

14:15-15:45 223

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

The Regulation and Funding of Political Parties in Comparative Perspective

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Piero IGNAZI, University of Bologna, Italy and Eugenio PIZZIMENTI, University of Pisa, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 223.1 Giulia SANDRI, Universite Catholique de Lille, France and Felix VON NOSTITZ, University of Exeter, United Kingdom The Regulation of Political Participation Across Party Organizations 223.2 Daniela R. PICCIO, Università degli Studi di Torino, Italy On the Coherence of Political Finance Regulation 223.3 Piero IGNAZI, University of Bologna, Italy; Eugenio PIZZIMENTI, University of Pisa, Italy and Francesca FEO, University of Bologna, Italy Party Finance and Party Membership in Europe

Session Organizer: Stephanie ALENDA, Universidad Andrés Bello, Santiago de Chile, Chile AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 225.1 Adriano CODATO, Université Fédérale du Paraná, Brazil; Fabia BERLATTO, Université Fédérale du Paraná, Brazil; Pedro Rodolfo BODE DE MORAES, Université Fédérale du Paraná, Brazil and Jacques DE MAILLARD, Université de Versailles-Saint-Quentin, France Idéologies Politiques, Recrutement Politique Et Sécurité Publique : Une étude Des Agents De La Sécurité Publique Au Brésil 225.2 Andrea GARTENLAUB, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales Universidad de Chile, Chile and Stephanie ALENDA, Universidad Andres Bello, Santiago de Chile, Chile How Do Think Tanks Matter? Assessing the Impact of Study Centers on the Reshaping of Chilean Political Right

14:15-15:45 226

16:00-17:30

Transnational Social Movements and European Democratization

JS-47 Expertise and Interests: For a Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

Committees: RC18 Political Sociology (Host); RC14 Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture

Session Organizers: Paul BLOKKER, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic and Ondrej CISAR, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic

of Think Tanks

See Joint Session Details for JS-47.

158

www.isa-sociology.org

RC18 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

226.1 Katharina CREPAZ, Max Planck Institute for Social Law and Social Policy and Technische Universitat Munchen, Germany “Bottom-up” Europeanization and Transnational Civil Society Collaboration: Examples from the Refugee Crisis

226.3 Alexander KUTEYNIKOV, St. Petersburg State University, Russia How “Genuine Democracy” of the Council of Europe Influences Political Institutions of the European States 226.4 Paul BLOKKER, Charles University, Czech Republic A Sociology of Constitutional Claims-Making: Transnational Movements and the Re-Imagination of the Common 226.5 Renata MUSTAFINA, Ecole Normale Superieure, France Ethnographying the Juridicization of Protests in Russia: Assistance to Resistance?

16:00-17:30 227

14:15-15:45 229

Political Sociology and the War on Terror. Part I

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Michael BLAIN, Boise State University, Sociology, USA Discussant: Joseph DEANGELIS, University of Idaho, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 229.1 Dimitri PRANDNER, University of Salzburg / University of Linz, Austria Ever-Changing Political Narratives? the War on Terror As Carrier for Political Debate in the USA and Austria from 2001 to 2011. 229.2 Eran SHOR, McGill University, Canada Counterterrorist Legislation and Subsequent Terrorism: Does It Work? 229.3 Paulina SWIATEK-MLYNARSKA, Institute of Sociology, Warsaw University, Poland The Advantages of Isolation: War on Terror and European Refugee Debate

RC18 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

Thursday 14 July

16:00-17:30

09:00-10:30

230

228

Political Sociology

226.2 Susanne PERNICKA, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria and Julia HOFMANN, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria The Role of Transnational Trade Union Action for European Integration

228.4 Dola BORKATAKI, K.K. Handiqui State Open University, India Commercialisation of Land and Resources, Land Alienation and Issues of Identity: A Study of the Tiwa Tribe of Assam

The Poli-Tics/Tricks of Development and the Plight of Marginal Communities in the 21st Century South Asia

Political Sociology and the War on Terror. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Angeline KEARNS BLAIN, Boise State University, USA

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

Discussant: Michael BLAIN, Boise State University, Sociology, USA

Session Organizers: Julia GUENTHER, University of Vienna, Austria and Eswarappa KASI, National Institute of Rural Development, India

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 228.1 Ngamjahao KIPGEN, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, India Dams, Indigenous Peoples and Resistance: An Exploration through the Case of Manipur, India 228.2 tamil Selvan ELUMALAI, Department of Anthropology, University of Madras, India The Irula Tribes of Nilgris: Anthropology of Development 228.3 Julia GUENTHER, University of Vienna, Austria Postcolonialism, Hegemony, Gender and Development: A Much Discussed Discourse or a Failed Path?

RC18

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

No. 230

230.1 Deniz GOKALP, American University in Dubai, United Arab Emirates Regime Change in the Name of Freedom and Democracy: Neo-Liberal State-Building and Colonialism Reloaded in Iraq 230.2 Ghaleb ATTRACHE, University of California Berkeley, USA Atheism, Moral Panics, and Struggle in the Religious Field in Post-July 2013 Egypt 230.3 Mohammad Hossein PANAHI, Professor of Sociology, Allameh Tabataba’i University, Iran and Nima SHOJAEI BAGHINI, PhD Candidate in Political Sociology, Allameh Tabatabae’i University, Iran Islam, State, War on Terror and Democracy in the Middle East

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159

Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy

RC19

No. 231

Program–Session Details

232.4 Andrea GALLELLI, University of Bologna, Italy; Silvia CATALDI, University of Cagliari, Italy and Gennaro IORIO, University of Salerno - Department of Political Social and Communication Sciences, Italy Agape in Action: Overabound in Social Life.

RC19

Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Program Coordinator: Bjorn HVINDEN, NOVA, Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway and Hildegard THEOBALD, University of Vechta, Germany

Sunday 10 July

233

Changing Care Diamonds in Europe and Asia: Is Europe Becoming Asia?

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Open Session III

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Rune HALVORSEN, Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 231.1 Jasmijn SLOOTJES, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands; Saskia KEUZENKAMP, Movisie - Netherlands Centre for Social Development, Netherlands and Sawitri SAHARSO, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands Overcoming Obstacles? Critical Transitions Between Vicious and Virtuous Cycles Between Health Problems and Employment in Migrant Women’s Life Histories. 231.2 Pasi MOISIO, National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), Finland; Susanna MUKKILA, National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), Finland and Jussi TERVOLA, The Social Insurance Institution of Finland, Finland The Mandatory Evaluation of Adequacy of Basic Social Security in Finland 231.3 Juliane ACHATZ, IAB Institute for Employment Research, Germany Low-Income Children’s Participation in Guided Activities

233.1 Silke BOTHFELD, University of Applied Sciences, Germany Policy Fragmentation As a Bridging Concept in Institutional Analysis of Gender Regime Change - the German Case 233.2 Shu-Yung WANG, Chung Cheng University, Taiwan Re-Familialism or De-Familiamlism? the Social and Political Economy of Changing Childcare Diamond in Taiwan 233.3 Eunkyung SHIN, University of York, United Kingdom Changing Elderly Care Diamonds in Japan and South Korea 233.4 Haruka KUDO, Hokkaido University, Japan Child-Rearing Supports for Urban Families in Japan

14:15-15:45 234

Open Session II

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Mi Ah SCHOYEN, Oslo & Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 234.1 Tatiane VALDUGA, ISCTE-IUL, Portugal; Tatiana CALMON, School of Sociology and Public Policy - ISCTE / IUL, Portugal and Claudia SANTOS, University Institute of LisbonISCTE-IUL, Brazil The Social Protection Policy in the Context of Crisis. an Analysis Portugal/Brazil

10:45-12:15 Open Session I

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Hildegard THEOBALD, University of Vechta, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 232.1 Bettina LEIBETSEDER, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Department of Politics and Social Policy, Austria Social Investment Perspective and European Union: An Iron Fist in Velvet Glove? 232.2 Gabrielle MEAGHER, Macquarie University, Australia and Marta SZEBEHELY, Stockholm University, Sweden The Politics of Profit in Swedish Social Services: Investigating the Strategies of the Private Providers’ Interest Group 232.3 Jonnabelle ASIS, University of Brescia, Italy Not All Paths Are Paved: The Role of Social Networks on Ageing Non-EU Migrants’ Economic Incorporation

160

12:30-14:00

Chair: Emiko OCHIAI, Kyoto University, Japan

Language: English, French, Spanish

232

232.5 Senay GOKBAYRAK, Ankara University, Faculty of Political Science, Turkey Global Social Policy Prescription Versus Local Realities: An Assessment on Pension Reforms in Turkey

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

09:00-10:30 231

RC19 Sunday 10 July

234.2 Özgün UNVER, HIVA - KU Leuven, Belgium; Ides NICAISE, HIVA - KU Leuven, Belgium and Tuba BIRCAN, HIVA KU Leuven, Belgium Impact of the Institutional Setting of ECEC on the Use of Child Care in Europe 234.3 Timo FLECKENSTEIN, LSE, United Kingdom and Soohyun Christine LEE, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Youth Unemployment, Post-Industrialisation, and Economic Crisis: Comparing Vocational Education and Training Policy in England, Germany, and South Korea 234.4 Stefan ANGEL, Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria Persistent Household over-Indebtedness and Exits from over-Indebtedness. Evidence from EU-SILC 234.5 Stephan KÖPPE, University College Dublin, Ireland Welfare Markets. Politics of Privatisation and Embedding Institutions

www.isa-sociology.org

RC19 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

236.6 Nadia SHAPKINA, Kansas State University, USA Global Solutions? Efforts, Challenges and Contradictions of Global Anti-Trafficking Policy

09:00-10:30 235

Transnational Migration of Care Workers: Policy Challenges and Outcomes

RC19

Monday 11 July

No. 238

16:00-17:30

Session Organizer: Ito PENG, University of Toronto, Canada

A Worldwide Decline of Universalism? Welfare Reform in Comparative Perspective

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 235.1 Ito PENG, University of Toronto, Canada Care and Migration Policies in Japan and South Korea 235.2 Nicola YEATES, The Open University, United Kingdom and Jane PILLINGER, The Open University, United Kingdom Towards a Transnational Policy Field of Care Migration: Evidence from the Asia Pacific 235.3 Andre LALIBERTE, University of Ottawa, Canada A Multi-Scalar Comparison of Responses to Abuse Against Migrant Domestic Workers in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Shanghai DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 235.4 Florence DEGAVRE, Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium and Laura MERLA, Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium Re-Thinking Defamilialization in the Light of Global Care Chains and the Transnational Circulation of Care

Session Organizers: Juliana MARTINEZ FRANZONI, University of COSTA RICA, Costa Rica; Camila ARZA, CONICET, Argentina and Diego SANCHEZ-ANCOCHEA, Oxford University, United Kingdom Chair: Daniel BELAND, University of Saskatchewan, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 237.1 Joseph Ambrose HARRIS, Boston University, USA From Neoliberalism to Universalism: Explaining the Emergence of Universal Health Coverage As a Global Norm 237.2 Mikko PERKIO, Programme for Global Health and Development, University of Tampere, Finland Knowledge on Wellbeing Processes before Universal Social Policy 237.3 Ricardo VELÁZQUEZ LEYER, University of Bath, United Kingdom Social Policy Reforms in Brazil and Mexico

14:15-15:45

Tuesday 12 July

236

09:00-10:30

Global and Transnational Social Policy: Contexts, Policies and Processes

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Alexandra KAASCH, University of Bielefeld, Germany; Bob DEACON, University of Sheffield/ University of York, United Kingdom and Paul STUBBS, The Institute of Economics, Zagreb, Croatia Chair: Bob DEACON, University of Sheffield/ University of York, United Kingdom Discussant: Paul STUBBS, The Institute of Economics, Zagreb, Croatia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 236.1 Sofiya AN, Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan Children’s Rights or Child Protection? Policy Translation and Institutional Change in Post-Soviet Kazakhstan 236.2 Enrique DELAMONICA, UNICEF, Nigeria Child Marriage in Nigeria: From Global Social Policy and International Law to National and Local Legislation and Policy

238

Struggling for Better Social Potection: How Are Decision-Making Processes Evolving?

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Ana Marta GUILLEN RODRIGUEZ, University of Oviedo, Spain and Emmanuele PAVOLINI, Macerata University, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 238.1 John GOERING, City University of New York, USA The Politics of Austerity & Inequality: A Comparison of US and UK Policies Aiding the Poor 238.2 Soraya CORTES, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Social Assistance Policies in Brazil: The Role of a Policy Community Defending the Rights of the Citizens

16:00-17:30

236.3 Gabriele KOEHLER, UNRISD senior research associate, Germany and Alexandra KAASCH, University of Bielefeld, Germany Policy Coherence Paradoxes

JS-48 Global Social Protection and Migration:

236.4 Lutz LEISERING, Bielefeld University, Germany Towards a Global Civic Minimum? the Idea and Practice of Minimum Income Security

Committees: RC19 Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration

Reproduction of Inequalities or Safety Net?

See Joint Session Details for JS-48.

236.5 Tijana MORACA, Sapienza University Rome, Italy Exploring Transitional Reforms and Civil Society in Serbia through the Role of the Expert

www.isa-sociology.org

161

Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy

237

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

RC19

No. 239

Wednesday 13 July

The Challenges of Innovating Social Policies

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Yuri KAZEPOV, University of Vienna, Austria; Massimo BRICOCOLI, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg and Stefania SABATINELLI, Polytechnic of Milan, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 239.1 Lavinia BIFULCO, Department of Sociology, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy and Vando BORGHI, University of Bologna, Italy What Is Social in Social Innovation? 239.2 Emanuele POLIZZI, Ecampus University, Italy and Matteo BASSOLI, Ecampus University, Italy Fostering Collaborative Practices: The Governance of Sharing Economy 239.3 Santiago EIZAGUIRRE ANGLADA, Universitat de Barcelona - CRIT, Spain and Marc PRADEL MIGUEL, Universitat de Barcelona - CRIT, Spain Social Innovation As a Challenge for Urban Governance Policies. Analysing Local Administrations’ Approaches and Their Inclusive Policies. 239.4 Marcus KNUTAGARD, School of Social Work, Lund University, Sweden and Arne KRISTIANSEN, School of Social Work, Lund University, Sweden Scaling up Housing First-Pilots – Drivers and Barriers 239.5 Pieter COOLS, University of Antwerp, Belgium and Stijn OOSTERLYNCK, University of Antwerp, Belgium Social and Environmental Policies As Context for Systemic Social Innovation: Comparing Networks of Re-Use Work Integration Social Enterprises in Belgium and the UK. 239.6 Olga JUBANY, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain and Berta GUELL, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain Social Innovation to Address Social Exclusion Among Youth: The Case Study of Two Deprived Neighbourhoods in Barcelona 239.7 Fabio COLOMBO, University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy and Tatiana SARUIS, University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy Housing First: From Local Social Innovation to a New Policy Strategy? 239.8 Loic TRABUT, Institut National d’Etudes Démographiques / National Institute of Population Studies, France and Alexandra GARABIGE, Ined, France The Actors in the Reform of Provisions for the Elderly in France: Difficulties to Generalise a Global Service.

10:45-12:15 240

Welfare Regimes and Social Policy after the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Orion Arturo FLORES CAMACHO, Department of Education, Government of the State of Jalisco, Mexico

162

RC19 Wednesday 13 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 239

Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy

Program–Session Details

240.1 Stefanie BREINLINGER, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria and Angela WEGSCHEIDER, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria Outcomes of Recent Reforms of Supported Employment Programmes. a Comparative Study. 240.2 Paula PINTO, CAPP/ISCSP, University of Lisbon VAT#600019152, Portugal; Teresa PINTO, ISCSP - ULisboa, Portugal and Albino CUNHA, ISCSP, University of Lisbon, Portugal From Principles to Practices: A Comparative Analysis of the Enjoyment of the Right to Social Protection in Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia 240.3 Rune HALVORSEN, Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway; Bjorn HVINDEN, NOVA, Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway and Kjetil Klette BOHLER, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway European Disability Policy after the Uncrpd: Austerity Measures or Social Investments? 240.4 Carel HODGE, University of New England, Australia Who Are the Disadvantaged? a Case for Social Inclusion in the Education System of Small Caribbean Islands. 240.5 Mariana FLORES, Facilitadora de espacio de participación de personas con discapacidad del PDHDF, Mexico Participación Política De Organizaciones De y Para Personas Con Discapacidad En El Diseño De Programas Públicos En La Ciudad De México: Espectro De Organizaciones y Tipos De Participación

14:15-15:45 241

Sustainable Welfare: Perspectives, Policies and Emerging Practices

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Max KOCH, Lund University, Sweden and Mi Ah SCHOYEN, NOVA Norwegian Social Research, Norway AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 241.1 Milena BUCHS, University of Southampton, United Kingdom Conceptualising Implications for Human Welfare of SocioEconomic Transformations to a Sustainable Steady State 241.2 Moira NELSON, Lunds Universitet, Sweden Sustainable Citizenship on the Local Level in Sweden: Towards an Understanding for How to Resolve Tensions Between Social, Economic, and Ecological Sustainability 241.3 Jean-Michel BONVIN, Université de Genève, Switzerland and Francesco LARUFFA, Humboldt University, Germany The Contribution of the Capability Approach to a Theory of Sustainable Welfare Society 241.4 Erin KENNEDY, Lund University, Sweden Community Engagement and a Movement Toward Ecological Sustainability: Case Studies in Shanghai China 241.5 Martin FRITZ, University of Bonn, Germany Welfare Regimes and Attitudes Towards Environmental Regulation

16:00-17:30 242

RC19 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum)

www.isa-sociology.org

RC19 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

244.2 Nicola YEATES, The Open University, United Kingdom Regional Organisations in the Making of Global Health Governance and Policy

09:00-10:30 243

244.3 Amanda SHRIWISE, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Social Protection and Health: A Key Relationship for Achieving the Sdgs

Open Session IV

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Joakim PALME, Uppsala University, Sweden AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 243.1 Huck-Ju KWON, Graduate School of Public Administraton, Seoul National Univ, South Korea and Hyojin JANG, Graduate School of Public Administration, South Korea Precarious Work, the Middle Class and the Risk of Poverty in South Korea 243.2 Koichi HIRAOKA, Ochanomizu University, Japan Continuities and Changes in Family Policy and Familialism in Japan 243.3 Birgit PFAU-EFFINGER, University of Hamburg, Germany and Christopher GRAGES, University of Hamburg, Germany Why Do Seniors Often Chose Family Care? Elderly Care Recipients Between Care Policies and Culture. 243.4 Kirstein RUMMERY, University of Stirling, United Kingdom Comparative Social Policy and Policy Transfer: The Example of Gender Equality and Care Policy

10:45-12:15 JS-64 Welfare States and Health Care Systems: In Search for Solutions to Social Inequalities in Health

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health (Host); RC19 Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy See Joint Session Details for JS-64.

14:15-15:45 244

Global Health Policy: From the MDGs to the Sdgs

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Tuba AGARTAN, Providence College, USA; Alexandra KAASCH, University of Bielefeld, Germany and Marian URBINA-FERRETJANS, United Nations University, Japan Chair: Daniel BELAND, University of Saskatchewan, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 244.1 Alexandra KAASCH, University of Bielefeld, Germany; Mulyadi SUMARTO, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia and Brooke WILMSEN, La Trobe University, Australia Indonesian Health Policy Development in a Global Context

244.4 Tuba AGARTAN, Providence College, USA Developing Health Workforce Policy in the Global-National Nexus 244.5 Azeema VOGELER, COMSATS University Islamabad, Pakistan and Saba MANSUR, COMSATS University Islamabad, Pakistan Status of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in Pakistan

16:00-17:30 245

Obstacles to Immigrants’ Successful Labour Market Integration

Location: Hörsaal 11 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Flavia FOSSATI, University of Lausanne, Switzerland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 245.1 Romana CAREJA, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark and Mila DAMYANOSKA, University of Southern Denmark, Political Science Department, Denmark Immigrant Integration Programs and Job Quality in Denmark 245.2 Peter DWYER, University of York, United Kingdom; Katy JONES, University of Salford, United Kingdom; Lisa SCULLION, University of Salford, United Kingdom and Alasdair B R STEWART, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom Conditional Benefits and Barriers: Migrants’ Experiences of Sanction and Support within the UK 245.3 Marcel DRESSE, GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; Andrea MECKEL, GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany and Martin FRITZ, University of Bonn, Germany Cultural Distances and Immigrants’ Labour Market Integration 245.4 Anna DIOP-CHRISTENSEN, The Metropolitan University College, Denmark and Hamiyet KAYA, The Metropolitan University College - Copenhagen, Denmark How to Integrate the Newly Arrived Refugees into the Labour Market? an Evaluation of the Three Year Danish Integration Programme 245.5 Daniel AUER, IDHEAP Lausanne & nccr - on the move, Switzerland and Flavia FOSSATI, University of Lausanne, Switzerland Access Bias in the Swiss Labor Market

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163

Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy

Language: English, French, Spanish

RC19

Thursday 14 July

No. 245

Comparative Sociology

RC20

No. 246

Program–Session Details

246.4 Andre COSTA, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil Norbert Elias and Psychoanalysis: The Concept of Figuration in the Clinical Practice.

RC20

Comparative Sociology Program Coordinator: Jean Pascal DALOZ, CNRS University of Strasbourg, France

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30

Sunday 10 July

247

09:00-10:30

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

JS-3

Contextualizing Cases and Types through Qualitative Multi-Level-Analysis

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology and WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-3.

10:45-12:15 JS-11 Comparison in Ethnographic Research Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology

12:30-14:00 JS-15 The Complex Discursivity of Global

Futures in the Making: Analyzing Transnational Orders of Discourse 2

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-15.

Session Organizer: Hanno SCHOLTZ, University of Konstanz, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 247.1 Riie HEIKKILA, University of Helsinki, Finland; Tina LAURONEN, University of Helsinki, Finland and Semi PURHONEN, University of Tampere, Finland The Crisis of Cultural Journalism Revisited. the Place and Space of Culture in Five European Newspapers from 1960 to 2010 247.2 Thomas LAUX, University of Chemnitz, Germany Institutionalizing Freedom of the Press. a Comparative Analysis on the Structural Conditions for the Freedom of the Press in Constitutions

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 247.4 Kota TOMA, National Institute of Population and Social Security Research, Japan and Hirohisa TAKENOSHITA, Sophia University, Japan The Variety of Attitudes Towards Family in East Asia: A Comparative Study Using Issp 2012

10:45-12:15

14:15-15:45 Biographies - Figurations - Discourses: The Dialectic of Individuals & Society in the (Empirical) Study of Individual & Collective Hi/Stories

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Artur BOGNER, University of Bayreuth, Germany and Robert VAN KRIEKEN, University of Sydney, Australia Chair: Elisabeth TUIDER, University of Kassel, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 246.1 Artur BOGNER, University of Bayreuth, Germany and Gabriele ROSENTHAL, Georg-August University of Göttingen, Germany Familial and Life (Hi)Stories in the Context of EstablishedOutsiders Figurations 246.2 Maria POHN-LAUGGAS, University of Vienna, Department of Sociology, Austria Biographies in the Shadow of a Resistant Family History: The Meaning of Discourse and “We-Group” in Intergenerational and Biographical Processes 246.3 Stefanie ERNST, University Muenster, Institute of Sociology, Germany and Inken ROMMEL, University Muenster, Institute of Sociology, Germany Issues and Aspects of Comparative Long-Term Studies in Youth Unemployment in Europe: Biographical Constructions of “Generation Y”

164

Current Research in the Comparative Study of Institutions

247.3 Masood ALAMINEISI, Professor, Iran Functional Disintegration of Institutions (FDI) and Crime in Iran

See Joint Session Details for JS-11.

246

RC20 Sunday 10 July

248

Declining Middle Classes: Challenging Classical Theories of Social Distinction through Consumption

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Sofia ULVER, University of Lund, Sweden AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 248.1 Daniel SMITH, Anglia Ruskin University, United Kingdom Gentry Distinction: How to be ‘Not-Quite Upper’ but ‘More Than Middle’ Class in Neo-Liberal Britain 248.2 Louis CHAUVEL, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg Between Welfare State Retrenchments, Globalization, and Declining Returns to Credentials: The French Middle Classes Under Stress 248.3 Maria-Luisa MENDEZ, Universidad Diego Portales, Chile and Modesto GAYO, Universidad Diego Portales, Chile Upper Middle Class Reproduction in Santiago: How to Reproduce Privilege in a Context of Increasing Wealth. 248.4 Mirko PETRIC, Department of Sociology, University of Zadar, Croatia; Inga TOMIC KOLUDROVIC, Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar, Croatia and Predrag CVETICANIN, Faculty of Sports and Tourism, TIMS, Novi Sad, Serbia The Socialist “Middle Class” Revisited: Consumption-Based Class Distinctions in Four Post-Yugoslav Countries

www.isa-sociology.org

RC20 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

249

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Comparative Capitalism: Trajectories of Social and Economic Change in the Countries of the Former Soviet Union Since 1991

Session Organizers: Andrey REZAEV, St. Petersburg State University, Russia and David L. WEAKLIEM, University of Connecticut, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 249.1 Natalya TREGUBOVA, TANDEM, St. Petersburg State University, Russia; Pavel LISITSYN, TANDEM, St. Petersburg State University, Russia and Hope MCKOY, UCLA and TANDEM, St. Petersburg State University, USA Transnationalism As a New Model of Integration: Comparative Analysis of the Migrants’ Everyday Life in Russia and the USA after 1991 249.2 Zenonas NORKUS, Sociology Department, Faculty of Philosophy, Vilnius University, Lithuania A Qualitative Comparative Analysis of Patterns in the Catching-up Performance of the Former Soviet Union Republics 249.3 Zhanna KRAVCHENKO, Sodertorn University, Sweden and Apostolis PAPAKOSTAS, Södertörn University, Sweden Memberless Civil Society in Russia: Interdependencies Between the Third Sector, the State and the Market 249.4 Irina TYURINA, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia and Mikhail GORSHKOV, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Civilizational Specific of Dreams in Russia and China 249.5 Andrey REZAEV, St. Petersburg State University, Russia and Valentin STARIKOV, TANDEM, St. Petersburg State University, Russia Comparative Analysis of Causal Mechanisms, Prevention and Regulation of the Ethno-Social Conflicts in Academe: Cases of Russia and Ukraine DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 249.6 Andrey REZAEV, St. Petersburg State University, Russia Comparative Capitalism: 25 Years of the New Societies’ Evolvement in Post-Soviet Eurasia 249.7 Dmitrii ZHIKHAREVICH, St. Petersburg State University, Russia and Anna KULESHOVA, The Monitoring of Public Opinion Journal, Moscow, Russia The Notion of Capitalism and the Reality of Contemporary Societies in the Fsu Countries. 249.8 Anna ANDREEVA, Comparative Sociology, Ukraine; Maria ERMAKOVA, Comparative Sociology, St. Petersburg State University, Russia and Alexander STEPANOV, TANDEM, St. Petersburg State University, Russia Ethnicity Conflicts and Nationalism in the Former Soviet Union Countries

250.2 Wing Shek Adrian LUI, Macquarie University, Australia The Impact of Economic Structure and Solidarity Mechanism on the Rise of ‘Emancipative Values’: Lessons Learnt from Analysing Historical Trends Using Data from World Values Survey 250.3 Charles CROTHERS, AUT University, New Zealand Theorists Views on Variations in Futures & Their Confrontation with Evidence DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 250.4 Dmitry ZAKOTYANSKY, LCSR, Higher School of Economics, Russia Do Value Changes Explain Fertility Differences Across the MENA Region?

10:45-12:15 251

Political Representation in Comparative Perpective

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jean Pascal DALOZ, CNRS - SAGE, University of Strasbourg, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 251.1 Isabel KUSCHE, Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies, Denmark Political Self-Reflection on Political Representation: Constituency Service As a Topic in Parliamentary Debates 251.2 Didier RUEDIN, University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland The Representation of Ethnic Groups in National Legislatures 251.3 Paula DIEHL, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany The Representative’s Body and the Logics of Representation 251.4 Jean Pascal DALOZ, CNRS - SAGE, University of Strasbourg, France On the Theatrical Dimension of Political Representation: Beyond the Usual Approaches

14:15-15:45 252

Urban Neighbourhoods and Culture-Led Revitalization: Comparative Processes, Entanglements, and (Un)Intended Effects

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

Tuesday 12 July

Session Organizer: Sonia BOOKMAN, University of Manitoba, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 250

252.1 Nico BAZZOLI, University of Urbino, Italy Top-Down and Bottom-up Practices of Neighbourhood Revitalization: Processes, Players and Outcomes in a Comparative Perspective.

World Values on a Comparative Prespective

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Marita CARBALLO, Voices Research and Consultancy, Argentina

252.2 Maria-Luisa MENDEZ, UNIVERSIDAD DIEGO PORTALES, Chile Urban Revitalization and Cultural Capital

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165

Comparative Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

250.1 Gabriel CASALECCHI, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil and Mario FUKS, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil Democratic Legacy, Education and Support for Democracy: Direct and Interactive Effects.

RC20

16:00-17:30

No. 252

Comparative Sociology

RC20

No. 253

Program–Session Details

RC20 Wednesday 13 July

252.3 Michael SABBAGH, Wayne State University, USA Land Battles in the Motor City: A Field Guide to Subverting Neoliberal Land Policy from Detroit

255.5 Yoshihiko SHIRATORI, Kobe University, Japan Comparative Study on Japanese and French University System and Recent Reforms

252.4 Maira MAGALHAES LOPES, Stockholm University, Sweden; Joel HIETANEN, Stockholm Business School, Stockholm University, Sweden and Jacob OSTBERG, Stockholm Business School, Stockholm University, Sweden Crowd Is the Street: Revitalizing Affective City-Space in Baixo Centro

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

255.7 Meike BUCKER, University of Rostock, Germany Institutional Re-Employment Determinants for the Elderly Unemployed – an International Comparison

16:00-17:30 253

RC20 Business Meeting

16:00-17:30

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

JS-57 Health Inequalities in Comparative

Wednesday 13 July

Perspective

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology

09:00-10:30 254

255.6 Mario Luis GRANGEIA, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Images of Social Policy in Brazil: A Comparison Between Governments

Analysing the Global/Regional/National/ Local Divide. Comparative Perspectives on a “Blurred” Relationship

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Thomas LAUX, University of Chemnitz, Germany; Thomas KERN, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany and Michael HOELSCHER, German University of Administrative Sciences Speyer, Germany

See Joint Session Details for JS-57.

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30 JS-63 Contextualizing Inter- & Multinational

Survey Research. Discussing Regional Perspectives on Effects & Outcomes of Global Trends / Linear & Non-Linear (Multi-Level-)Modelling with Aggregate or Regional Data for Policy Analysis & Evidence Based Councelling

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 254.1 Emanuel DEUTSCHMANN, Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences, Germany Regionalization and Globalization in Networks of Transnational Human Mobility, 2000-2010 254.2 Tim ROSENKRANZ, The New School for Social Research, USA Outsourcing the Nation-State: Localities of Expertise in Comparison 254.3 Sabrina ZAJAK, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany and Saida RESSEL, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany Measuring Scales of Contention By Using an ActorAttribution Analysis. the Empirical Case of Global-Local Labour Rights Struggles

Current Research in Comparative Sociology (qualitative methodology)

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jean Pascal DALOZ, Université de Strasbourg, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 255.1 Judit BODNAR, Central European University, Hungary Triangulating a Global Form 255.2 John HIGLEY, University of Texas at Austin, USA Elites and the Limits of Western Power 255.3 Tho LE, The University of Bonn, Germany and Dirk TAENZLER, The University of Bonn, The University of Konstanz, Germany “(Anti-) corruption in Vietnam and Singapore, analysis of cultural and institutional conditions” 255.4 Sergio Henrique ROCHA FRANCO, University of Barcelona, Spain Comparative Qualitative Research in Disadvantaged and Violent-Prone Urban Environments

166

See Joint Session Details for JS-63.

10:45-12:15 256

Recent Quantitative Research in Comparative Sociology, I

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

10:45-12:15 255

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology and WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology

Session Organizer: David L. WEAKLIEM, University of Connecticut, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 256.1 Tom W SMITH, University of Chicago, USA Cross-National Differences in Attitudes Towards Income Inequality and Government Policy to Reduce Income Inequality 256.2 Artur POKROPEK, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland and Joanna SIKORA, Australian National University, Australia What We Need to Know about Cross-Country Equivalence When Studying Gender Differences in Labour Market Outcomes 256.3 Louis CHAUVEL, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg and Eyal BAR-HAIM, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg More Necessary and Less Sufficient: An Age-Period-Cohort Approach to over Education in a Comparative Perspective. 256.4 Roland VERWIEBE, University of Vienna, Austria and Nina-Sophie FRITSCH, University of Vienna, Department of Sociology, Austria Labor Market Flexibilization and Low-Wage Employment in Germany, Austria and Switzerland: Between Transformative and Incremental Change?

www.isa-sociology.org

RC20 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

No. 258

14:15-15:45

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building)

256.6 Pedro LOPEZ-ROLDAN, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain Comparative Analysis of Labor Market Segmentation Between Argentina and Spain

Session Organizer: Frederick TURNER, University of Connecticut, USA

256.8 Elena DAMIAN, University of Cologne, Germany Effects of Economic and Cultural Contexts on Formal Volunteering: Evidence from 33 European Countries, 1981-2008 256.9 Malina VOICU, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany and Vera LOMAZZI, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy Gender Role Attitudes in Mediterranean Countries: Does a Common Pattern Really Exist? 256.10 Leonie STECKERMEIER, Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Germany and Jan DELHEY, Otto-von-GuerickeUniversity Magdeburg, Germany Revisiting the Spirit-Level Theory: It’s Competition, Not Inequality

Recent Quantitative Research in Comparative Sociology II

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 257.1 Tom W SMITH, University of Chicago, USA Gender Role Attitudes and Family Values Across Time and Countries 257.2 Elena DAMIAN, University of Cologne, Germany and Malina VOICU, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany Effects of Host Country Social Inequality on Immigrant Civic Participation Across Europe DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 257.3 Christian MORGNER, University of Leicester, United Kingdom Global Reputation: An Inquiry into the Question of Why Jurgen Habermas Is a Global Household Name and Niklas Luhmann Is Not 257.4 Christopher CHASE-DUNN, University of CaliforniaRiverside, USA and Hiroko INOUE, University of California, Berkeley, USA Size Upswings of Cities and Polities: Comparisons of WorldSystems Since the Bronze Age

16:00-17:30

256.11 Inna VOLOSEVYCH, GfK Ukraine, Ukraine Pre- and Post-War Ukraine 256.12 Joonmo SON, National University of Singapore, Singapore and Qiushi FENG, National University of Singapore, Singapore In Social Capital We Trust? 256.13 Hiroko INOUE, University of California, Riverside, USA City Growth and Decline Cycles: A Comparative WorldSystems Approach 256.14 Olena OLEKSIYENKO, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Political Inequalities and the Formation of Russian Ethnic Minorities in Post-Soviet States (1993 – 2014). Comparative Study.

258

Civilization, Decivilization, and International Relations - Current Trends

Location: Hörsaal 30 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Stephen VERTIGANS, Robert Gordon University, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 258.1 Fumiya ONAKA, Japan Women’s University, Japan The Pono’ (Pondok) Examinations in the Context of International Relations in the Southern Border Provinces of Thailand 258.2 Désirée WATERSTRADT, University of Education Karlsruhe, Germany Parenthood in the Society of Individuals: ‘Helicopter Parents’ As Prime Example of Individually Inescapable Blame Gossip.

www.isa-sociology.org

167

Comparative Sociology

256.7 Tilo BECKERS, Heinrich-Heine-Universitat Dusseldorf, Germany and Pascal SIEGERS, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany The Legitimacy of Euthanasia in Europe: Socio Cultural Heritage, Law and Religion As Boundaries of Personal Autonomy in a Multilevel Analysis

257

RC20

256.5 Jordi LOPEZ, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain and Omar LIZARDO, University of Notre Dame, USA Between the Global and the National Culture: The Double Social Structure of Listening Music Habits

Sociology of Religion

RC22

No. 259

Program–Session Details

12:30-14:00

RC22

260

Sociology of Religion Program Coordinator: Vineeta SINHA, National University of Singapore, Singapore; Olga BRESKAYA, European Humanities University, Lithuania and James SPICKARD, University of Redlands, USA

Sunday 10 July 10:45-12:15 259

Welfare and Civil Society: The Role of Religion

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Per PETTERSSON, Karlstad University, Sweden Chair: Afe ADOGAME, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 259.1 Gretchen PURSER, Syracuse University, USA and Brian HENNIGAN, Syracuse University, USA “Work As Unto the Lord:” Enhancing “Employability” in a Faith-Based Job-Readiness Program 259.2 Julia MARTINEZ-ARINO, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Germany and Mar GRIERA, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain Taking Advantage of the Context: The Manifold Roles of Catholic Chaplains in Public Institutions in Spain 259.3 Edgar ZAVALA-PELAYO, Freie Universitat Berlin, Germany The Longue-Durée Impact of Religious Welfare: Secular Young Politicians in Mexico and Their Notions of Charity and the Common Good. 259.4 Annette SCHNABEL, Heinrich-Heine-Universitaet Dueseldorf, Germany Don’t Ask What Your Nation Can Do for You… Welfare State Attitudes and Individual Religiousness 259.5 Miroslav TIZIK, Institute for Sociology of Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia The Catholic Church As an Actor of Neoliberal Changes in Education 259.6 SangJi LEE, IOM-MRTC, South Korea The Public Role of Religious NGOs and the Problem of Social Integration: How Are Religious Markets and Public Religions in Conflict? DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 259.7 Per PETTERSSON, Uppsala University, Sweden Deregulation of Welfare and Religion – New Challenges to the Church of Sweden By Neoliberal Market Values 259.8 Sylvia MEICHSNER, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom Exploring Child-Focussed Welfare Provision By Evangelical Christians

Negotiating Religion and Citzenship in Global Context

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Olga BRESKAYA, European Humanities University, Lithuania and Afe ADOGAME, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom Chair: Olga BRESKAYA, European Humanities University, Lithuania AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 260.1 Prema KURIEN, Syracuse University, USA Race, Religion, and the Political Incorporation of Contemporary Immigrants: The Case of Indian Americans 260.2 Lili DI PUPPO, Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia What Is “Traditional Islam”?: Defining the Borders of Islam in Russia 260.3 Michael OKYEREFO, University of Ghana, Department of Sociology, Ghana “I Am Austro-Ghanaian” - Citizenship and Belonging of Ghanaians in Austria 260.4 Simone MARTINO, Università degli Studi di Torino, Italy and Roberta RICUCCI, Fieri, Italy Being Muslims in Italy: New Opportunities and Old Challenges DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 260.5 Anima ADJEPONG, The University of Texas at Austin, USA “They Said Here Is a Christian Country”: How Ghanaians in Houston Employ Christianity to Claim Sociopolitical and Cultural Belonging 260.6 Bayan ITANI, American University of Beirut, Lebanon Veiling at the American University of Beirut: Religious Values, Social Norms, and Integration of Veiled Students

14:15-15:45 261

Presidential Session: Where Do We Go from Here? an Agenda for the Sociology of Religion

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: James SPICKARD, University of Redlands, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 261.1 James SPICKARD, University of Redlands, USA Welcome: Thinking about Our Future 261.2 Meredith MCGUIRE, Trinity University, USA Follow Religion! an Agenda Based on Social Transformation 261.3 Gary BOUMA, Monash University, Australia A Future for the Sociology of Religion? Disruptive Possibilities 261.4 Afe ADOGAME, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom New Directions in the Sociology of Religion: An African Perspective 261.5 Edward A. TIRYAKIAN, Duke University, USA What’s Next for the Sociology of Religion? Wider Horizons Discussion

168

RC22 Sunday 10 July

www.isa-sociology.org

RC22 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 262

Location: Hörsaal 48 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Olga BRESKAYA, European Humanities University, Lithuania and Miroljub JEVTIC, University of Belgrade, Serbia ROUNDTABLES:

Africa and the African Diaspora Chair: Michael OKYEREFO, University of Ghana, Department of Sociology, Ghana ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 262.1 Jualynne DODSON, AFRICAN ATLANTIC RESEARCH TEAM, MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY, USA A Better WORLD from Learnings of the African Diaspora 262.9 Andrew EROMONSELE, Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Nigeria, Nigeria Church Proliferation in Time of Economic Challenges and Its Socio- Implications for Development. 262.6 Lovemore NDLOVU, Maranatha Christian University, Zimbabwe Religion As a Tool for Legitimization of the Political Institutions – Lessons from the Anglican Church Crisis in Zimbabwe

Inter-Religious Understanding Chair: Miroljub JEVTIC, University of Belgrade, Serbia ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 262.17 Vicente ESPINOZA, USACH, Chile Christian Churches, Social Capital and Civic Involvement in Chile 262.10 Jin Woo PARK, Sogang University, South Korea Conflicts Between Religions in the Public Sphere : The Problem of Validity Claims and Social Integration 262.5 Hakan GULERCE, Istanbul University, Turkey Inclusivist Understanding of Religion; Dealing with Disagreement and Diversity Via Said Nursi’s Thought 262.2 Zoran MATEVSKI, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, Macedonia and Dushka MATEVSKA, South East European University in Tetovo, Macedonia Interreligious Dialogue and Peace in the Balkans: Past Challenges and Future Opportunities 262.15 Alimpana GOSWAMI, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Guwahati Campus, India The Everyday Axomiya Canopy : A Study Among the Indigenous Assamese Muslims 262.20 Lee SANGGU, Sogang University, South Korea Ties That Bind or Tearing the Social Fabric? : The Integrating and Disintegrating Power of Religion in South Korea

262.16 Diana Therese VELOSO, De La Salle University, Philippines Armed Conflict, Religious Extremism, and the Normalization of Violence: The Abu Sayyaf in Perspective 262.11 Muhammed SULEMAN, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Delving into ‘Structural Prisons’: As Insight into Muslim Women’s Struggle in Dealing and Overcoming Marital Violence 262.19 Jin Woo PARK, Sogang University, South Korea Sexual Discourses and Religious Conflicts in Post-Secular Korea : Dialogue about Queer Festivals 262.4 Cecilia DELGADO-MOLINA, UNAM, Mexico The Symbolic Dispute over the “Peace-Building” Between the Government and the Catholic Church in Morelos, Mexico 262.8 Oluwafemi BANDELE, Stellenbosch University, South Africa “Bring Back Our Girls”: Voices Crying in the Wilderness

Religious Radicalization Chair: Yoshihide SAKURAI, Hokkaido University, Japan ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 262.12 Younes NOURBAKHSH, University of Tehran, Iran Extremism, Its Different Types and Influential Factors That Help Shape It 262.14 Rob FAURE WALKER, Institute Of Education, United Kingdom How the Prevent Counter-Terrorism Strategies Create a Muslim Outgroup and Might Increase the Threat of Terrorism 262.3 Gwynyth OVERLAND, RVTS - Ragional trauma compeency centre Southern Norway, Norway Religious Radicalisation: The Ways of Norwegian Jihad 262.18 Andre ARMBRUSTER, Helmut Schmidt University, Germany The Process of Radicalization: Transforming the Habitus to Become a Religious Radical 262.7 Joe ALIZZI, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia The Radicals and the Radicalized – Placeless Souls in the Illusive Search for Heroism and Meaning

10:45-12:15 263

Roundtables II: Europe, Communities, Multiple Secularities, Individuals & Power

Location: Hörsaal 48 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Roberta RICUCCI, University of Torino, Italy ROUNDTABLES:

Religion’s Role in Peace and Violence Chair: Lovemore NDLOVU, Maranatha Christian University, Zimbabwe

Individual Religiosity and Power Relations Chair: Vineeta SINHA, National University of Singapore, Singapore

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169

Sociology of Religion

Roundtables I: Dialogue, Peace & Violence, Africa/Diaspora, Identities, Radicalization

262.13 Catherine HOLTMANN, Muriel McQueen Centre for Family Violence Research, Canada A Place at the Table: The Challenges and Opportunities of Including Religion in a Collaborative Community Response to Domestic Violence

RC22

Monday 11 July

No. 263

Sociology of Religion

RC22

No. 263

Program–Session Details

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 263.13 Norbert FUCHSLEHNER, Johannes Kepler Universität Linz, Austria Analysis of the Categories Religiosity and Secularity from a Quantitative Perspective 263.5 Adam HAMORI, Karoli Gaspar University of the Reformed Church in Hungary, Hungary Ethical and Value Orientations through the Lens of Religiosity, Belief and Personality: The Case of Some Hungarian Settlements 263.19 Annette SCHNABEL, Heinrich-Heine-Universitaet Dueseldorf, Germany and Heiko BEYER, Institut for Social Sciences, Germany Religion and Weltanschauung: The Politics of Religion and the Religiosity of the Political 263.3 Rossana SALERNO, Master’s program “Sociology: Theory, Methodology and Research” at University of Roma Tre, La Sapienza University of Roma and University of Roma Tor Vergata, Italy Sri Lanka to Monte Pellegrino: The Tamil People and Santa Rosalia. 263.12 Rachid JARMOUNI, University of Moulay Ismail in Meknes, Morocco The Sociology of Religious Transformations Individual Religiosity Among Moroccan Youths As a Case Study DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 263.22 Mohammad Reza KOLAHI, Institute for Social and Cultural Studies (ISCS), Iran Typology of Religiosity in Iran: Supernal Religiosity and Sublunar Religiosity

Multiple Secularities Chair: Anna HALAFOFF, Deakin University, Australia ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 263.14 Antonija PETRICUSIC, University of Zagreb, Croatia and Dorit GEVA, Central European University, Hungary Anti-Gay Marriage Movements in France and Croatia: A Conservative Response to Legal Liberalism 263.1 Andrew LYNCH, University of Sydney, Australia Catholicism and Post-Secularism: Contesting Secularism in (Post)Modern Conditions 263.9 Ozgur Olgun ERDEN, Middle East Tehnical University, Department of Sociology, Turkey Culture and Capital: New Religionist Middle Classes and Their Changing Cultural Forms within the Context of Class Transformation of Islamic Groups in Turkey 263.17 Ihsan ALTINTAS, Post Graduate Student, Turkey Modernity, Social Change and Despair: A Nursian Perspective 263.8 Roberto CIPRIANI, University Roma Tre, Italy World Diffused Religions

170

RC22 Monday 11 July

Religious Communities and Civil Society Chair: Ephraim SHAPIRO, Columbia, USA ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 263.6 Daria ORESHINA, St.Tikhon’s University, Russia and Elena PRUTSKOVA, St.Tikhon’s University, Russia Factors Influencing the Diversity of Non-Liturgical Activities in Russian Orthodox Church Parishes 263.2 Rosemary HANCOCK, University of Notre Dame, Sydney, Australia Muslims and Social Justice Activism in the US: Religious Charity or Political Dissent? 263.10 Lulie EL-ASHRY, Harvard, USA Negotiating Private to Public Transitions: The Case of Italian/French Muslim Sufi Convert Community 263.18 Joao Ricardo SALES, Universidade Estadual do Norte Fluminense, Brazil Religion and Social Class: An Analysis of the Impacts of the Theology of Prosperity in Different Groups of the Evangelical Movement 263.16 Shun-hing CHAN, Hong Kong Baptist University, China The Protestant Community and the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong

Religious Mobilization in Europe Chair: Sinisa ZRINSCAK, University of Zagreb, Croatia ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 263.11 Janroj Yilmaz KELES, Middlesex University, United Kingdom Religion, Migration and Social Capital: The Case of Kurdish Alevis in the UK 263.15 Barry STEPHENSON, Memorial University, Canada Religious Heritage and the Mobilization of Cultural Trauma 263.7 Amika WARDANA, Yogyakarta State University, Indonesia, Indonesia The Sacred Mobilisation: The Response of Islamic Organization to the Democratic Experimentation of Indonesia 263.4 Haimo SCHULZ MEINEN, Institute of Sociology, Germany Total Mobilization in the West - Fiume 1919 DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 263.21 Nora MACHADO DES JOHANSSON, ISCTE-IUL ISCTE University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal Apparitions and Catholic Devotionality 263.20 Norbert FUCHSLEHNER, Johannes Kepler Universität Linz, Austria Religious Mobilization in the Context of Cultural Path Dependency, Religious Practice and Modernization

www.isa-sociology.org

RC22 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

Religion and Human Rights

09:00-10:30

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building)

Co-chairs: Adam POSSAMAI, University of Western Sydney, Australia and Giuseppe GIORDAN, University of Padua, Italy

World Religions and Axial Civilizations. Part I

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Stephen KALBERG, Boston University, USA Chair: Stephen KALBERG, Boston University, USA

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 264.1 Sylvie BIJAOUI, College of Management Academic Studies, Israel Human Rights, Bricolage and Social Change: The Israeli Spousal Covenant Revisited 264.2 Biljana RIBIC, Belgrade University, Serbia Religion and Human Rights in Present-Day Serbia 264.3 Olga BRESKAYA, European Humanities University, Lithuania and Susanne DOHNERT, University of Wurzburg, Germany Human Dignity As a Dependent Variable: Introductory Results from the Sociological Survey “Religion, Youth and Human Rights” in Belarus 264.4 Robert ROSEN, University of Miami, USA No Exit: Law and Religion in Hong Kong’s Movement for Universal Suffrage

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 266.1 Mark GOULD, Haverford College, USA Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Confucianism and the Emergence of Right Reason: Natural Law, Human Fallibility and the Transcendence of God 266.2 Said ARJOMAND, State University of New York, Stony Brook, USA Hodgson, Gellner and Eisenstadt As Pioneers of Islamicate Civilizational Analysis 266.3 Roberto MOTTA, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco at Recife (Brazil), Brazil The Protestant Ethic Thesis: Some Forerunners of Max Weber in France and Brazil

10:45-12:15 267

16:00-17:30 Business Meeting and Distinguished Lecture

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: James SPICKARD, University of Redlands, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

The Categories of Religion and the Secular in the Post-Secular Discourse

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Mitsutoshi HORII, Shumei University, Japan Chair: Mitsutoshi HORII, Shumei University, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 267.1 Sam HAN, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Is the Return of Religion the Return of Metaphysics? or, the Renewed Spirit of Capitalism in Post-Secular Age

265.1 Welcoming Remarks 265.2 Business Meeting 265.3 Hans JOAS, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany Distinguished Lecture: “Sacralization and Desacralization. Political Domination and Religious Interpretation” 265.4 Discussion

266

267.2 Ernils LARSSON, Uppsala University, Faculty of Theology, History of Religions, Sweden Is Shinto Secular? the 2016 G7 Meeting at Ise in Light of Postwar Japanese Secularism 267.3 Silke GUELKER, WZB Social Science Research Center Berlin, Germany Dealing with Uncertainty: A Social Theoretical Idea Beyond the Religion Versus Secular Dichotomy 267.4 Haimo SCHULZ MEINEN, Institute of Sociology, Germany The Nonreligious/Secular Comfort Zone of Human Rights Reconsidered

14:15-15:45 268

The Politics of Religious Heritage: Memory, Identity and Place. Part I

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Mar GRIERA, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain; Marian BURCHARDT, Inst Study Religious & Ethnic Diversity, Germany and Avi ASTOR, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain Chair: Marian BURCHARDT, Inst Study Religious & Ethnic Diversity, Germany

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Sociology of Religion

Session Organizers: Adam POSSAMAI, University of Western Sydney, Australia and Giuseppe GIORDAN, University of Padua, Italy

265

RC22

Tuesday 12 July

14:15-15:45 264

No. 268

RC22

No. 269

Program–Session Details

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 268.1 Edward A. TIRYAKIAN, Duke University, USA Sacralizing Evil: Applying Durkheim to Genocide Studies

Sociology of Religion

268.2 Tim JENSEN, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark Discourses on Cultural and Religious Heritage in Religious Education in Scandinavia. 268.3 Sinisa ZRINSCAK, Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb, Croatia Religious Legitimization and Social Change: From Ethnic to Ethical 268.4 Federico SETTLER, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa Imaginaries of Home: Somali Migrant Experiences of Identity and Belonging in South Africa 268.5 Nevin SAHIN, Yildirim Beyazit University, Turkey From Whirling to Combatting: Contesting Experiences of Mevlevi Sufism in 21st Century Turkey DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 268.6 Saswati BHATTACHARYA, Lady Shri Ram College for Women, India Akshardham Temple in New Delhi: Conjuring ‘Heritage’, ‘Strengthening’ Community 268.7 Iya BIDIKHOVA, Saint Tikhon’s Orthodox University, Russia Models of the Population’s Attitude to the Sacred Orthodox Objects in Contemporary Russia (survey results conducted in the city of Sergiev Posad, Russia)

RC22 Wednesday 13 July

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 270

World Religions and Axial Civilizations. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Said ARJOMAND, State University of New York, Stony Brook, USA Chair: Said ARJOMAND, State University of New York, Stony Brook, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 270.1 Eugene HALTON, University of Notre Dame, USA The Moral Revolution/Axial Age As Progressive Regression 270.2 Victor LIDZ, Department of Psychiatry, Drexel College of Medicine, USA The Axial Status of the Enlightenment 270.3 Roberto SCALON, University of Turin, Italy Back to the Future. New Religious and Secular Paradigms Facing the Radical Crisis of Modern Civilization

10:45-12:15 271

In-Depth Studies on Religion and Society

Location: Arcade Courtyard (Main Building) AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

16:00-17:30 269

271.1 Arpana INGLE, research scholar, India Religious Practices and Human Rights in India

Religion in the Public Sphere. Part I

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Orivaldo LOPES JR, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte - UFRN, Brazil Chair: Orivaldo LOPES JR, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 269.1 Iman HAMDY, The American University in Cairo, Egypt Religious Groups and the State in Egypt and Israel: A LoveHate Relationship 269.2 Francis LIM, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Religion, Social Media, and ‘Civil Society’ in China 269.3 Mari Sol GARCÍA SOMOZA, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Usos, Sentidos y Definiciones De Lo Público. Formas De Participación De Mujeres Musulmanas En El Espacio Público Argentino Contemporáneo 269.4 Simon GORDT, University of Bern, Switzerland Secularization of Western European School System?

172

271.2 Haydn AARONS, Australian Catholic University, Australia and Paul WIDDOP, Leeds Beckett University, United Kingdom Exploring Religion and Musical Taste: Evidence from the UK 271.3 Hengameh ASHRAF EMAMI, Northumbria University, United Kingdom British Muslim Women’s Identities 271.4 Pei-Ru LIAO, National Pingtung University of Science and Technology, Taiwan A Mediatized Sacred War: Examining Multimedia Strategies of Anti Same-Sex Marriage Movement in Contemporary Taiwan 271.5 Viviana PREMAZZI, FIERI, Italy and Roberta RICUCCI, University of Turin, Italy Traditional Religious Institutions Vs “Cut and Paste” Online Religions: Challenges to Religious Education 271.6 Esmeralda F. SANCHEZ, University of Santo Tomas, Philippines El Shaddai Dwxi-Ppfi: A Filipino Catholic Charismatic Movement’s Vision And Mission

www.isa-sociology.org

RC22 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

The Politics of Religious Heritage, Memory, Identity, and Place. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building)

Chair: Julia MARTINEZ-ARINO, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 272.1 Caroline STARKEY, University of Leeds, United Kingdom and Emma TOMALIN, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Buddhist Buildings in England: Conserving and Constructing Heritage(s) 272.2 Marian BURCHARDT, Inst Study Religious & Ethnic Diversity, Germany; Mar GRIERA, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain and Avi ASTOR, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain Invoking Heritage: The Catholic Church and the Politics of Religious Diversity in Spain 272.3 Werner BINDER, Masaryk University, Czech Republic The Contested Heritage of Mistr Jan Hus 272.4 Pragna RUGUNANAN, University of Johannesburg, South Africa The Politics of Heritage, Religion and Identity in Johannesburg, South Africa DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 274

From New Age and Spiritualities to Different World Views: Individualized Religious Beliefs, Autonomy Values and Individualized Morality

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Tilo BECKERS, Heinrich-Heine-University of Düsseldorf, Germany and Pascal SIEGERS, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany Chair: Tilo BECKERS, Heinrich-Heine-Universitat Dusseldorf, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 274.1 Marko UIBU, University of Tartu, Estonia Less Than Believing and Belonging: Weak Inclination Towards Spirituality in Estonia 274.2 Hossein GODAZGAR, Al-Maktoum College of Higher Education, United Kingdom and Shiva VELAYATI, Nabi Akram University, Iran Spiritualism and Faith Traditions in Modern Iran: The Case of Rituals 274.3 Jonathan HARTH, Universitat Witten/Herdecke, Germany The Concept of Nibbana and Its Potential for the Transformation of Self- and Worldview in Western Buddhist Practice 274.4 Anna BRINKMAN, Sogang University, South Korea Social Implications of Spiritual Turns in Korea: Moral Clashes on Homosexuality

272.5 Seddigheh MIRZAMOSTAFA, University of Mazandaran, Iran Selective Representation of Religion in the City

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

16:00-17:30 273

Religion in the Public Sphere. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Vincenzo PACE, University of Padua, Italy Chair: Vincenzo PACE, University of Padua, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 273.1 Jerry ESPINOZA RIVERA, University of Costa Rica, Costa Rica Desecularization of Public Space in Costa Rica 273.2 Marton CSANADY, Karoli Gaspar University of the Reformed Church in Hungary, Hungary Protestant Ethic, Religiosity and Migration in Hungary at the Reformation 500th Anniversary 273.3 Amir SHEIKHZADEGAN, University of Fribourg, Switzerland and Michael NOLLERT, University of Fribourg, Switzerland Public (in)Visibility of Faith: The Contrasting Responses of Two Muslim Organizations to the Debate on the Public/ Private Divide in Switzerland 273.4 Mario VENTURELLA, PoieinLab, Italy; Niccolo SIRLETO, PoieinLab, Italy and Francesco SACCHETTI, Università degli studi di Urbino, Italy New Religions in Montesacro 273.5 Roland SHAINIDZE, York University, Canada Cyberspace As Sacred Space: Toronto’s Universal Oneness Spiritual Centre

274.5 Heiner MEULEMANN, Institut für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, Germany From the Religious Question to Christian and Secualr Convictions 274.6 Han NAHYUN, University of Sogang, South Korea and Seil OH, Sogang University, South Korea Diverse Differences of Youth Spirituality Between Unchurched Believers and Liminals in Korea 274.7 Adam POSSAMAI, University of Western Sydney, Australia and Giuseppe GIORDAN, University of Padua, Italy Branding the Devil in New Age, Catholicism and Pentecostalism: A Sociology of Exorcism

10:45-12:15 275

Religion, Gender, and the Internet

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Anna HALAFOFF, Deakin University, Australia; Emma TOMALIN, University of Leeds, United Kingdom and Caroline STARKEY, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Chair: Caroline STARKEY, University of Leeds, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 275.1 Lisa WORTHINGTON, Western Sydney University, Australia Digital Islam: In Search of Gender Equality Online 275.2 Emma QUILTY, University of Newcastle, Australia, Australia #Witchlife: Witchy Digital Spaces

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173

Sociology of Religion

Session Organizers: Marian BURCHARDT, Inst Study Religious & Ethnic Diversity, Germany; Mar GRIERA, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain and Avi ASTOR, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain

RC22

Thursday 14 July

14:15-15:45 272

No. 275

Sociology of Religion

RC22

No. 276

Program–Session Details

275.3 Natalie LANG, University of Goettingen, Germany Religious and Gender Negotiations on Facebook: Female Hindu Practitioners Claiming New Roles in La Réunion

RC22 Thursday 14 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 276.1 Yoshihide SAKURAI, Hokkaido University, Japan Decline of the Established Religions and New Primordial Religiosity in Social Engagements in Japan

275.4 Rosemary HANCOCK, University of Notre Dame, Sydney, Australia Muslim Women Online: Giving Voice to Orthodoxy or Reform?

276.2 Kikuko HIRAFUJI, Kokugakuin University, Japan Girls Meet Deities: Deities in Japanese Pop Culture 276.3 Francis LIM, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Beyond Civil Society: Spiritual Empowerment, Work, and Social Engagement in China

275.5 Yvette TAYLOR, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom Mediated Belief: Queer Youth, Facebook and Faith DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 275.6 Satoshi ADACHI, Kindai University, Japan Religious Knowledge and Muslim Women in the Information Age: A Case Study in Britain

276.4 Siyoon LEE, Sogang University, South Korea When Narrative Is Failed: A Comparative Study of Environmental Movement Narratives of Buddhist Society in South Korea

275.7 Anna HALAFOFF, Deakin University, Australia and Emma TOMALIN, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Bhikkhuni Ordination and Digital Activism

276.5 Yasushi KOIKE, Rikkyo University, Japan Empowered or Belabored?: Neuro-Linguistic Programming in Japan 276.6 Norihito TAKAHASHI, Toyo University, Japan The Characteristics and Effectiveness of Social Support for Foreign Residents By Faith-Based Organizations in Contemporary Japan

14:15-15:45 276

Religious Engagement and Spiritual Empowerment in Asian Countries: Quest for Human Security and Self-Fulfilment

276.7 Praveena RAJKOBAL, Deakin University, Australia, Australia Spiritual Engagement in Post-Disaster Resettlement and Environmental Risk Governance

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Yoshihide SAKURAI, Hokkaido University, Graduate School of Letters, Japan, Japan

276.8 Anna BRINKMAN, Sogang University, South Korea Subjectivized Spirituality As Empowerment: Youth Responses to Life Course Uncertainty in South Korea

Chair: Meredith MCGUIRE, Trinity University, USA

16:00-17:30 JS-73 Rhythms and Rituals Committees: RC22 Sociology of Religion (Host); RC54 The Body in the Social Sciences See Joint Session Details for JS-73.

NOTES

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www.isa-sociology.org

RC23 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

No. 279

RC23

Sociology of Science and Technology Program Coordinator: Nadia ASHEULOVA, Institute of History of Science and Technology, Russia and Alice ABREU, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

14:15-15:45

Sunday 10 July

278

10:45-12:15

Location: Arcade Courtyard (Main Building)

JS-10 Sociology of Innovation: The Social

and Cultural Structure of Innovative Societies

Committees: RC02 Economy and Society (Host); RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology See Joint Session Details for JS-10.

12:30-14:00

A Sociological View for Science and Technologies

Session Organizer: Anatoly ABLAZHEY, Novosibirsk State University, Russia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 278.1 Jose Franciso ROMERO MUNOZ, AUTONOMOUS UNIVERSITY OF PUEBLA, Mexico and Rollin KENT SERNA, BENEMERITA UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE PUEBLA, Mexico University-Industry Collaboration in Agro-Biotechnology in Puebla, Mexico: Different Types of Social Capital for Innovation

JS-13 The Future of University Research and

278.2 Dennis ZUEV, Independent Scholar, Russia Development of Urban Mobility Innovation in China: The Case of E-Bike

Committees: RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology (Host); RC07 Futures Research

278.3 Finn ORSTAVIK, USN, Norway Innovation Agency and Institutional Powers: The Case of Norwegian Salmon Farming

the National Innovation Systems

See Joint Session Details for JS-13.

278.4 Borut RONCEVIC, School of Advanced Social Studies, Slovenia and Frank PECK, University of Cumbria, United Kingdom Cognition, Innovations and Knowledge Spillovers

Monday 11 July 10:45-12:15 277

Globalization of Science and Technologies: Present Challenges, Future Acceptance

278.5 Daniel GABALDON-ESTEVAN, Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology, Universitat de València, Spain and Josep-Antoni YBARRA, Departamento de Economía Aplicada y Política Económica, Universitat d’Alacant, Spain Looking at the People Innovating: Innovative Districts of European Ceramics

Location: Hörsaal 42 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Liliia ZEMNUKHOVA, European University at St.Peresburg, Russia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 277.1 Jurgen POESCHE, none, Canada and Ilkka KAURANEN, Aalto University, Finland Many Diverse Sciences in a Multipolar World 277.2 Jaime JIMENEZ GUZMAN, IIMAS, UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL AUTÓNOMA DE MÉXICO, Mexico; Juan C. ESCALANTE LEAL, UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL AUTÓNOMA DE MÉXICO, IIMAS. Modelación Matemática de Sistemas Sociales, Mexico and Hernando ORTEGA CARRILLO, UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL AUTÓNOMA DE MÉXICO, IIMAS, Departamento de Probabilidad y Estadística, Mexico How New Technologies from the South Are Taken By the Economic North: Future Acceptance? 277.3 Maria Lucia MACIEL, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Sarita ALBAGLI, Instituto Brasileiro de Informação em Ciência e Tecnologia, Brazil; Henrique PARRA, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil and Felipe FONSECA, Instituto Brasileiro de Informação em Ciência e Tecnologia, Brazil The Case for Open and Collaborative Science

16:00-17:30 279

The Knowledge Society and the Brics: Economic and Social Implications

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Sonia GUIMARAES, Federal University do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 279.1 Margarita BERSHADSKAYA, Research University - Higher School of Economics, Russia and Yulia VOZNESENSKAYA, Modern University for the Humanities, Russia Brics’s Countries in the Webometrics Ranking of World Universities 279.2 Galina GVOZDEVA, Institute of Economics & Industrial Engineering, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia and Elena GVOZDEVA, Institute of Economics & Industrial Engineering, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Labor Practices and Expectations of the Russian Young Scientists and Innovators

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175

Sociology of Science and Technology

277.5 Olga MILIUCHIKHINA, The Russian Presidential Academy of national economy and public administration, Russia The Types of Communities in the Structure of Innovative Society

RC23

277.4 Natalia SHMATKO, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia and Yurij KATCHANOV, National Research University - Higher School of Economics, Russia Careers Development and International Mobility of Russian Doctorate Holders

Sociology of Science and Technology

RC23

No. 280

Program–Session Details

RC23 Tuesday 12 July

279.3 Vinod CHANDRA, J N P G College, Lucknow University, India Building the Knowledge Society through Digital India Programme

280.3 Oliver BERLI, University of Cologne, Germany Disruptions and Detours – Methodological Challenges and Opportunities of Interaction Effects in Qualitative Interviews with Young Researchers

279.4 Anatoly ABLAZHEY, Novosibirsk State University, Russia and Vladimir PETROV, Novosibirsk State University, Philosophy Department, Russia Adaptive Strategies of Russian Scientists in the Era of Reforms

280.1 Liliia ZEMNUKHOVA, Russian Academy of Sciences; European University at St. Petersburg, Russia Mobility, Transfer, and Other Challenges: Some Tips from the IT Professionals

279.5 Xiaohua ZHONG, Department of Sociology, Tongji University, China and Shuqin ZHOU, Institute of Social Development, Nanjing Association of Social Science, China China’s New Strategy of “Internet Plus” and Its Social Impacts

10:45-12:15 281

Tuesday 12 July

Science and Technology for the Better World

Location: Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

09:00-10:30 280

280.6 Catarina EGREJA, CIES / ISCTE-IUL, Portugal Sociology in Foreign Scientific Fields: An Analysis of the Portuguese Higher Education System

Session Organizers: Czarina SALOMA-AKPEDONU, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines; Leandro RAIZER, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil and Fabricio NEVES, Brasilia University, Brazil

Roundtable for the Early Career Researchers

Location: Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

ROUNDTABLES:

Session Organizers: Matthias GROSS, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Germany and Nadia ASHEULOVA, Institute of History of Science and Technology, Russia

Roundtable A

ROUNDTABLES:

281.9 Aymeric LUNEAU, MSH Paris-Nord, France “Look, but Don’t Touch” : Public Involvement in the French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health and Safety

Roundtable A: Science, Technology, and the Governance of New Realities ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 280.8 Michael HUTTER, University of Vienna, Austria Governing New Realities: The Negotiation Proceedings for the International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) 280.5 Luis JUNQUEIRA, Instituto de Ciencias Sociais Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal Science, Policy and Societal Needs: Renewable Energy Research in Portugal 280.4 Ivett ESTRADA, Department of Educational Research at the Center for Research and Advanced Studies (DIE/CinvestavIPN), Mexico and Eduardo REMEDI, Department of Educational Research at the Center for Research and Advanced Studies (DIE/ Cinvestav-IPN), Mexico Scientific Production Re-Configurations Under a Global/ Local Perspective: The Case of Applied Physics in Southeast Mexico 280.2 Renato PONCIANO SANDOVAL, University of Padua, Italy Technological Determinism on the Media Representation of the Conflict over Guatemala’s Hydropower Plants: An Exploratory Survey

Roundtable B: Transformations, Disruptions, and Novel Technologies ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 280.7 Daniel KERPEN, Institute of Sociology at RWTH Aachen University, Germany; Jacqueline LEMM, Institut für Textiltechnik (ITA) at RWTH Aachen University, Germany and Mario LOHRER, Institut für Textiltechnik (ITA) at RWTH Aachen University, Germany Advanced Manufacturing Implementations Transforming Production Systems: Insights from an Interdisciplinary Young Scholars Research Group Focusing on the German Textile Industry

176

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

281.1 Christopher MALLAGH, Leeds University, Retired, United Kingdom Applied Knowledge Model Systems As Actor-Networks 281.6 Czarina SALOMA-AKPEDONU, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines; Michael Pante PANTE, Department of History, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines and Michael SYSON, Department of Information Systems and Computer Science, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines From Knowledge to Policy: Mobilizing Social Science Knowledge in the Philippine Food Staples Self-Sufficiency Program

Roundtable B ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 281.13 Terry SCHUMACHER, RHIT, USA Addressing Uncertainty through Construction of Vision: The Potential of Scenario Planning. 281.2 Catherine ROBY, Université Rennes 2, France Approche Des Conceptions Du Développement Durable Dans Les écoles D’ingénieurs Françaises 281.16 David MACRO, Utrecht University, Netherlands From Institutions to Networks to Organizational Outcomes: The Case of Open Source Innovation 281.7 Elena A. IVANOVA, Sociological Institute, Russia Postgraduate’s Image about Future Scientific Work 281.11 Davide DUSI, Ghent University, Belgium Social Innovation Driven By Digital Innovation: Conditions of Citizens’ Participation in Technology-Driven Innovation Processes

www.isa-sociology.org

RC23 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 281.14 Daniel GABALDON-ESTEVAN, Universitat de Valencia, Spain Going Green, Adopting the Rhetoric or Going Beyond? a Sociological Look at Environmental Transitions Theory

281.4 Georg FRANCK, Vienna University of Technology, Austria Vanity Fairs. Competition in the Service of Self-Esteem. on Modern Science and Post-Modern Media Cultur 281.8 Sambit MALLICK, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, India Weakening Powerloom Industry and Allied Technology Factors: A Sociological Study of Siminoi Powerloom Cluster in Odisha

282.4 Joao Marcelo EHLERT MAIA, FGV, Brazil; Raewyn CONNELL, University of Sydney, Australia and Robert MORRELL, University of Cape Town, South Africa Doing Science in the South: Negotiating Centrality and Marginality in the Process of Knowledge Production on a Global Scale. 282.5 Ivett ESTRADA, Department of Educational Research at the Center for Research and Advanced Studies (DIE/CinvestavIPN), Mexico and Eduardo REMEDI, Department of Educational Research at the Center for Research and Advanced Studies (DIE/ Cinvestav-IPN), Mexico International Collaboration in a Department of Applied Physics in Mexico: Scope and Character Analysis from a Gender Perspective

16:00-17:30 283

Roundtable D ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 281.5 Yu-cheng LIU, Nanhua Univesity, Taiwan “Doing Privacy” in an Accelerating Society: A Sociological Perspective on How Wearable Technology Shapes People’s Recognition and Practice 281.3 Friederike ROHDE, Technische Universitat Berlin, ZTG, Germany and Martina SCHAEFER, TU Berlin, ZTG, Germany Organizing the Smart Grid: The Underlying Meso-Level Social Order of Smart Grid Development 281.12 Mathieu ALBERT, University of Toronto, Canada and Elise PARADIS, University of Toronto, Canada Social Scientists and Humanists in the Health Research Field: A Clash of Epistemic Habitus 281.15 Maria Elena FABREGAT CABRERA, University of Alicante, Spain; Raul RUIZ CALLADO, University of Alicante, Spain and Francisco IBANEZ, Innovatec S&C, Spain Sociology for Transdisciplinar Innovation: Useful R&D for Solving Real Problems. Case Study.

14:15-15:45 282

Global Science and International Collaboration: A Gender Perspective from the South

Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Alice ABREU, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Judith ZUBIETA GARCIA, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Chair: Judith ZUBIETA GARCIA, UNAM, Mexico AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 282.1 Alice ABREU, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil The Construction of Excellence in Science: Problems, Challenges and Advancements from a Gender Perspective 282.2 Lisa FREHILL, National Science Foundation, USA and Katie SEELY-GANT, Energetics Technology Center, USA Enhancing Gender Equity in Opportunities for International Collaboration: Policy Implications of Three Studies

Governance in Science and Technology: Research, Innovation and Knowledge Sharing

Language: English, French Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Luisa VELOSO, Centre for Research and Studies in Sociology CIES-IUL, Portugal; Paula URZE, New University of Lisbon, Portugal and Isabel AMARAL, New University of Lisbon, Portugal AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 283.1 Laura CRUZ-CASTRO, CSIC Institute of Public Goods and Policies, Spain; Pablo KREIMER, CONICET, Argentina and Luis SANZ-MENENDEZ, CSIC- Institute of Public Goods and Policies, Spain The Changing Role of Research Councils in Public Research Systems: Argentina and Spain in Comparative Perspective 283.2 Christine BAILEY, Universidad de Playa Ancha, Chile and Silke HAARICH, Haarich Regional Research and Development, Germany Innovation Governance in Chile – a Methodology to Measure Cultural Elements in Innovation Systems 283.3 Irina DEZHINA, Skolkovo institute of science and technology, Russia Russian-Speaking Researchers Abroad: Do They Want to Cooperate with Russia? 283.4 Cecilia MANZO, University of Teramo, Italy and Francesco RAMELLA, University of Torino, Italy The Fab Labs in Italy: New Local Collective Goods for Development 283.5 Georg REISCHAUER, Hertie School of Governance, Germany Relational Strategies of Public Organizations to Stimulate the Diffusion of Knowledge in Innovation Systems 283.6 Wilfried WUNDERLICH, Tokai University, Japan Creativity in Natural Science Requires Ethical Balance Between Trust and Risk

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281.10 Anders HYLMÖ, Lund University, Sweden Neoclassical Economics As Style of Scientific Reasoning: A Sociological Study of Contemporary Economics

282.3 Eloisa MARTIN, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Where Are Brazilian Sociologists in the Geopolitics of Knowledge?

RC23

Roundtable C

No. 283

RC23

No. 284

Wednesday 13 July

RC23 Wednesday 13 July

285.3 Livia FRITZ, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Department of Geography, Germany The Contours of Participatory Dynamics in Sustainability Research at Science-Society Interface

09:00-10:30 284

Sociology of Science and Technology

Program–Session Details

Challenges and Opportunities of Nanotechnology and Other Technological Advances for the Health and Environment.

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Tania SILVA, Universidade Federal de Sergipe, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 284.1 Claudia SCHWARZ-PLASCHG, University of Vienna, Austria Imagining Nanotechnology in Public Engagement – the Power of Analogies 284.2 Julio ZÁRATE VÁSQUEZ, Grupo de Analisis para el Desarrollo, Peru Science Policy and Institutionalization of Science. Public Policies of Nanotechnology in Latin America, the Cases of Brazil and Peru. 284.3 Gregoire LITS, Université catholique de Louvain IACCHOS, Belgium Eco-Power and Technocracy Today. Analysis of the Recent “Participatory Turn” in Belgian Nuclear Waste Management

285.4 Eugenia RODRIGUES, Science, Technology and Innovation Studies (STIS), University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom Citizen Science and the Democratisation of Knowledge Production 285.5 Teresa SORDE-MARTI, Department of Sociology, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain; MAR FORASTER, University of Barcelona, Spain; Emilia AIELLO, Department of Sociology, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain and Nataly BUSLON, University of Barcelona, Spain Sior: A New Tool to Evidence Social Impact of Science

14:15-15:45 286

RC23 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30 287

New Challenges of Science in Underdeveloped and Emerging Economies

284.4 Débora LANZENI, IN3-UOC, Spain and Elisenda ARDEVOL, IN3-UOC, Spain Contested Futures and Smart Technologies

Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

284.5 Stefan AYKUT, LISIS (INRA / UPEM / CNRS), France Performing Energy Policy. Reconsidering the Role of Energy Forecasts in Policy-Making

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

284.6 Anna WILLIAMS, Nesta, United Kingdom Visions of a Robot Future: Towards a Pragmatic Approach for Future Speculation.

10:45-12:15 285

The Politics of Science and Techology: Authority, Expertise and Democratic Participation

Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Gary BOWDEN, University of New Brunswick, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 285.1 Alena BLEICHER, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Germany; Magdalena WALLKAMM, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Germany and Martin DAVID, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Germany When Public and Science Form a Community of Practice – Organizing Participation in Technology Development in a German Mining Region

Session Organizer: Rafael Antonio PALACIOS BUSTAMANTE, Investigador y Consultor Internacional, Venezuela 287.1 Rafael Antonio PALACIOS BUSTAMANTE, Investigador y Consultor Internacional, Venezuela Economic Complexity and Creation of Non-Tradable Technological Capabilities 287.2 Sonia GUIMARAES, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil The New Economy and the Challenges Facing Emerging Countries: The Case of Brazil 287.3 Cholnapa ANUKUL, ๋Center of Just Society Network, Thailand Connecting Research into Practice and Policy: A Case Study of Health Equity Research in Thailand 287.4 Esther DARKU, University of Fort Hare, South Africa and Wilson AKPAN, University of Fort Hare, South Africa Textile Capitalism in Africa: Competition, Innovation and the African Challenge 287.5 Duru ARUN KUMAR, NSIT, DU, India Use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) in Higher Educational Institutes – Some Concerns 287.6 Ku MANUSHI, Indian Institute of Mass Communication, India Rural India in the Digital Age

285.2 Stefano CRABU, University of Padova, Italy and Paolo MAGAUDDA, University of Padova, Italy Building Alternative Infrastructures for Digital Communications: Technoscientific Activism in the Italian Wireless Community Network

178

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RC23 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

288

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 289.1 Kornelia KONRAD, University of Twente, Netherlands and Carla ALVIAL PALAVICINO, University of Twente, Netherlands Evolving Patterns of Governance of and By Expectations the Graphene Hype Wave

Recent Technological Developments and Its Implications for (better) Employment

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

289.2 Jingwen YIN, University of Bristol, United Kingdom Using the Concrete Case “Bristol Is Open” to Explore the Future City in the Making

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 288.1 Linda NIERLING, KIT, Germany; Bettina KRINGS, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany and Antonio MONIZ, KIT, Germany Digital Myth? Visions and Open Questions in the Field of “Digital” Work

289.3 Heta TARKKALA, University of Helsinki, Finland Building the Future through Collecting and Using Genomic Data – Case of Finland 289.4 Andreas LOSCH, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany; Reinhard HEIL, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany and Christoph SCHNEIDER, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Visions As Socio-Epistemic Practices – a Concept to Analyse the Effects of Visions

288.2 Florian BUTOLLO, FSU Jena, Institute for Sociology, Germany; Martin EHRLICH, FSU Jena, Institute for Sociology, Germany; Thomas ENGEL, FSU Jena, Institute for Sociology, Germany and Ingo SINGE, FSU Jena, Institute for Sociology, Germany What about the Workers? the Latest Industrial Revolution and Its Shop Floor Effects

289.5 Ingo SCHULZ-SCHAEFFER, University of DuisburgEssen, Germany and Martin MEISTER, University of DuisburgEssen, Germany Situational Scenarios in Engineers’ Practices of Inventing Socio-Technical Futures

288.3 Klara-Aylin WENTEN, Technical University Munich, Germany The Future Is Unwritten... Time, Agency and Technological Development in Future Visions of Robots

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

288.4 Mariella BERRA, University of Turin, Italy Building a Socio Technical Network for the Dissemination of Qualified Knowledge. the Portal of Science and School 288.5 Naga CHELLURI, University of Hyderabad, India Enabling Institutional Innovations: A Critical Examination of Initiatives in Public Service Delivery in India

16:00-17:30 JS-71 How Are Science and Technology Engaged in Eco-Innovations?

14:15-15:45 289

289.6 Vincenzo GIORGINO, University of Torino, Italy An Enactive Approach to Social Innovation: Towards a Wise and Smart City

Understanding the Shaping of SocioTechnical Futures

Committees: RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology (Host); RC24 Environment and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-71.

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Knud BOEHLE, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany and Petra SCHAPER-RINKEL, Austrian Institute of Technology, Austria

NOTES

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Session Organizer: Antonio MONIZ, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany

RC23

10:45-12:15

No. 289

Environment and Society

RC24

No. 290

Program–Session Details

RC24

Environment and Society Program Coordinator: Koichi HASEGAWA, Tohoku University, Japan

Sunday 10 July

Natural Resources Conservation for Future and Civil Society.

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Rajendra PATIL, Shivaji University, India 290.1 N. ARUNOTAI, Social Research Institute, Thailand Expanding Participatory Resource Management in the Western Forest Complex of Thailand: Lessons from Civil Society 290.2 Mahadev SHINDE, Chhatrapati Shivaji College, Satara, Maharashtra, India., India Role of NGOs in Environmental Protection and Conservation: A Study of Satara District 290.3 Vidya AVACHAT, Sir Parshurambhau college, Pune, India, India Role of Non- Governmental Organization in Environmental Conservation: A Study of Vanarai Organization, India 290.4 Adolfo TORRES, Universidad de Granada Spain, Spain and Juan Francisco BEJARANO BELLA, Universidad de Granada, Spain Public Involvement Tools Aimed at Strenghtening Citizens’ Commitment in the Preservation of the Natural Area of DoÑana (SPAIN). 290.5 Sanjay SAVALE, K. T. H. M. College, Gangapur Road, Nashik, Maharashtra, India, India ‘Phase Pardhis’ of Central India in Search of Sustainable Livelihoods through Natural Resources Conservation 290.6 Machhindra SAKATE, MRJM College, Umbraj, Karad, India, India Water Conservation: A Study of Ugam Foundation, Balawadi, India

10:45-12:15 There’s No Planet B: Exploring Strategies for Changing Attitudes and Promoting Sustainable Behaviour at Every Level

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Lynne CIOCHETTO, College of Creative Arts, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 291.1 Matthew PERKS, Concordia University, Canada Indexing Behaviours Indicative of Eco-Citizenship Among the Canadian Population 291.2 Dominik SCHREIBER, University of Mannheim, Germany Climate Change and Humor? Revisiting Al Gore’s Documentary “an Inconvenient Truth”

180

291.4 Razieh KHAZAIE, Shiraz University, Iran and Nasser KARAMI, Bergen university, Norway Media; The Main Tool for Problematizing the Environmental Issue; Case Study: Iran

JS-16 Framing Discourses, Action and Collective Imaginaries about Environmental Issues

Committees: WG03 Visual Sociology (Host); RC24 Environment and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-16.

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

291

291.3 Yasushi MARUYAMA, Nagoya University, Japan; Makoto NISHIKIDO, Hosei University, Japan; Shota FURUYA, Researcher Institute for Sustainable Energy Policies, Japan and Tae NAKANE, Nagoya University, Japan Pro-Active Social Movement in Uncertain Social Issue of Sustainability: A Case Study of Citizen Cooperative in Japan

12:30-14:00

09:00-10:30 290

RC24 Sunday 10 July

14:15-15:45 JS-20 What Do Global Interventions Look like at Ground Level? the Everyday Implementation of International Environmental Schemes

Committees: RC24 Environment and Society (Host); WG01 Sociology of Local-Global Relations See Joint Session Details for JS-20.

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 292

Mitigating Global Emissions: Networks of Political Mobilization and International Cooperation

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jeffrey BROADBENT, University of Minnesota, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 292.1 Jeffrey BROADBENT, University of Minnesota, USA; Keiichi SATOH, Tohoku University, Japan and Volker SCHNEIDER, University of Konstanz, Germany Comparing Climate Change Policy Networks: Project Overview and Comparison of Japan, Germany and the United States 292.2 Keiichi SATOH, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Japan Governing through Voluntarily?: The Japanese Climate Change Policy and the Policy Networks 292.3 Pradip SWARNAKAR, ABV-Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management, India and Tuomas YLA-ANTTILA, University of Helsinki, Finland Social Movement Organizations, Epistemic Communities or a “Third Sector”? the Divergent Roles of Indian Civil Society Organizations in Policy Networks of Climate Change 292.4 Tuomas YLA-ANTTILA, University of Helsinki, Finland; Antti GRONOW, University of Helsinki, Finland; Marcus CARSON, Stockholm Environment Institute, Sweden and Christofer EDLING, Lund University, Sweden Advocacy Coalitions and Policy Outcomes: Explaining the Divergent Trajectories of Climate Policy in Finland and Sweden

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RC24 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

10:45-12:15 293

New Research in the Sociology of Climate Change

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Mark STODDART, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada and David TINDALL, University of British Columbia, Canada Chair: Antti GRONOW, University of Helsinki, Finland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 293.1 Anna KUKKONEN, University of Helsinki, Finland and Pradip SWARNAKAR, ABV-Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management, India Climate Change Discourse Networks in the North and South: Comparing the US, Canada, Brazil and India 293.2 Midori AOYAGI, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan IPCC Reports on Climate Change and Media : Comparing Media Coverage of IPCC AR4 and AR5 293.3 Mark STODDART, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada and David TINDALL, University of British Columbia, Canada The Role of Engos in Canadian Climate Politics: Comparing Policy Network Actors’ Perceptions with Insights from Sociological Theories 293.4 Luisa SCHMIDT, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal; Joao GUERRA, Institute of Social Sciences. University of Lisbon, Portugal; Joao MOURATO, Institute of social Sciences. University of lisbon, Portugal; Jose GOMES FERREIRA, Institute of Social Sciences. University of Lisbon, Portugal and Adriana ALVES, Institute of Social Sciences. University of Lisbon, Portugal Climadapt.Local: Spreading and Strengthening Municipal Adaptation 293.5 Steve YEARLEY, Science, Technology and Innovation Studies (STIS), University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom and Eugenia RODRIGUES, Science, Technology and Innovation Studies (STIS), University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom Attempts to Govern Climate Policy through Emissions Targets and the Monitoring of Carbon Budgets: A CaseStudy of Climate Monitoring in the UK 293.6 Andrew SZASZ, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA Red State; Blue State: Conflicts over Teaching Climate Change in U.S. Public Schools

14:15-15:45 294

Environmental Risks, Disaster Prevention and Resilient Community from Perspectives of Environmental Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Koichi HASEGAWA, Tohoku University, Japan

294.1 Koichi HASEGAWA, Tohoku University, Japan Beyond 3.11: Environmental and Risk Awareness after the Fukushima and Tsunami Disaster 294.2 Hua-Mei CHIU, National Sun Yat-Sen University, Taiwan Environmental Conflicts and Risk Governance after 2014 Kaohsiung Gas Explosion 294.3 Guadalupe ORTIZ, University of Alicante, Spain; Jose Andres DOMINGUEZ, University of Huelva, Spain; Antonio ALEDO, University of Alicante, Spain; Anna Maria URGEGHE, University of Sassari, Italy and Fernando RELINQUE, University of Huelva, Spain Environmental and Social Impact Assessment of Golf Tourism: A Social Participatory and Multicriteria-Based Process Applied in Southern Spain 294.4 Jakub LEWANDOWSKI, 1) Institute for Agricultural and Forest Environment, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland, and 2) Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland Social Construction of Technology As a Perspective Explaining Stability in Flood Risk Management in Poland. 294.5 Danielle MILLER-BELAND, Concordia University, Canada The Social Effects of Methylmercury Contamination in the English-Wabigoon River System. 294.6 Atsushi NOZAWA, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Japan Negative Aspects of Noneconomic Compensation for Technological Disaster Victims-Contemporary Issues of Minamata Disease-

16:00-17:30 JS-37 The Visual Construction of Nature and Environment

Committees: WG03 Visual Sociology (Host); RC24 Environment and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-37.

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 295

Core Concepts in Environmental Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Magnus BOSTROM, Örebro University, Sweden and Debra DAVIDSON, University of Alberta, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 295.1 Stephan LORENZ, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany Growth Critique and Ecological Democratization 295.2 Jens JETZKOWITZ, Philipps University Marburg, Germany How to Generate Knowledge on Styles of Living and Acting? Comparing Different Approaches to a Core Concept in Environmental Sociology 295.3 Andreas MAYER, Institute of Social Ecology, Austria and Anke SCHAFFARTZIK, Institute of Social Ecology, Austria Is Sustainability Stuck in a Vicious Circle? 295.4 Jens ZINN, University of Melbourne, Australia Living in the Anthropocene: From Risk Society to RiskTaking Society

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292.6 James GOODMAN, University of Technology Sydney, Australia; Rebecca PEARSE, University of Sydney, Australia and Francesca DA RIMINI, University of Technology Sydney, Australia Mapping a Laggard: Climate Policy Networks in Australia

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC24

292.5 Luisa SCHMIDT, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal and Ana DELICADO, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal Climate Change Policy Networks in Portugal

No. 295

Environment and Society

RC24

No. 297

Program–Session Details

295.5 Stewart LOCKIE, James Cook University, Australia Monsters, Time Travel and Environmental Sociology 295.6 Luigi PELLIZZONI, University of Trieste, Italy Rethinking the Commons: From Nondualist Ontologies to Use without Law 295.7 Marja YLONEN, Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT), Finland Risk and Resilience 295.8 Jean Philippe SAPINSKI, Department of Sociology, University of Oregon, USA Nature, Environment, Territories: Some Political Implications of Environmental Sociology’s Discourse Categories

Environmental Attitudes, Opinions and Perceptions in Comparative Context

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Riley DUNLAP, Oklahoma State University, USA and Sandra MARQUART-PYATT, Michigan State University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 297.1 Lawrence HAMILTON, University of New Hampshire, USA Downscaling Climate Survey Data — from Large to Local 297.2 Malcolm FAIRBROTHER, University of Bristol, United Kingdom Trust and Public Support for Environmental Protection in Diverse National Contexts 297.3 Markus HADLER, Macquarie University, Australia Public and Private Environmental Behaviors: Determinants, Differences, and Similarities Across Countries and Time. 297.4 Manuel Magno GARCIA, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain and Jose ECHAVARREN, University Pablo Olavide, Spain Green Ideas on Gender: Examining the Gender Effect on Environmental Concern in a Multilevel Analysis 297.5 Vittorio SERGI, University of Urbino, Italy; Paolo GIARDULLO, University of Padova, Italy and Yuri KAZEPOV, University of Vienna, Austria Do Air Quality Policies and Individual Attitudes Meet? Four European Metropolitan Areas for a Comparative Exploration 297.6 Sandra MARQUART-PYATT, Michigan State University, USA Environmental Risk Perceptions over Time and Across National Contexts: A Comparative, Multilevel Study 297.7 Noriko IWAI, JGSS Research Center, Osaka University of Commerce, Japan and Kuniaki SHISHIDO, Osaka University of Commerce, Japan The Impact of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Accident on People’s Perception of Disaster Risks and Attitudes Toward Nuclear Energy Policy:Regional Differences and Distance from Nuclear Plants

296

Emerging Research in Environmental Sociology. Part I

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Magnus BOSTROM, Orebro University, Sweden

182

ROUNDTABLES:

Roundtable A ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 296.21 Rita RAHMAWATI, Djuanda University, Indonesia and Dudung Darusman DARUSMAN, Bogor Agricultural University, Indonesia Adaptation Strategies and Resilience of LOCAL Communities in the Struggling of Forest Resources 296.6 Catherine Mei Ling WONG, The Cairns Institute, James Cook University, Australia Hybrid Risk Governance: Integrating Knowledge-Based and Value-Based Decision Making 296.12 Rolf LIDSKOG, Environmental Sociology Section, Sweden Invented Communities and Social Vulnerability. the PostDisasters Dynamics of Extreme Events

10:45-12:15 297

RC24 Tuesday 12 July

296.5 Maria de Lourdes BASQUES, Anibal Firme de Lira e Analice Cutalo de Lira, Brazil The Environment in Question: A Arena Analysis of Public Debates in Marica / RJ - Project Port of Jaconé 296.19 Karly BURCH, University of Otago, New Zealand The Governance of Food Safety in Post-Fukushima Japan: Is There Space for the Public’s Rationalities and Experiences to be Included in the Governance and Regulation of Risky Technologies?

Roundtable B ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 296.22 Valentina ANZOISE, European Center for Living Technology, Ca’ Foscari University, Italy Cha(lle)Nging Perspectives: Sustainable Urban Development of Medium-Size Cities in China 296.1 Namita GUPTA, Panjab University, Chandigarh, India and Rajiv GUPTA, Municipal Corporation, India Dams and Development: Stress Factors for Environment and Societies 296.7 Sheng-Wen TSENG, National Taiwan Ocean University, Taiwan and Jenn Hwan WANG, National Chengchi University, Taiwan Institutional Decoupling: The Paradox of Green Energy Development in China 296.13 Kazuko UDA, Fukuoka Institute of Technology, Japan Isolated Illness: Characteristics and Issues of Multiple Chemical Sensitivity 296.20 Ozge YAKA, College d’etudes mondiales, Fondation des sciences de l’homme, France “Clean Energy” Vs. Environmental Justice: Local Community Struggles Against Hydropower Plants in Turkey

Roundtable C ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 296.26 Sulastri SARDJO, University of Indonesia, Indonesia Challenges in Improving Local Community Livelihood: A Case Study of Villages Surrounding Conservation Forest Areas in West Java, Indonesia 296.29 Mihai SARBU, University of Ottawa, Canada Divesting from Fossil Fuel Companies: An Attempt to Challenge the Structural Forces Defining Consumer Capitalism. 296.2 Midori AOYAGI, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan Energy Choice Differences Among Publics, Analyzing Social Inequality Point of View.

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RC24 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

296.23 S ayamol CHAROENRATANA, CUSRI, Thailand Human Security in New Frontier of Environmental Sociology: EIA, Community Participation and Community Right in Petroleum Exploration and Production Project in Thailand 296.10 Arho TOIKKA, University of Helsinki, Finland Uncovering Multi-Level Governance and Policy Idea Transfer in Energy Policy Using Topic Modelling on Large Policy Corpuses

296.18 Eirini Ioanna VLACHOPOULOU, University of the Aegean, Greece and Mitsutaku MAKINO, Fisheries Research Agency of Japan, Japan Sustainable Fisheries and Global Change: The Cases of Shiretoko Peninsula and Tokyo Bay, Japan 296.9 Luca SABINI, Newcastle University Business School, United Kingdom The Project of Sustainability: The Role of Project Management in Developing a More Sustainable Economy and Society

14:15-15:45 298

Emerging Research in Environmental Sociology. Part II

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building)

Roundtable D

Session Organizer: Debra DAVIDSON, University of Alberta, Canada

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 296.27 Nina TROEGER, Chamber of Labour, Austria and Florian WUKOVITSCH, Chamber of Labour, Austria Development of a Regular Consumer Survey for Monitoring Transition Processes 296.17 Sandrine BARREY, University Toulouse 2 - CERTOP CNRS, France Limitations and Demarcations of Transgenic Salmon Market : The Political Work of Scientific Experts

ROUNDTABLES:

Roundtable A ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 298.13 Harald HEINRICHS, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany Governance without Government? Re-Introducing the State As Key Actor of Sustainability Transitions

296.30 Raya MUTTARAK, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/OAW and WU), Austria and Wolfgang LUTZ, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/OAW, WU), Austria Newer, Smarter, and Greener: Demographic Metabolism As a Driver of Green Consumption and Pro-Environmental Behaviour

298.10 Christoph GOERG, University of Klagenfurt, Austria and Willi HAAS, Institute of Social Ecology, Alpen Adria Universitaet, Austria Long-Term Transitions and Social-Ecological Transformations – Integrating Different Spatial and Temporal Scales

296.3 Natalia MAGNANI, University of Trento, Italy Policies and Practices of Housing Energy Retrofit in Northern Italian Cities

298.20 Fanny PELLISSIER, INRA, France and Alix LEVAIN, INRA, France Reducing the Use of Pesticides in Europe. Birth (and death?) of a Transition Policy.

296.8 Roberta PALTRINIERI, University of Bologna, Italy; Stefano SPILLARE, University of Bologna, Italy; Lucia MARCIANTE, University of Bologna, Italy and Umberto MEZZACAPO, University of Bologna, Italy Practices for Food Waste Reduction in the Digital Age 296.15 Nadine HAUFE, Vienna University of Technology, Austria Understanding Energy Consumption and Mobility Behaviour - a Starting-Point for Interventions to Change Individual Behaviour to More Sustainability 296.25 Elisabeth SUESSBAUER, Center for Technology and Society (ZTG), Germany Workplaces As Enabling Structures for Sustainable Consumption Practices?

298.4 Ulrich BRAND, University of Vienna / Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies, Austria and Markus WISSEN, University of Business and Law Berlin, Germany Strategies of a Green Economy, Contours of a Green Capitalism. Sociology Meets Political Economy

Roundtable B ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 298.1 Ngamjahao KIPGEN, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, India Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable Livelihoods through Ecotourism: A Prospective Look in Northeast India

296.14 Meenakshi Sinha SWAMI, University of Delhi, India Making Sense of Ecovillage Senses

298.19 Shamalabai B. DASOG, Dept of Sociology,M.Ms Arts, Commerce, Science and Home- Science College, India and Chandrika K. B, Dept of Studies and Research in Sociology, RaniChannamma University, India Environment Protection : Role of National Service Scheme in Belgaum, India.

296.28 Robert NEUMANN, Technische Universitat Dresden, Germany and Guido MEHLKOP, University of Erfurt, Germany Pro-Environmental Behavior in High Cost Situations – Evidence from a Mixed-Mode Panel in Germany

298.23 Tania M.Freitas BARROS MACIEL, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Human and Social Sustainability: Development of Man As ‘ True ‘ Development.

Roundtable E ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

296.24 Joao GUERRA, Institute of Social Sciences. University of Lisbon, Portugal Slippage in Sustainability – the Crisis Effects on the Gap

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Environment and Society

296.16 Ossi OLLINAHO, Independent Researcher, Brazil Exploring the Foundations of Human Environmental Behavior: A Deep Dive into Relevance Systems and Practical Intelligibility

296.4 Saleem MIR, Cluster Innovation Centre, India Spirituality As a Panacea for the Ecological Crisis in Kashmir Region, India

RC24

296.11 Karl-Michael BRUNNER, Institute for Sociology and Social Research, Austria and Sylvia MANDL, Austrian Institute for Sustainable Development, Austria Energy Consumption and Social Inequality. Fuel Poverty As a Socio-Ecological Problem

No. 298

Environment and Society

RC24

No. 299

Program–Session Details

298.16 Tania SILVA, Universidade Federal de Sergipe, Brazil and Cristiane GUEDES, Instituto Federal de Sergipe, Brazil Natural Resources, Development and Modernization: The Social and Environmental Consequences in the Lower San Francisco River in Brazil 298.25 Richard FILCAK, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia The EU Enlargement and Green Movement in the Eastern Europe: From Environmental Justice to Environmental Modernization? 298.11 Giverage AMARAL, University of Campinas, Brazil The Institutionalization Process of the Environmental ISSUE in Mozambique, 1980-2000.

Roundtable C ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 298.17 Marlene KAMMERER, University of Zurich, Switzerland Analyzing Discourse Networks –the Politics of Climate Change Mitigation in Switzerland 298.7 Trevon FULLER, University of California, Los Angeles, USA; Anthony TROCHEZ, University of California, Los Angeles, USA; Paul LOUNDOU, Institut de Recherche en Ecologie Tropicale (IRET), Gabon; Serge KAMGANG, Ecole de Faune de Garoua, Cameroon; Thomas NARINS, University at AlbanyState University of New York, USA; Thomas SMITH, University of California, Los Angeles, USA and Walter ALLEN, University of California, Los Angeles, USA Biodiversity and Climate Change in Central Africa: Perceptions, Attitudes and Policies 298.24 Dominik SCHREIBER, University of Mannheim, Germany Climate Change and Its Entanglements with the Lifeworld – a Mundane Phenomenological Approach to Global Warming 298.22 Daniel HAUSKNOST, Insitute of Social Ecology, Austria and Willi HAAS, Institute of Social Ecology, Alpen Adria Universitaet, Austria Enabling Conditions and Impediments to the Stabilisation and Mainstreaming of Low-Carbon Practices 298.3 Ylva UGGLA, School of Humanities, Education and Social Sciences, Sweden and Linda SONERYD, University of Gothenburg, Sweden Green Governmentality, Responsibilization and the Role of International Engos 298.14 Shu-Fen KAO, Fo Guang University, Taiwan Journalists As Cosmopolitan Actors in Climate Change Communication? Exploring Taiwan Case

Roundtable E ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 298.18 Henrike SCHAUM, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Department of Socioeconomics, Austria and Hendrik THEINE, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Institute for Ecological Economics, Austria Beyond Economic Inequality - a Socio-Ecological Perspective 298.2 Ilari NIKULA, University of Lapland, Finland Environmental Crisis and Depoliticization 298.12 Ana VARA, National University of San Martin, Argentina Environmental Inequality, Collective Action Frames, and Social Theory: A View from Latin America 298.9 Jean-Paul BOZONNET, Sciences Po - Grenoble University, France Is There a Cyclical Movement in Environmental Concern in Europe?

16:00-17:30 299

RC24 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 300

Environmental Issues in Asia and Developing Countries: New Contexts for Environmental Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Dowan KU, Environment and Society Research Institute, South Korea AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 300.1 Shu-Fen KAO, Fo Guang University, Taiwan Citizen’s Initiatives and Energy Democratization in Taiwan 300.2 Thounaojam SOMOKANTA, centre for studies in science, technology and innovation policy, India Transitions in Risk Society: Regional Case of Gujarat Solar Park 300.3 Kushariyaningsih BOEDIONO, Binghamton University, State University of New York, USA Oil Palm Boom and the Fate of Oil Palm Small-Holders in Sumatra-Indonesia, 1965-2015

Roundtable D ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 298.8 Bruce TRANTER, University of Tasmania, Australia and Jed DONOGHUE, University of Tasmania, Australia Climate Scepticism in Cross-National Perspective 298.15 Georgios GKIOUZEPAS, University of the Aegean, Greece Mapping Parties’ Positions on Climate Change in Pre-Crisis Greece 298.21 Utpal Kumar DE, North-Eastern Hill University, India Sustainable Agricultural Management, Productivity Growth and Impact of Climate Change in India’s North-East 298.6 Christina PRELL, University of Maryland, USA Unequal Carbon Exchanges: Understanding Pollution Inequalities As Embodied in Global Trade

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RC24 Wednesday 13 July

300.4 Saburo HORIKAWA, Department of Sociology, Hosei University, Japan What Have We Gained and Lost Along the Way?: The Rise and Institutionalization of Environmental Sociology in Japan 300.5 Mikiko SHINOKI, Chuo University, Japan; Hiroshi KOMATSU, Matsuyama University, Japan; Koji ABE, Yamagata University, Japan; Yasuto NAKANO, Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan and Michio UMINO, Professor Emeritus, Tohoku University, Japan Exploring Trend of Attitudes and Behaviors Toward Environment: The Time Series Analysis in Sendai, Japan 2000-2015

www.isa-sociology.org

RC24 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30

301

303

How Does Society Change? Theories and Research in the Field of Social Change, Transformation and Transition

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

RC24

10:45-12:15

No. 303

Environmental Practices and Social Changes

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Ritsuko OZAKI, Imperial College London, United Kingdom; Luisa SCHMIDT, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal and Audrone TELESIENE, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

301.1 Debra DAVIDSON, University of Alberta, Canada What the Frack?! Observations on the Rapid Development of, and Growing Resistance to, Hydraulic Fracturing.

303.1 Ritsuko OZAKI, Imperial College London, United Kingdom Shifting Household Activities at Peak Demand

301.2 Dwiparna CHATTERJEE, IIT Bombay, India Gentrification in the Textile Mill Areas of Mumbai: Changing Spatial Relations and the Role of State

303.2 Anna WOLFF, Institut für Soziologie LMU München, Germany; Bernhard GILL, Institut für Soziologie LMU München, Germany; Ines WEBER, Institut für Soziologie LMU München, Germany; Johannes SCHUBERT, Institut für Soziologie LMU München, Germany and Michael SCHNEIDER, Institut für Soziologie LMU München, Germany Heating Practices and Non-Technical Energy Saving Potentials

301.3 Silvia DONEDDU, University of Cagliari, Italy The Paradox of Transition. Environmental Vs. Economic Development: The Eternal Dilemma. 301.4 Sandra WASSERMANN, University of Stuttgart, Germany The Governance of Branching Points in Electricity Transitions: A Case Study from Germany on the Struggle over Capacity Markets

14:15-15:45 302

New Frontiers and Recent Developments in Environmental Sociology

303.3 Sabine HIELSCHER, TU Berlin, ZTG, Germany; Martina SCHAEFER, TU Berlin, ZTG, Germany; Michaela LEITNER, Austrian Institute for Sustainable Development, Austria and Sylvia MANDL, Austrian Institute for Sustainable Development, Austria Developing Pro-Environmental Practices within Community Based Initiatives: Eco-Villages and Low Carbon Municipalities 303.4 Chandan KAUSHAL, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India and Sarmistha PATTANAIK, Indian Institute of Technology, India Meanings and Social Practices: Changing Pattern of Water Consumption in Western Himalayan Region

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Koichi HASEGAWA, Tohoku University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 302.1 Marina FISCHER-KOWALSKI, Institute for Social Ecology, Austria and Anke SCHAFFARTZIK, Institute of Social Ecology, Austria The Vienna School of Social Ecology – an Enrichment or Too Interdisciplinary a Challenge for Environmental Sociology? 302.2 Magnus BOSTROM, Örebro University, Sweden and Ylva UGGLA, School of Humanities, Education and Social Sciences, Sweden Practices, Dilemmas and Reflections Among Environmental Representatives 302.3 Peter OOSTERVEER, Environmental Policy Group, Wageningen University, Netherlands Practices, Flows and Networks: Towards Understanding Sustainable Global Food Provision

303.5 Vivienne WALLER, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Changing Socio-Technical Practices to Enable the Composting of Food Waste for Food Production 303.6 Lukas KALA, Masaryk University, Faculty of Social Studies, Department of Environmental Studies, Czech Republic and Lucie GALCANOVA, Masaryk University, Office for Population Studies, Czech Republic Intergenerational Transmission of Pro-Environmental Values and Lifestyles: How Is the Ecological Habitus Reproduced? 303.7 Qian WANG, Nagoya University, Japan Exploring the Social Compensation Patterns in Process of Developing Wind Energy in China

302.4 Henrike RAU, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany, Germany and Gary GOGGINS, School of Political Science and Sociology, NUI, Galway, Ireland, Ireland A Question of Scale: The Sustainability Potential of Food Provision within Large Organisations 302.5 Harris ALI, York University, Canada and Peter MULVIHILL, York University, Canada Towards a Critical Environmental Management 302.6 Koichi HASEGAWA, Tohoku University, Japan Reframing Environmental Sociology from Downstream Perspective

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Environment and Society

Session Organizers: Michael JONAS, Institute for Advanced Studies, Austria and Beate LITTIG, Institute for Advanced Studies Vienna, Austria

RC24

No. 304

Program–Session Details

Thursday 14 July

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 304.5 Aymeric LUNEAU, MSH Paris-Nord, France Institutionalising “the Openess of Scientific Expertise to Society” : A French Case Study

09:00-10:30 JS-62 How Did Environment Call Development

14:15-15:45

Environment and Society

Pathways out?

305

Committees: RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development (Host); RC24 Environment and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-62.

Time Cultures and Sustainable Futures: Theoretical Concepts and Practical Tools

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

10:45-12:15 304

RC24 Thursday 14 July

Session Organizers: Henrike RAU, Ludwig Maximilians University Munich, Germany; Jeppe Dyrendom GRAUGAARD, Time-Culture. Net, Denmark and Morten SVENSTRUP, Time-Culture.Net, Denmark

The Institutionalisation of Expertise in Environmental Governance

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building)

305.1 Barbara SMETSCHKA, Institute of Social Ecology, Austria; Veronika GAUBE, Institute of Social Ecology, Austria; Alexander REMESCH, Institute of Social Ecology, Austria; Edeltraud HASELSTEINER, Institute of Social Ecology, Austria and Dominik WIEDENHOFER, Institute of Social Ecology, Austria Time Use and Energy Use: Exploring Conceptual Links and Assessing Sustainable Pathways

Session Organizers: Rolf LIDSKOG, Environmental Sociology Section, Sweden and Alexander BOGNER, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 304.1 Karin GUSTAFSSON, Orebro University, Sweden Reproducing Expertise. the Role of Young Scholars in Ipbes’s Capacity Building Efforts.

305.2 Katerina PSARIKIDOU, Lancaster University, United Kingdom Unfolding the Multiplicity of the ‘Temporal’ in the Pursuit of Sustainable Mobility Futures

304.2 Gregoire LITS, Université catholique de Louvain IACCHOS, Belgium Knowledge, Tools of Governance and Organization – Analyzing the Institutionalization of the Belgian Space of Decision Surrounding Nuclear Waste Management 304.3 Tomiko YAMAGUCHI, International Christian University, Japan and Junko HABU, University of California, Berkeley, USA Institutional Expertise and Lay Responses to Soil Contamination: The Experience of Farmers in Fukushima 304.4 Martine LEGRIS REVEL, Lille University CERAPS, France and Jean Gabriel CONTAMIN, Lille University - CERAPS, France When Participatory Research Tackles Environmental Stakes. Science, Democracy and Expertise

305.3 Carla Patricia GALAN-GUEVARA, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Can Environmental Knowledge That Reaffirms Sustainable Livelihoods be Maintained?

16:00-17:30 JS-71 How Are Science and Technology Engaged in Eco-Innovations?

Committees: RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology (Host); RC24 Environment and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-71.

NOTES

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www.isa-sociology.org

RC25 Sunday 10 July

Program–Session Details

Language and Society

307.4 Everlyn KISEMBE DARKWAH, All Natins University College, Ghana The Development of Lexical and Conceptual Representations in Sheng 307.5 Maria YELENEVSKAYA, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel and Larisa FIALKOVA, The University of Haifa, Israel Dehumanizing the “Other” in Conflict Situations: From an Evil Human to an Animal and Object 307.6 Kapitolina FEDOROVA, European University at St. Petersburg, Russia “Different Kinds of Foreigners”: Russian Speakers’ Stereotypes, Discourse Strategies, and Modes of Interethnic Communication

Sunday 10 July 09:00-10:30

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Neutrality in Language Policy

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Mark SEILHAMER, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

307.7 Damian RIVERS, Future University Hakodate, Japan White Nationalist Discourse on Hip-Hop: A Sociolinguistic Analysis of “Otherness” Construction

12:30-14:00

306.1 Evgeny GOLOVKO, European University at St. Petersburg, Russia Russian Vs. ‘languages of Small-Numbered Peoples’: New Developments, Old Approaches?

308

306.2 Jone GARAIZAR, University of Deusto, Spain Neutrality and Discourses of Language Homogeneity and Diversity: The Case of the Basque Autonomous Community (1980-2012)

Language: Spanish, English

306.3 Cecilio LAPRESTA-REY, Universidad de Lleida, Spain; Adelina IANOS, University of Lleida, Spain; Cristina PETRENAS, University of Lleida, Spain and Francis OLOUME, University of Lleida, Spain Linguistic Policies and Attitudes. the Case of Descendents of Immigrants in Catalonia 306.4 Stuart DUNMORE, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom Linguistic Ideologies and Cultural Identities in Gaelic Scotland: Scots, Gaels, and New Speakers 306.5 Eduardo FAINGOLD, University of Tulsa, USA Is the Treaty of Lisbon Neutral Towards Language Minorities in the European Union?

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Maria MARTINEZ-IGLESIAS, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain and Nadezhda GEORGIEVA-STANKOVA, Trakia University, Bulgaria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 308.1 Anna MIRGA-KRUSZELNICKA, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain; Balint-Abel BEREMENYI, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain and Silvia CARRASCO, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain Roma Youth Mobilization in Spain. Public Policies, Supranational Agencies and Youth Identity Frames 308.2 Nuno OLIVEIRA, ISCTE Lisbon University Institute, NIF 501510184, Portugal Repertoires of Diversity: Ethnic Boundary Construction in Contemporary Brazil 308.3 Magdalena LEMANCZYK, The Kashubian Institute, Poland Ethnic Mobilization of the Kashubians after the Democratic Turn in Poland

10:45-12:15 307

Ethnic Minority Mobilization: Intersections of Distribution and Recognition

Classifications of Otherness I

308.4 Robert MEARS, Bath Spa University, United Kingdom ‘rude and Ignorant People’ ; Stigmatising Minority Language in the Formation of the United Kingdom

Language: Spanish, French, English Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Trinidad VALLE, Fordham University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 307.1 Adrian HOLLIDAY, School of Language Studies & Applied Linguistics, Canterbury Christ Church University, United Kingdom and Sara AMADASI, FISPPA Department - University of Padova, Italy Multiple Discourses in Developing Intercultural Awareness: Talking about Blocks and Threads 307.2 Lisandre LABRECQUE, CRESPPA, Centre d’etudes sociologiques et politiques, France Converser Et Classifier : La Construction De L’autre Dans Les échanges Quotidiens

308.5 Lloyd HILL, Stellenbosch University, South Africa Language and Academic Discourse at Stellenbosch University

14:15-15:45 309

Language Diversity and Social Cohesion I

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Cecilio LAPRESTA-REY, University of Lleida, Spain

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187

Language and Society

Program Coordinator: Amado ALARCON ALARCON, Universidad Rovira i Virgili, Spain; Federico FARINI, University Campus Suffolk, United Kingdom and Keiji FUJIYOSHI, Otemon Gakuin University, Japan

RC25

307.3 Danko SIPKA, Arizona State University, USA Colloquial Lexical Means of Otherization: A Case Study

RC25

306

No. 309

Language and Society

RC25

No. 310

Program–Session Details

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 309.1 Vanessa BRETXA, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain; Llorenc COMAJOAN, Universitat de Vic-Universitat Central de Catalunya, Spain and F.Xavier VILA, University of Barcelona, Spain Sociocultural and Linguistic Integration of Students of Immigrant Origin in Catalonia: A Longitudinal Perspective 309.2 Rodolfo GUTIERREZ, OVIEDO UNIVERSITY, Spain; Javier MATO, OVIEDO UNIVERSITY, Spain and Maria MIYAR, UNED, Spain Language and Integration Among Immigrant Populations: The Case of Spain 309.3 Brett BLAKE, St. John’s University, USA Translanguaging As Pedagogy and Practice Among Muslim Immigrant Students in Urban U.S. Classroom Settings: Toward Social Cohesion or Social Inequality? 309.4 Torsten TEMPLIN, Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin, Germany and Bengt-Arne WICKSTROM, Andrássy-Universität Budapest, Hungary Can Language Policies Alter Language Dynamics: A Language Competition Model

309.5 Josep UBALDE BUENAFUENTE, URV, Spain Evolution and Determinants of Language Attitudes Among Catalan Adolescents

Monday 11 July

310.5 Ruta MUKTUPAVELA, Latvian Academy of Culture, Latvia and Agnese TREIMANE, Latvian Academy of Culture, Latvia Restoration of the Linguistic Tradition of Ethnic Livs (Latvia): Aspects of Motivation DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 310.6 Rosario REYES, EMIGRA, Spain Linguistic Capital, School and Immigration: An Ethnography of Contradictions and Resistances.

JS-33 Language on Health and Disease Committees: RC25 Language and Society (Host); RC15 Sociology of Health See Joint Session Details for JS-33.

16:00-17:30

09:00-10:30 JS-27 Language in Children’s Socialization Committees: RC53 Sociology of Childhood (Host); RC25 Language and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-27.

311

Classifications of Otherness II

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Trinidad VALLE, Fordham University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 311.1 Natalie BYFIELD, St. John’s University, USA Re-Defining ‘the Human’: A Necessary Step in De-Coloniality

10:45-12:15 Language Diversity and Social Cohesion II

Language: Spanish, English Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Cecilio LAPRESTA-REY, Universidad de Lleida, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 310.1 Stefan MACHURA, Bangor University, United Kingdom Language Diversity and Social Cohesion: The Support of Police in North West Wales 310.2 Phakisho MOKHAHLANE, North West University, South Africa Social Cohesion and Language Policy in South Africa 310.3 Julia SCHROEDTER, University of Zurich, Switzerland and Joerg ROESSEL, University of Zurich, Switzerland The Importance of Linguistic Homogamy in (Inter) Marriages: Insights from a Multilingual Country

188

310.4 Roland TERBORG, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico; Roberto GUERRA MEJIA, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico; Virna VELAZQUEZ, Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Mexico, Mexico; Tamara SANCHEZ, Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Mexico, Mexico; Guillermo GARRIDO, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Mexico; Carlos Manuel HERNANDEZ GOMEZ, Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco, Mexico and Lourdes NERI, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico A Proposal to Measure the Advance of Language Shift in Small Communities Using the Framework of Ecology of Pressures

14:15-15:45

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

310

RC25 Monday 11 July

311.2 Tero ERKKILA, University of Helsinki, Finland and Attila KRIZSÁN, University of Turku, Finland Competing with ‘Others’: Economic Globalization Framing Professional Identities of EU Civil Servants and Lobbyists 311.3 Irina CHUDNOVSKAYA, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia “Otherness” in Traditional Russian Media in the Modern Social Context 311.4 David REDMALM, Uppsala University, Sweden Posthuman Postmortem Postcards: Othering and Identification in Condolence Cards for Bereaved Pet Keepers 311.5 Katharina CREPAZ, Max Planck Institute for Social Law and Social Policy and Technische Universitat Munchen, Germany “Otherness” As a Prerequisite for Self-Identification? Europeanization and Identity Change Regarding National Minorities

www.isa-sociology.org

RC25 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

313.6 Hakushi HAMAOKA, Nova School of Business and Economics, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal Discourse Analysis Re-Formulated As Engaged Practices of Thorizing Social Processes

09:00-10:30 312

Representation, Agency and Identities in Media Arenas

Session Organizers: Attila KRIZSÁN, Lecturer, Finland and Lotta LEHTI, French Department of Turku University, Finland AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

14:15-15:45 314

RC25 Roundtable I. Language and Representation: Struggles in the Global Age

Location: Hörsaal 24 (Main Building)

312.1 Erzsebet BARAT, University of Szeged, Hungary The Migration Crisis on a University Chancellor’s Facebook Page

Session Organizers: Keiji FUJIYOSHI, Otemon Gakuin University, Japan and Johanna WOYDACK, Wirtschafts Universität Wienn, Austria

312.2 Claire MAREE, University of Melbourne, Australia ‘i’m a Girl’: Impact Captioning, Identities and Language Ideologies in Audiovisual Media

Chairs: Abraham DE SWAAN, Columbia University, USA; Angela SCOLLAN, Middlesex University, United Kingdom; Elena YAGUNOVA, St.-Petersburg State University, Russia and Eduardo FAINGOLD, University of Tulsa, USA

312.3 Trinidad VALLE, Fordham University, USA The #Nothing-to-Celebrate Campaign: Mapuche Online Media, De-Colonial Forms of Knowledge and Redefined National and Ethnic Identities 312.4 Tomoaki MIYAZAKI, UCL, United Kingdom Exploration of Political Identity Emergence on the Internet 312.5 Maria Cristina GIORGI, CEFET/RJ, Brazil and Fabio DE ALMEIDA, CEFET/RJ, Brazil If Someone Is Black, He Is Suspect: Media Discourse and the Construction of Suspicion in a Brazilian Newspaper DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 312.6 Roberto LOBATO, University of Granada, Spain; Sergio MOLDES-ANAYA, University of Granada, Spain; Humberto TRUJILLO, University of Granada, Spain and Miguel MOYA, University of Granada, Spain Approach to the Representation of Palestinians and Israelis in the Spanish Online Newspapers

10:45-12:15 313

Co-chairs: Sumaiah ALMUDARRA, Université Nice Sophia Antipolis, France and Shruti TAMBE, Savitribai Phule Pune University, India ROUNDTABLES:

Classifications of Otherness: Space and Law ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 314.8 Daniele KARASZ, University of Vienna, Austria Defining the “Migrant” Resident in Vienna. the NonDefinition of “Migrants” in a Developer’s Competition for “Intercultural” Housing Estates and the Consequences for Housing Allocations 314.23 Stephanie CASSILDE, Centre d’Études en Habitat Durable, Belgium Occupied, Unoccupied, Inhabited, Inhabitable: Sociological Dimensions of Housing Categorization 314.5 Letizia MANCINI, University of Milan - Italy, Italy Si El Rom Es Gitano, Nómada y Extranjero. Percepción Social, Discriminación y El Papel Del Derecho

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

314.20 Susanne BECKER, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany The Construction of the Linguistic Other – Constructing the Other By Classifying Language(s)

Session Organizers: Celine-Marie PASCALE, American University, USA and Amado ALARCON ALARCON, Universidad Rovira i Virgili, Spain

314.15 Frederic MOULENE, Universite de Strasbourg, France These “Others” Who “Are Not Charlie”: A Slogan to Unity, a Rhetoric of Exclusion?

Sociological Studies of Language: Theory & Method

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 313.1 Simon SUSEN, City University London, United Kingdom Hermeneutic Bourdieu 313.2 Ruth AYASS, University of Klagenfurt, Austria ‚Membership Categories’, Stocks of Knowledge and Social ‘Figuration’ 313.3 Susanne BECKER, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany How to Incooperate the Category Language into Sociological Analysis of Social Inequalities 313.4 Abraham DE SWAAN, Columbia University, USA Unequal Exchange in the World Language System DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 313.5 Ayako OZEKI, chilibou, Japan The Generality of Language, and Diversity of Reality ---Positioning of the Language in Bergson and Durkheim---

Language and Medicine ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 314.21 Gentaro KATO, Otemon University, Japan A New Meaning of Mental Health in Japanese Net World 314.12 Rosemary FREY, University of Auckland, New Zealand; Jackie ROBINSON, University of Auckland, New Zealand; Michal BOYD, University of Auckland, New Zealand; Merryn GOTT, University of Auckland, New Zealand and Sue FOSTER, University of Auckland, New Zealand Barriers and Facilitators of Palliative Care Communication in Aged Residential Care(ARC):a New Zealand Example 314.7 Catarina DELAUNAY, CICS.NOVA - Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences, Portugal Communication Problems within Medically Assisted Procreation and Palliative Care: The Power of Words 314.3 Yukako NISHIDA, Nagoya University, Japan Medicine, Media and Identity: The Discourse on “Developmental Disabilities” in Japanese TV Programs

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Language and Society

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC25

Tuesday 12 July

No. 314

RC25

No. 315

Program–Session Details

314.19 Hiroshi YAMANAKA, Osaka University, Japan; Natsuko NOJIMA, Osaka University, Japan and Mari HIGUCHI, Osaka University, Japan Signifiant without Signifie :Diagnostic Language and Illness Experience in Rare Disease Patients.

Language and Society

Language and Work. Commodification and its Critics. ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 314.11 Amado ALARCON ALARCON, Universidad Rovira i Virgili, Spain; Maria MARTINEZ-IGLESIAS, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain and Johanna WOYDACK, Wirtschafts Universitat Wienn, Austria Acknowledging Language Work. a Study on Public and Private Call Centers. 314.18 Nune AYVAZYAN, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Armenia Migrants’ Languages: Assets or Liabilities? an Empirical Study of a Russian-Speaking Community in Tarragona, Spain 314.4 Anna WEIRICH, Goethe-Universitat Frankfurt, Germany Restructuration and Commodification of Linguistic Repertoires in a Moldovan-Italian Call Center 314.10 Sara ORTHABER, University of Maribor, Faculty of Logistics, Mariborska 7, 3000 Celje, Slovenia and Rosina MARQUEZ-REITER, University of Surrey, United Kingdom Social Customer Service: Responses to Customer Complaints

314.24 Nilta DIAS, Sophia University, Japan Dekasseguês: Una Identidad Lingüística En Construcción 314.2 Zelinda SHERLOCK, Kyushu Sangyo University, Japan Does National Identity Influence Learner Attitudes Towards English Education? 314.9 Bhoomi THAKORE, Northwestern University, USA Seeing Is Believing: South Asian Characterizations in Popular US TV Programming 314.14 Paul CAPOBIANCO, University of Iowa, USA The Impact of Second Language Acquisition on Foreign and Japanese Identities

16:00-17:30 315

RC25 Roundtable II. Language and Representation: Struggles in the Global Age

Location: Hörsaal 24 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Federico FARINI, University Campus Suffolk, United Kingdom and María GONZALEZ, Universidad Pedagógica Nacional,ACADEMIC AREA 4 Information Technologies and Alternative Models, Mexico Chairs: Federico FARINI, University Campus Suffolk, United Kingdom; Everlyn KISEMBE DARKWAH, All Natins University College, Ghana and Tomoaki MIYAZAKI, UCL, United Kingdom ROUNDTABLES:

Longitudinal Studies, Models and Education ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 314.1 Ana Raquel MATIAS, CIES-IUL; CES-UC, Portugal; Pedro MARTINS, CELGA/ILTEC, Portugal and Dulce PEREIRA, CELGA/ ILTEC; FLUL, Portugal Bilingual Education (Portuguese-Cape Verdean) and Language and Education Policies in Portugal 314.6 F.Xavier VILA, University of Barcelona, Spain; Vanessa BRETXA, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain and Josep UBALDE BUENAFUENTE, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain Building Social Cohesion in a Plurilingual Setting? a Longitudinal View to the Sociolinguistic Evolution of Adolescents in Catalonia 314.13 Tadahiko MAEDA, The Institute of Statistical Mathematics, Japan; Yukari TANAKA, Nihon University, Japan; Naoki HAYASHI, Nihon University, Japan and Masao AIZAWA, National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics, Japan Impacts of Sociodemographic Factors on the Type of Regional Dialects Usage in Contemporary Japan 314.17 Eugen ZARETSKY, University hospital of Frankfurt/ Main, Germany and Benjamin P. LANGE, University of Wuerzburg, Germany Methodological Pitfalls in Sociolinguistics, Exemplified By Statistical Analyses of Associations Between Stuttering and German Preschoolers’ Sociolinguistic Characteristics

Shaping “Self” through language acquisition ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Academic Discourse and Education ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 315.7 Vasilica MOCANU, Universitat de Lleida, Spain and Enric LLURDA, Universitat de Lleida, Spain A Comparative Study of Erasmus Students in Three Different European Contexts 315.1 Manuela GUILHERME, Centre for Social Studies, Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal Academic Discourses Across Epistemologies, Languages and Cultures: A View from the South 315.11 Teresa MORLA, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain; Guiomar MERODIO, University of Barcelona, Spain and Tinka SCHUBERT, University of Barcelona, Spain How Communicative Acts in Dialogic Literary Gatherings Contribute to Enrich Language Skills and Increase Social Cohesion 315.4 Riad NASSER, Fairleigh Dickinson University, USA Nationalism Vs. Cosmopolitanism: Postcolonial Interpretation of Identity in Mass Education DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 315.14 Francisco Antar MARTINEZ GUZMAN, Universidad de Colima, Mexico Positive Psychology and the Construction of the Neoliberal Subject: A Critical Approach Towards “Happinness” and “Resilience” Discourses

314.22 Delin DENG, EHESS, France Analysis of Two Discourse Markers, Oui and Voilà, Used By Chinese-L1 Speakers of French in France 314.16 Santiago IZQUIERDO, author, Spain; Josep M. NADAL, author, Spain and Pilar MONREAL-BOSCH, author, Spain Catalan Language and Social Representations: Affective Experiences

190

RC25 Tuesday 12 July

www.isa-sociology.org

RC25 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

No. 317

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC25

Wednesday 13 July

Language of Struggles and Reconciliation

09:00-10:30

315.8 Vladimir PAPERNI, University of Haifa, Israel Kill Brother: A Hegemonic Discourse of the Russian Aggression Against Ukraine

JS-50 Re-Imagining Gendered & Raced

315.3 Tatiana NIKULINA, St.-Petersburg State University, Russia; Elena YAGUNOVA, St.-Petersburg State University, Russia and Vladislav KOTOV, St.-Petersburg State University, Russia Socio-Political Events and Language of Twitter: The Representation of Events in Ukraine in Russian Twitter 315.12 Sumaiah ALMUDARRA, Université Nice Sophia Antipolis, France Vous, les autres: L’altérité dans les discours aux Nations Unies DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Representations in the Public Sphere

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC25 Language and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-50.

14:15-15:45 JS-55 Innovation in Discourse: Promotion,

Defensiveness, Reflexivity and Hidden Fears

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work (Host); RC25 Language and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-55.

16:00-17:30

315.15 Edson DORNELES, Dorneles, Brazil Raising Children: The Strategy of Accusations in Establishing Age Boundaries and Moral Duty.

316

315.17 Emmanuel H. RODRIGUES, Universidade de Brasília, Brazil Theoretical Developments in Critical Discourse Analysis: For a Linguistic about Brazil

RC25 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Thursday 14 July

The Representation of Gender Identities

09:00-10:30

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

317

315.10 Sirin DILLI, Giresun Üniversitesi, Turkey Beyond the Camera: Women Screenwriters in Turkish Cinema 315.2 Claire MAREE, University of Melbourne, Australia Debuting into the Scene: Women Narrating Queer Time and Space 315.9 Judit KROO, Stanford University, USA and Eunyeong KIM, Stanford University, USA The Construction and Consumption of Korean Masculinity in Japan 315.6 Pavel POSPECH, Masaryk university, Czech Republic Women in the Public Space of the Early 20th Century Czechoslovakia: The Guidebooks for „Proper Conduct“ in a Men’s World DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 315.13 Guzin YAMANER, Ankara University, Turkey 20 Years Experiment in Stage Arts, Language and Gender Classes in Women Studies Department 315.16 Svetlana NOVIKOVA, Russian State Social University, Russia Social State and Gender Equality in Modern Russia

Discourse in Practice: Microsociology of Social Exclusion and Control

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Frida PETERSSON, University of Gothenburg, Sweden AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 317.1 Bruna GISI MARTINS DE ALMEIDA, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil Delinquent Self As a “Frame Trap”: The Routine Processing of Inmates in Youth Detention Centers 317.2 Franca ORLETTI, Università di Roma Tre, Italy and Rossella IOVINO, Università di Roma Tre, Italy Latin As a Tool for Social Differentiation. a Study of the Italian Juridical and Medical Language. 317.3 Keiji FUJIYOSHI, Otemon Gakuin University, Japan Liberty, Harmony and Democracy: Why Democracy Works Ill in Japan? 317.4 Amado ALARCON ALARCON, Universidad Rovira i Virgili, Spain Language Practices of Telephone-Level Bureaucrats. Analysis of a Gender Violence Helpline. 317.5 Peter OEIJ, TNO, Netherlands; Steven DHONDT, TNO, Netherlands and Jeff GASPERSZ, Nyenrode Business University, Netherlands Defensive Behaviours in Innovation Teams – an Analysis How Teams Discuss It DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 317.6 Hakushi HAMAOKA, Nova School of Business and Economics, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal Appreciating Inequality: Providing Thickness to Discourses of the Powerless

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191

Language and Society

315.5 Mehmet MUTLU, Middle East Technical University (METU), Turkey Publishing Experience of the Urban Poor: Katik Newspaper

Language and Society

RC25

No. 318

Program–Session Details

RC25 Thursday 14 July

10:45-12:15

14:15-15:45

318

JS-67 The Use of Language and Silences in

Discourses on Risk

Coping with Everyday Nationalism, Racism and Sexism

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Emmanuel H. RODRIGUES, Faculdade Frassinetti do Recife - FAFIRE, Brazil and Viviane RESENDE, University of Brasilia, Brazil

Committees: RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations (Host); RC25 Language and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-67.

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 318.1 Celine-Marie PASCALE, American University, USA Vernacular Epistemologies of Risk: The Crisis in Fukushima 318.2 Vesa KOSKELA, University of Turku, Finland War: The Final Word in Managing Risk 318.3 Gloria Luz NELSON, Department of Social Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences,University of the Philippines Los Banos, Philippines; Esperanza ESPINO, ESPERANZA, Department of Parasitlogy,Research Institute of Tropical Medicine Mandaluyong, Philippines, Philippines; Pauline Joy LORENZO, Research Institute of Tropical Medicine, Mandaluyong, Philippines, Philippines; Ma Lauren NOLASCO, Research Institute of Tropical Medicine, Mandaluyong, Philippines, Philippines and Duane MANZANILLA, Research Institute of Tropical Medicine, Mandaluyong, Philippines, Philippines Eliciting Perceptions on Malaria Using Photovoice in Endemic Communities in Palawan,Philippines 318.4 Iwona MLOZNIAK, Institute of Sociology, Poland Risk and Fear in the Disocurses about Ageing

NOTES

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RC26 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice

Monday 11 July

320.3 Massimiliano RUZZEDDU, University Niccolo Cusano Rome, Italy Common Goods and Political Participation in Rome

09:00-10:30 JS-25 Social Enterprises and Empowerment. Part I

10:45-12:15 321

Committees: RC26 Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice (Host); RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

Challenging Hegemonies and Emerging Alternatives in Times of Crisis

Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

See Joint Session Details for JS-25.

Session Organizer: Georgios TSOBANOGLOU, Agean Universitiy, Greece

10:45-12:15 JS-29 Social Enterprises and Empowerment. Part II

Committees: RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management (Host); RC26 Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 321.1 Dionyssis BALOURDOS, National Center for Social Research, Greece Multidimensional Poverty, Multilevel Governance and Poverty Reduction Strategies in Times of Austerity 321.2 Bibhuti MALIK, Department of Sociology, Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India Access to Civil Amenities of Dalits in Eastern Uttar Pradesh: The Poverty Question or Social Exclusion

See Joint Session Details for JS-29.

16:00-17:30 Social Change and New Forms of Government and Political Participation

Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Arianna MONTANARI, University of Rome, Italy and Gloria PIRZIO, Universita Sapienza di Roma, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 319.1 Flaminia SACCA, Tuscia University, Italy The Formation of Globalized Political Cultures 319.2 Michele NEGRI, University of Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy New Indicators for the Study of Pathways to Political Participation 319.3 Nikos SARRIS, National Centre for Social Research, Greece Can the Referendum As a Form of Direct Democracy Substitute the Lack of Confidence in Representative Institutions? the Case of the Greek Referendum in July 2015.

Tuesday 12 July

321.3 Flaminia SACCA, Tuscia University, Italy The Socio-Political Effects of Mass Migration in Times of Crisis 321.4 Ilona MATYSIAK, The Maria Grzegorzewska University, Poland New Young Rural Elite? Young People with University Education and Their Motivations and Ways of Life in the Polish Countryside. 321.5 George GANTZIAS, HELLENIC OPEN UNIVERSITY, SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, CULTURAL ORGANISATIONS MANAGEMENT, MSc, Greece Info-Communication Payment Culture and Regulation: Global Control, Local Resistance and the “Digital Tax Payment Culture”

14:15-15:45 322

Reshaping Democracy? Decision Making, Power and Participation in Times of Crisis

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Flaminia SACCA, Tuscia University, Italy

09:00-10:30 320

320.2 Ioanna GIANNOPOULOU, Sociology Department, University of the Aegean, Mytilini, Greece and Georgios TSOBANOGLOU, University of the Aegean, Greece The Needs of Unacompanied Children Minors in Greece

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Socio-political change in times of crisis

Location: Seminarraum 5C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Gertrud LENZER, City University of New York, USA

322.1 Lorenzo VIVIANI, University of Pisa, Italy New Cleavages in Old Europe: Cartel Parties Vs AntiEstablishment Parties 322.2 Andrea MILLEFIORINI, Political Sociology, Italy The Possible Consequences of the Electoral Reform in the Italian Political System 322.3 Aristea ALEXIOU, University of the Aegean, Greece Challenging Political Hegemony, Unseen Community Assets, Poverty and Its Regulation Under Duress. Social Asset Building Innovations for Greece.

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193

Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice

Program Coordinator: Flaminia SACCA, Tuscia University, Italy

320.1 George GANTZIAS, HELLENIC OPEN UNIVERSITY, SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, CULTURAL ORGANISATIONS MANAGEMENT, MSc, Greece Cultural Sponsorship and the Info-Communication Industry: The “Code of Digital Transactions” and the “InfoCommunication Payment System”.

RC26

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC26

319

No. 322

Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice

RC26

No. 323

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30 323

325.4 Marilena MACALUSO, Universita’ degli Studi di Palermo, Italy Moving from an Online Petition to an Informal Network of Artist-Activists: Protest and Participation in Palermo

RC26 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

325.5 Mikhail GORSHKOV, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia and Irina TYURINA, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Civic Activism in Modern Russian Society: Peculiarities of Localization

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 324

RC26 Wednesday 13 July

Nature, Culture and Development. Part I

16:00-17:30

Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

326

Session Organizers: Marie Louise CONILH DE BEYSSAC, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Maria Inacia D’AVILA NETO, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 324.1 Nikita POKROVSKY, Higher School of Economics, Russia ‘Liquid Migration’ Beyond the City: Environmental Values Vs. Urban Everyday Life 324.2 Eirini Ioanna VLACHOPOULOU, University of the Aegean, Greece and Georgios TSOBANOGLOU, Agean Universitiy, Greece Community Fish Stock Management for Conservation and Cohesion: A Comparative Study Between Greece and Japan 324.3 Luciana HALBRITTER, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Maria Inacia D’AVILA NETO, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Marie Louise CONILH DE BEYSSAC, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Social Justice and Internet: The Case of Controladoria-Geral Da União Facebook Page 324.4 Bojana BULATOVIC, Master Erasmus Mundus Intercultural Mediation: Identities, Mobilities, Conflicts (MITRA), Belgium Working Mechanisms of Empowerment Programs on the Agency of Roma Women in Montenegro

14:15-15:45 325

Civic and political participation in the context of local political and socio-cultural process

Session Organizer: Nikita POKROVSKY, Higher School of Economics, Russia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 326.1 Andrey TREYVISH, Institute of Geography Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia and Tatiana NEFEDOVA, Institute of Geography Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Rural-Urban ?ontinuum in the Context of Urbanization, DeUrbanization and Recurrent Mobility of Population 326.2 Vladimir ILIN, St. Petersburg University, Russia Between City and Village; Models of Dual Lifestyles in Russia 326.3 Sergey BOBYLEV, moscow state, Russia and Alla BOBYLEVA, moscow state “lomonosov” university, Russia Sustainable Development Indicators for Cities 326.4 Uliana NIKOLAEVA, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia The Concept of ‘Archaic’ in Interpreting Contemporary Community Life

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30 327

Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Nataliya VELIKAYA, Russian State University for the Humanities, Russia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 325.1 Anton KAZUN, Higher School of Economics (Moscow), International Center for the Study of Institutions and Development, Russia Social Responsibility of Russian Lawyers: Factors of Engagement into “Pro Bono” Work 325.2 Gaja MAESTRI, Durham University, United Kingdom Resistance in Times of Crisis: How Austerity Generates New Strategies and Solidarities Against Roma Residential Segregation in Rome 325.3 Jurga BUCAITE-VILKE, Vytautas Magnus University, Department of Sociology, Lithuania Discussing New Modes of Neighborhood Governance: Evidence from Lithuania on Mayors Support to Local Community Involvement to Decision-Making Processes

194

Life after the City: De-Urbanization and Social Capital in Non-Urban Areas

Socio-Economic Crisis, InfoCommunication Culture and Social Media Power

Location: Hörsaal 6D P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: George GANTZIAS, HELLENIC OPEN UNIVERSITY, SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, CULTURAL ORGANISATIONS MANAGEMENT, MSc, Greece AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 327.1 Tumwerinde Emmanuel ATURINDE, Ministry of Defence, Uganda, Uganda “Digital Socialization” and the “New Political Culture of Resistance” in Sub-Saharan Africa: The Case of Youth Politics. 327.2 Anastasiia KAZUN, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia Why Russians Do Not Afraid Economic Sanctions? the Counterrhetoric Strategies of the Print Media 327.3 Argyro KANTARA, Cardiff University, United Kingdom Impression Management in Greek Pre-Election Interviews

www.isa-sociology.org

RC29 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

329.1 Nirmal CHAKRABARTI, KIIT University, School of Law, India Is Rehabilitation Essential in Probation Service? : A SocioLEGAL Approach to Developing a Theory of Self-Correction?:

Deviance and Social Control

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 Culture of Violence: social representations and images

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Maria Stela GROSSI PORTO, University of Brasilia, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 328.1 Jose Vicente TAVARES-DOS-SANTOS, FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE DO SUL, PORTO ALEGRE, BRAZIL, Brazil Violence in Literature: The NOVEL of Violence in LATIN America 328.2 Jacqueline SINHORETTO, Federal University of Sao Carlos, Brazil Social Control and Racial Relations in Brazil: Old and New Affinities

329.2 Silvia GOMES, University of Minho, Portugal Life after Prison - Gender Differences in the Perceived Needs and Barriers of Prisoners Preparing for Reentry 329.3 Jakub LEWANDOWSKI, 1) Institute for Agricultural and Forest Environment, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland, and 2) Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland 15 Years of Expansion and Implausible Results. Effectivenes, Efficiency and Sustainability of CCTV System in PoznaÅ„, Poland. 329.4 Maria-Fátima SANTOS, University of California, Berkeley, USA Dungeons and ‘Democracy’: Brazilian Carceral Reform in the Bureaucratic Field DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 329.5 Mónica PONTONES, Universidad Autonoma de la Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico and Miguel MONROY FARIAS, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Educación Superior En Contextos Carcelarios. La Situación Carcelaria Como Experiencia Límite

14:15-15:45 330

Security and Penal State-Making: The Politics, Institutionalization and Effects of Security As a Category of Public Intervention

328.3 Maria Stela GROSSI PORTO, Brasilia University, Brazil Police: Professional Identity and Social Representations in Brazil

Language: English, Spanish

328.4 Ivone COSTA, Federal University of Lisbon, Brazil and Iris GOMES, Federal University of Bahia, Brazil Social Responsibility and Police Forces an Investigation about Values and Practices Developed in Brazil and Portugal

Session Organizers: Paul Carlos HATHAZY, CONICET / Universidad Nacional de Cordoba, Argentina and Jose Luiz RATTON, Graduate Program in Sociology, Universidad Federal de Pernambuco, Brazil

328.5 Enio PASSIANI, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil and Alex NICHE TEIXEIRA, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Horror, Crime and Violence As Entertainment: A Brazilian Case Study 328.6 Mahmood SHAHABI, Allameh Tabataba’i University, Iran A Comparative Research on the Deterring Effects of Religious and Non-Religious Factors on Economic Crimes in Iran 328.7 Cesar BARREIRA, Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil Cruelty and Diffuse Violence within the Current Brazilian Context

10:45-12:15 329

Sociology of Punishment: rehabilitation and social control

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Caroline AGBOOLA, University of Johannesburg, South Africa

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 330.1 Christina MERZ, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany Hot Spot Societies: The Urban Space As a “Projection Screen” for Data-Driven Crime Prevention and Law Enforcement 330.2 Andrea KRETSCHMANN, Centre Marc Bloch, Germany Internal Security Law in the Making. Structures of Experience and Expectance in Austria’s Discourse of a New Terrorism Act 330.3 Jose Javier NINO MARTINEZ, Autonomous University of Mexico State, Mexico and Vanessa Lizbeth LARA CARMONA, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México, Mexico Project of Citizen Identity Card and Institutional Design of Security Policy in México 330.4 Jesica VEGA, Universidad de Guanajuato, Mexico and Yamil PICON VARGAS, Universidad de Guanajuato, Mexico Citizenship and Public Security, 15 Years of Transition in Mexico: An Assessment of Guanajuato 330.5 Jose Luiz RATTON, Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil The Debate on “Militarization of Public Security” in Brazil: After All, What Is It?

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195

Deviance and Social Control

Program Coordinator: Jose Vicente TAVARES-DOS-SANTOS, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil

RC29

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC29

328

No. 330

RC29

No. 331

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30 331

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 333.1 Sebastian KURTENBACH, Institute of Sociology and Social Psychology, Germany Understanding Neighbourhood Effects

Drugs: from crime to legalization

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: John SCOTT, Queensland University of Technology, Australia

Deviance and Social Control

RC29 Tuesday 12 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 331.1 Orna ACHRAI, Zefat Academic college, Israel and Yaffa MOSKOVICH, Zefat Academic college, Israel The “Rothschild” Group (The Third Floor): Examination of the Existential Treatment of Rehabilitating Drug Addicts According to Prof. S.G. Shoham 331.2 Tacyana LOPES, A doctoral student in Sociology from the UFMG, Master of Social Development., Brazil and Ludmila RIBEIRO, Doctorate in Sociology, Master in Public Management, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology at the UFMG, CRISP researcher., Brazil Democratization of the Brazilian Criminal Justice System (CJS)? an Analysis Abaut the Perception of Female Participation in Drug Trafficking Crime in Montes Claros, Minas Gerais, Brazil. 331.3 Beverly THOMPSON, Siena College, USA Marijuana Legalization in the United States, Continued Imprisonment, and Felony Bans in the Cannabis Industry 331.4 John SCOTT, Queensland University of Technology, Australia and Ross Coomber COOMBER, Griffith Univeristy, Australia The Social Supply of Cannabis: Local Observations and Global Context 331.5 Sergio ADORNO, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil and Camila DIAS, Federal University of ABC - UFABC, Brazil Illegal Market Routes in the Brazilian Frontier Zones and Its Impacts in the Urban Centers

Tuesday 12 July

333.2 Joana DANIEL-WRABETZ, STOP Trafficking and Oppression of Children & Women, India and Rita PENEDO, Observatory on Trafficking in Human Beings, Portugal Trafficking in Human Beings in Time and Space: A SocioEcological Perspective 333.3 Carlos FIALHO, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil and Tatiana MIRANDA, Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística, Brazil The Last Hour: A Study about Homicides and Social Exclusion 333.4 Anthony AMATRUDO, MIDDLESEX UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW, United Kingdom What Bit of ‘urban’ Is Being Socially Controlled and Why? 333.5 Pavel POSPECH, Masaryk university, Czech Republic Who Is a “Maladaptive Citizen”? the Czech Media Discourse on Groups-Associated Disorder in Public Space 333.6 Yakov GILINSKIY, Russian State University of Education, Russia Deviance and Social Control in the Society of a Postmodern 333.7 Michal KRATOCHVILA, St. Elizabeth University, Slovakia Youth Fighting in Public Space 333.8 Vitor RIBEIRO, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Social Surveillance in Grassroots Society: The Chinese Case of the Zhian Zhiyuanzhe.

14:15-15:45 334

Policing Crisis, Community Policing and New Experiences

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

09:00-10:30

Session Organizer: Arturo ALVARADO, El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico

332

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Keynote Session: The Social Control and Deviance. the State of the Art

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Jose Vicente TAVARES-DOS-SANTOS, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil Panelists: Sergio ADORNO, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil; Cesar BARREIRA, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO CEARA, Brazil; Maria Stela GROSSI PORTO, UNIVERSIDADE DE BRASILIA, Brazil; Arpita MITRA, KIIT Univesity, India; Günter STUMMVOLL, Vienna University, Austria; Augusto DE VENANZI, Indiana University -Purdue University Fort Wayne, USA; Paul Carlos HATHAZY, Paul, Sociology, CONICET / Universidad Nacional de Cordoba Argentina, Argentina and Arturo ALVARADO, EL COLEGIO DE MEXICO, Mexico

10:45-12:15 333

Social Control in Urban Criminology – Understanding Deviance and Public Order in Urban Space

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

334.1 Andrew SPIVAK, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA; Christie BATSON, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA; William SOUSA, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA and Robert FUTRELL, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA Assessing the Impact of the Smart Policing Initiative: “Hotspot” Neighborhood Saturation, Urban Disorder and Crime Prevention 334.2 Arpita MITRA, KIIT University, School of Law, India People’s Police or Police’s People ? : An Appraisal of PolicePublic Collaboration By the Populace of Bhubaneswar, India. 334.3 Henry ALLEN, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Wheaton College (IL), USA Social Justice, Police Shootings, and Abusive Social Encounters with Unarmed African Americans 334.4 Melissa DE MATTOS PIMENTA, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil; Alex NICHE TEIXEIRA, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil and Rochele FACHINETTO, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Community Policing Programs in Brazil

Session Organizer: Günter STUMMVOLL, Vienna University, Austria

196

www.isa-sociology.org

RC29 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

336.4 Christopher SCHLEMBACH, University of Vienna, Austria Juvenile Delinquency in Austria: Results from the Isrd-3 Study

10:45-12:15

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Dominik BALDIN, Technical University of Munich, Germany and Laura DOBUSCH, MPI for Social Law and Social Policy, Germany

16:00-17:30

Chairs: Dominik BALDIN, Technische Universitat Munchen, Germany and Laura DOBUSCH, MPI for Social Law and Social Policy, Germany

RC29 Business Meeting

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum)

337.1 Judith MOYLE, Deakin University, Australia Considering Disability As Functional Difference in the Diversity Discourse in Australia

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 336

Valuing Diversity Instead of Constructing Deviance: A Future Perspective for Sociological Research?

Juvenile Delinquency Across Europe: Empirical and Comparative Perspectives

Location: Seminar 32 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Christopher SCHLEMBACH, University of Vienna, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

337.2 Fabian KARSCH, Technische Universitat Munchen, Germany Being Different: Neurodiversity and Neurosocial Subjectification 337.3 Alexandre BARIL, Institute of Feminist and Gender Studies, University of Ottawa, Canada Breeding “Debilitating” Blood and Bodies: Building Bridges Between Queer and Disability Studies By Comparing Voluntary HIV Acquisition and Voluntary Disability Acquisition

336.1 Silvia STAUBLI, University of Fribourg, Switzerland and Janne KIVIVUORI, University of Helsinki, Finland Religion: Protective or Risk Factor for Victimization Risk of Juveniles?

337.4 Yukie NAKAO, Kyoto University, Japan Capturing What Impairment Enables: A View from an African Urban Situation

336.2 Patrik MANZONI, University of Zurich, Switzerland Predicting Juvenile Delinquency in Austria: A Test of Different Theoretical Approaches

337.5 Sarah REKER, TU Munchen, Germany and Christiane KELLNER, TU München Lehrstuhl Diversitätssoziologie, Germany Diversity in Society: The Disability Perspective

336.3 Hlin KRISTBERGSDOTTIR, University of Iceland, Iceland and Jon Gunnar BERNBURG, University of Iceland, Iceland Bullying in Social Context: Are Impoverished Adolescents at a Greater Risk of Being Bullied in Affluent Neighborhoods?

NOTES

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Deviance and Social Control

337

334.6 Daniel MISSE, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil and Paulo COUTO FILHO, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Pacification and Other Occupation Police Tactics in an Integrated Area of Public Security in Rio De Janeiro

335

RC29

334.5 Andre ZANETIC, Center for the Study of Violence University of Sao Paulo (NEV-USP), Brazil; Bruno Paes MANSO, Center for the Study of Violence - University of Sao Paulo (NEVUSP), Brazil; Ariadne NATAL, Center for the Study of Violence - University of Sao Paulo (NEV-USP), Brazil; Frederico Castelo BRANCO, Center for the Study of Violence - University of Sao Paulo (NEV-USP), Brazil and Thiago OLIVEIRA, Center for the Study of Violence - University of Sao Paulo (NEV-USP), Brazil Predictors and Impacts of Police Legitimacy in the City of São Paulo

No. 337

Sociology of Work

RC30

No. 338

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

RC30

340

Sociology of Work Program Coordinator: Delphine MERCIER, Centro de Estudios Mexicanos y Centroamericanos, Mexico and Stéphanie BARRAL, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, France

Monday 11 July

The Third World Migrant Labour to First World Countries and the Implications to the Work.

Language: Spanish, French, English Location: Hörsaal 24 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Delphine MERCIER, Laboratoire d’Economie et de Sociologie du Travail, France and Prema RAJAGOPALAN, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, India ROUNDTABLES:

16:00-17:30 341

09:00-10:30 338

RC30 Monday 11 July

Local Expression of the Work Process Internationalisation

Transformation of Work in Bureaucratic Organizations

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Maria Eugenia LONGO, LEST, France

Session Organizers: Frank SOWA, Institute for Employment Research (IAB), Germany and Ronald STAPLES, FriedrichAlexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany

ROUNDTABLES:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 24 (Main Building)

Roundtable A ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 338.3 Saskja SCHINDLER, University of Vienna, Austria Fragmented Staff – Temporary Agency Work and Its Meaning for Staff Relations in Austria 338.5 Antonio TRINIDAD-REQUENA, Department of Sociology at University of Granada (Spain), Spain; Rosa SORIANO-MIRAS, Department of Sociology of University of Granada (Spain), Spain and Marlene SOLIS, Colef, Mexico Industrial Relocation and Social Processes : The Case of Tanger (Morocco) . 338.2 Alinaya Sybilla FABROS, University of the Philippines, Philippines Situating Outsourceable Labor: Location Work and the Era of Transnational Service Expansion in the Global Economy 338.1 Jacques DE WET, University of Cape Town, South Africa The New Work Order in Corporate South Africa from the Perspective of Black African Managers 338.4 Delphine MERCIER, LEST UMR 7317, France and Helen SAMPSON, Cardiff University, United Kingdom The Offshore Human Resource Management in the Case of Transnational and Cross-Border Companies.

10:45-12:15 339

Globalisation and Forms of Worker Protection.

341.1 Kathleen LYNCH, University College Dublin, Ireland and Bernie GRUMMELL, National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland New Managerialism As the Organizational Form of Neoliberalism 341.2 Micol BRONZINI, Department of Economics and Social Science, Italy and Diego COLETTO, Department of Sociology and Social Research, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy Street Level Bureaucracy Under Pressure: Job Insecurity, Business Logic and Challenging Users 341.3 Kendra BRIKEN, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom and Christian MOUHANNA, Centre de recherches sociologiques sur le droit et les institutions pénales (CESDIP), France Police Forces at Work: Going through Management? 341.4 Clive TRUSSON, Loughborough University, United Kingdom Managerial Control of IT Professionals Via IT Systems 341.5 Stephanie SCHNEIDER, University of Siegen, Germany Transforming Work Practices in Asylum Authorities. Practice-Theoretical Perspectives on the Implementation of a Training Programme.

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 342

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Helen SAMPSON, Cardiff University, United Kingdom and Jose Ricardo RAMALHO, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 339.2 Cheng LI, University of Campinas, Brazil Occupational Safety and Health Guidelines for the Retail Industry

198

Digital Working Spaces. New Geographies Evolving Shaped By Digitalization and Virtualization of Work.

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Mascha WILL-ZOCHOLL, Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany and Jessica LONGEN, Technical University Dortmund, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 342.1 Philip SCHOERPF, University of Vienna, Austria; Joerg FLECKER, University of Vienna, Austria and Annika SCHONAUER, University of Vienna, Austria How Round Is Flat? Crowdwork Between Relocalisation and Time Compression.

www.isa-sociology.org

RC30 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

Roundtable C ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 343.2 Mathilde MONDON-NAVAZO, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS) / Universite Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3, Brazil Los Trabajadores Autónomos Económicamente Dependientes En Francia y Brasil: Diferencias y Semejanzas

342.4 Keita MATSUSHITA, Jissen Women’s University, Japan Mediated Work Place and Work Styles As Second Offline: The Case Study of Coworking Space in Shibuya, Japan

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 342.5 Nina POHLER, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Germany „We Have Offline Meetings Twice a Year“ - Coordination and Justification Work in a Virtual Cooperative

10:45-12:15 343

Repensar El Trabajo y La Sociología Laboral Desde El Sur Global : La Experiencia De América Latina / Rethinking the Work and the Sociology of Work from the Global South the Experience of Latin America.

Language: Spanish, English Location: Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Javier HERMO, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina ROUNDTABLES:

343.7 Carlos MEJIA REYES, Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Hidalgo., Mexico Centralidad Del Trabajo En México. Una Revisión Desde La Encuesta Mundial De Valores. 343.4 Eder MONICA, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil; Carla CASTRO, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil; Beatriz AKUTSU, Programa de Pós-graduação em Sociologia e Direito da Universidade Federal Fluminense (PPGSD/UFF), Brazil; David Emmanuel SOUZA, Programa de Pós-graduação em Sociologia e Direito da Universidade Federal Fluminense (PPGSD/UFF), Brazil; Gabriel MARTIRE, Programa de Pósgraduação em Sociologia e Direito da Universidade Federal Fluminense (PPGSD/UFF), Brazil; Gustavo LACERDA, Programa de Pós-graduação em Sociologia e Direito da Universidade Federal Fluminense (PPGSD/UFF), Brazil and Patricia CORREA, Programa de Pós-graduação em Sociologia e Direito da Universidade Federal Fluminense (PPGSD/UFF), Brazil Identidad y Representación En La Inserción Del Segmento LGBT En El Mercado Laboral Formal Brasileño: Una Mirada Contemporánea

14:15-15:45 JS-42 Farm Work Issues within Globalization. Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work (Host); RC40 Sociology of Agriculture and Food

Roundtable A ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 343.9 Alejandro PIZZI, UNIVERSIDAD DE VALENCIA, Spain América Latina y Europa. Una Perspectiva Comparada De La Evolución De Sus Sistemas De Relaciones Laborales 343.3 Vera VRATUSA, Belgrade University, Serbia Questions on the Work and the Sociology of Work from the Global South Perspective - the Experience of Former “Second World” 343.5 Alberto Leonard BIALAKOWSKY, Instituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina and Ana CARDENAS TOMAZIC, Institute for Social Research (ISF), Germany The (re)Invention of Labour, the Worker, and Social Domination 343.8 Byoung-Hoon LEE, Chung-Ang Univ., South Korea The Crisis of Work Sociology in the Era of Neoliberalism: The Case of South Korea

See Joint Session Details for JS-42.

16:00-17:30 344

Current Transformation Processes on the German Labour Market - Empirical Evidences and Theoretical Explanations

Location: Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Klaus SCHMIERL, Institute for Social Science Research (ISF), Germany Panelist: Gerhard BOSCH, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany ROUNDTABLES:

Roundtable A ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 344.1 Klaus SCHMIERL, Institute for Social Science Research (ISF), Germany; Gerhard BOSCH, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany and Klaus DOERRE, University of Jena, Germany “Current Transformation Processes on the German Labour Market - Empirical Evidences and Theoretical Explanations”

Roundtable B ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 343.1 Johanna NEUHAUSER, Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies (IMIS), Germany; Nico WEINMANN, Universität Kassel, Germany and Johanna SITTEL, Universität Jena, Germany From the South to the North – Theoretical Insights on Gender and Work from Latin America 343.6 Priscila VIEIRA, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil The Job Search Experience: The Relevance of a New Study Object

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Sociology of Work

342.3 Jacob LIMA, Federal University of Sao Carlos, Brazil The Digital Workers in Brazil: Between Creativity and Precariousness.

RC30

342.2 Kumiko KAWASHIMA, Macquarie University, Australia Offshore IT Service Outsourcing and New Labour Export: Japanese Migrant Workers in Chinese Software Parks in Dalian

No. 344

RC30

No. 345

Wednesday 13 July

Moving Towards a Decent Work in a Multi-Active Society: Utopia or Reality? Part I

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Bernard FUSULIER, Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium; Marian BAIRD, University of Sydney Business School, Australia; Diane-Gabrielle TREMBLAY, Teluq, Canada; Pascal BARBIER, Université Paris 1 Sorbonne, France and Hideki NAKAZATO, Konan University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 345.1 Diane-Gabrielle TREMBLAY, University of Québec Téluq, Canada Right to Request “Decent” Work for Working Caregivers ? 345.2 Benedikt HASSLER, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland, Switzerland The Growing Desire for Decent Work after Long-Term Sick Leave. How Temporary Inability to Work Changes the WorkLife Balance in Labor Societies. 345.3 Nobuko HOSOGAYA, Sophia University, Japan; Noriko ARAI, Sophia university, Japan; Akiko OUCHI, Kwansei University, Japan and Asuka TAKEUCHI, Sophia university, Japan Navigating Career with Young Children: Japanese Women, Family-Life Balance and the Challenges of Professional Advancement 345.4 Lena HUNEFELD, Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Germany and Susanne GERSTENBERG, Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Germany Temporary Agency Work and Mental Health in Europe – Decent Work As a Long-Term Goal 345.5 Akiko OISHI, Chiba University, Japan Nonstandard Work Schedules and the Work-Life Balance of Mothers in Japan

10:45-12:15 346

RC30 Wednesday 13 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 345

Sociology of Work

Program–Session Details

Moving Towards a Decent Work in a Multiactive Society : Utopia or Reality ? Part II

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Bernard FUSULIER, Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium; Hideki NAKAZATO, Konan University, Japan; Diane-Gabrielle TREMBLAY, Teluq, Canada; Marian BAIRD, University of Sydney Business School, Australia and Pascal BARBIER, Universite Paris 1 Sorbonne, France

346.1 Carina ALTREITER, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria and Meinrad ZIEGLER, Department of Sociology, JKU Linz, Austria Thinking about Decent Work in Capitalism in Terms of a ‘concrete Utopia’ 346.2 Olga CZERANOWSKA, University of Warsaw, Poland Occupational Prestige As Element of the ‘Decent Work’ 346.3 Francesco LARUFFA, Humboldt University, Germany and Hannah SCHILLING, Center for Metropolitan Studies, Technische Universitaet Berlin, Germany Decent Work: A Challenge for a Global Sociology of Labor 346.4 Jenni SPANNARI, University of Helsinki, Finland Compassion – the key to meaningful and decent work 346.5 Daiga KAMERADE, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom and Matthew BENNETT, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom Voluntary Work and Generous Unemployment Benefits As a Replacement for the Loss of Manifest and Latent Benefits of Paid Work DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 346.6 Wen-Jui HAN, New York Univesity, USA Parental Employment and the Future of the Society: The 2014 Child Well-Being Study 346.7 Bernard FUSULIER, Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium Reconciling Work and Family in a Multi-Active Society 346.8 Carla Regina DIEGUEZ, Fundacao Escola de Sociologia e Politica de Sao Paulo, Brazil The Relationships Between the Executive and Legislative Powers in Brazil and the National Policy of Decent Work: An Analysis of the Law of Outsourcing.

14:15-15:45 JS-55 Innovation in Discourse: Promotion,

Defensiveness, Reflexivity and Hidden Fears

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work (Host); RC25 Language and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-55.

16:00-17:30 JS-58 Les Carrières Créatives: Modèles Contemporains D’organisation Du Travail / Creative Careers: Contemporary Models of Work Organization

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work (Host); TG04 Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty See Joint Session Details for JS-58.

200

www.isa-sociology.org

RC30 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 347

Informal Employment and Excluded Workers Part I

Session Organizer: Byoung-Hoon LEE, Chung-Ang University, South Korea AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 347.1 Steven Sek-yum NGAI, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Informal Employment and Social Exclusion Among Young Rural-Urban Migrant Workers in China 347.2 Maria Eugenia LONGO, INRS - UCS, Canada The Multiple Expressions of State Informalization in Employment. the Case of Young Workers in Argentina. 347.3 Tatiana KARABCHUK, LCSR, Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia and Natalya SOBOLEVA, LCSR, Higher School of Eocnomics, Russia Informal Employment and Subjective Well-Being in Europe: Evidence from the European Social Survey Data 347.4 Dominika WINOGRODZKA, Jagiellonian University, Poland Reflect and Discuss the New Dimension of Informal Work – on the Example of Student Internships

348.2 Marko GALIC, The University of Auckland, New Zealand and Maja CURCIC, The University of Auckland, New Zealand Everyday Struggle: Understanding Precarious Work and Life through Workers’ Testimonies, Class Analysis and the Imaginary of Neoliberal Capitalism 348.3 Shinji KOJIMA, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University, Japan Linking Consent and Resistance: Worker Responses to the Vulnerability of Informal Employment in Japan 348.4 Prema RAJAGOPALAN, Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, India Goldsmiths and the Informal Sector : A Study on the Changing Nature of a Caste Occupation 348.5 Anna SEBŐK, Educatio Non-Profit LLC, Hungary and Zsuzsanna VEROSZTA, Educatio Non-Profit LLC, Hungary The Blind Spot of Employment Statistics - Educational and Demographic Characteristics of Non-Registered Graduates in the Labor Market Administration System

14:15-15:45 JS-68 Professional Work in a Globalized

World: Migration, Cross-Bordering and Globalization of Knowledge Workers / El Trabajo Profesional En Un Mundo Globalizado: Migración, Transnacionalización y Globalización De Los Trabajadores Del Conocimiento.

347.5 Carlos FIALHO, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil and Tatiana MIRANDA, Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística, Brazil Social Disqualification and Negative Identity: The Case of the Motoboys 347.6 Justyna ZIELINSKA, University of Warsaw, Poland and Jacek ZYCH, University of Warsaw, Poland Work of the Unemployed? Exploitation of Marginalized Workers in Poland.

See Joint Session Details for JS-68.

16:00-17:30

10:45-12:15 348

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work (Host); RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups

Informal Employment and Excluded Workers Part II

349

RC30 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Byoung-Hoon LEE, Chung-Ang Univ., South Korea

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201

Sociology of Work

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

348.1 Jens THOEMMES, CERTOP-CNRS-University of Toulouse, France The Rules of Posting: Intra-European Mobility of Labour and Pressure on National Regulations

RC30

Thursday 14 July

No. 349

Sociology of Migration

RC31

No. 350

Program–Session Details

RC31 Sunday 10 July

RC31

351.4 Viviane RIEGEL, ESPM-SP, Brazil Cosmopolitanism and Migration in São Paulo: Reintroducing a Measure of Legitimacy of Being Cosmopolitan

Program Coordinator: Gustavo VERDUZCO, El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico

351.5 Kyoko SHINOZAKI, Osnabrück University, Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies, Germany Social Mobility through Spatial Mobility? Migrant Academics in German Cities in the Time of the “Global Competition for Talent”

Sociology of Migration

Sunday 10 July

12:30-14:00

09:00-10:30 350

352

Migration and Sexuality

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Co-chairs: Martina CVAJNER, University of Trento, Italy and Giuseppe SCIORTINO, University of Trento, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 350.1 Carolina ROSAS, Instituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina and Cecilia GAYET, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Mexico Sexuality in the Migration Process: Latin American Migrants in Chicago and Buenos Aires 350.2 Teresita DEL ROSARIO, Asia Research Institute, Singapore Love on the Run: Transmigration, Emotions, and Governmentality Among Filipino Domestic Workers in Singapore and Thailand 350.3 Jonas ROELENS, Ghent University, Belgium Fornicating Foreigners. Sodomy, Migration, and Urban Society in the Southern Low Countries (1400-1700) 350.4 Parvaneh ASTINFESHAN, Essex University, United Kingdom The Impact of Migration on Sexual Relationships Among Iranian Immigrant Couples in London 350.5 Melissa BLANCHARD, Idemec, France Juggling with Moving Sexual Norms: Senegalese Women’s Attempts to Make Their Way Trough Migration 350.6 Anastasia DIATLOVA, University of Helsinki, Finland Managing Multiple Marginalization: Russian-Speaking Women Doing Sex Work in Finland

Session Organizer: Monica IBANEZ-ANGULO, Universidad de Burgos, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 352.1 Michael PARZER, University of Vienna, Austria Shifting Symbolic Boundaries on Cultural Markets. Entrepreneurial Strategies of Immigrant Musicians in Austria 352.2 Ruben HERNANDEZ-LEON, University of California, Los Angeles, USA Chicanos y Veracruzanos: Música, Migración y Etnicidad En La Conexión Veracruz-Los Ángeles 352.3 Erika BUSSE, Universidad del Pacifico, Peru, Peru Performing Identity: A Comparative Study of Two Peruvian Immigrant Communities and the Practice of Peruvian Dances 352.4 Paula VILLA, LMU Munich, Germany Dancing Differences - an Intersectional Perspective on Argentine Tango 352.5 Karolina NIKIELSKA-SEKULA, University of Southeast Norway, Department of Cultural Studies and Humanities, Norway The Taste of “the Stranger.” Performing Heritage in Culture and Language Festival in Norway.

14:15-15:45 353

10:45-12:15 351

Social Actions Against Ethnic and Cultural Conflicts in Diversified Communities

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

Making Global Society

Session Organizer: Chie SAKAI, Kansai University, Japan

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Caroline PLUSS, Univ Liverpool in Singapore, Singapore AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 351.1 Claudia VORHEYER, University of Zurich, Switzerland Transnational Mobiles – Experiences and Biographical Costs of Perpetual Strangers 351.2 Anna SPIEGEL, Bielefeld University, Germany Gendered Mobilities, Gendered Cosmopolitanisms: Male and Female Expatriate Managers and Their Accompanying Spouses 351.3 Irene SKOVGAARD-SMITH, Anglia Ruskin University, United Kingdom The ‘Non-Nationals’: Multicultural Identity Making Amongst a Group of High-Skilled Migrants in Amsterdam

202

The Arts of Migration: Dancing and Signing (to) the World

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 353.1 Alba ANGELUCCI, DESP - University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy and Eduardo BARBERIS, DESP - University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy Social Cohesion and Hyper-Diversity in Milan, Italy: A Case Study 353.2 Philip YANG, Texas Woman’s University, USA Changes in American Attitudes Toward Immigrant-Native Job Competition 353.3 Kyungju KIM, Sogang University, South Korea Negotiating Reactions to Multi-Racial Tensions: The Civic Roles of the Multicultural Church in Korea 353.4 Claudia MANTOVAN, Università  degli Studi di Padova, Italy The Governance of Multi-Ethnic Neighborhoods Characterized By High Social Conflict: The Case of the Piave Street’s Area in Mestre (Venice, Italy)

www.isa-sociology.org

RC31 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

353.6 Susanne CHOI, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Gender and Anti-Immigration Politics in Post Colonial Hong Kong

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 354

355.5 Pei PALMGREN, UCLA, USA Status Brokers and the Regularization of Irregular Migrants in Thailand

Forced Migration and Trafficking in Persons in the Contemporary World: The Variables of Gender, Man-Made Disaster and Economic Liberalization

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Arun Kumar ACHARYA, Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Mexico AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 354.1 Carmen MENESES, Comillas University, Spain and Jorge UROZ, Comillas University, Spain Identification, Rescue, and Social Intervention with the Victims of Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation in Spain 354.2 Awkash KUMAR, CENTRAL UNIVERSITY OF GUJARAT, India Understanding the Cross Border Trafficking of Human Beings in India and Bangladesh 354.3 Ivana RUIZ ESTRAMIL, Universidad del País Vasco, University of the Basque Country, Spain European Borders. Between the Dwelling and the Content. 354.4 Jagdish MEHTA, D.A.V. College, Chandigarh (India), India Smuggling of Migrants from India to Europe Particularly U.K : Issues of Concern

355.6 Ana LOPEZ-SALA, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Spain and Dirk GODENAU, Department of Applied Economics. University of La Laguna (Tenerife), Spain Non-State Actors and Migration Control in Spain. a Migration Industry Perspective. 355.7 Tobias EULE, University of Bern, Switzerland Unlikely Partners? Collaboration and Shared Interests Among Immigration Bureaucracy and NGO in Germany 355.8 Jack BARBALET, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong Wealth Migration from Mainland China: International Investor Residency Schemes and Illegal Money-Moving As a Special Case of the Migration Industry 355.9 Minori MATSUTANI, Kyoto University, Education, Japan Labor Markets for Transnational Corporations: Nationalized and Localized Space in Global Context 355.10 Satomi YAMAMOTO, National Fisheries University, Japan The Migration Industry in Contemporary Japan 355.11 Elisa PASCUCCI, University of Tampere, Finland Community Infrastructures: Ethnicity, Self-Reliance, and Refugee Governance in Cairo.

14:15-15:45 356

JS-23 The Social Reproductive Worlds of Migrants

Social Integration and Wellbeing Among Transnational Migrants in Family and Community Contexts: The Role of Social Relationships

Committees: RC06 Family Research (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

See Joint Session Details for JS-23.

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 356.1 Tuen Yi CHIU, Harvard-Yenching Institute, USA Postmarital Residence Patterns and Wellbeing of Female Marriage Migrants in South China

10:45-12:15 355

Session Organizer: Hsin-Chieh CHANG, Academia Sinica, Taiwan

The Migration Industry: Global Presence, Local Arrangements

356.2 Christian ROGGENBUCK, RMIT University, Australia Social Relationships of Indian and Filipino Residents in Planned Housing Estates in Australia.

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Ruben HERNANDEZ-LEON, University of California, Los Angeles, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 355.1 Gracia LIU-FARRER, Waseda University, Japan Brokered Education Mobility: Study Abroad Agencies and Student Migration in Asia 355.2 Rebeca RAIJMAN, Department of Sociology- University of Haifa, Israel and Nonna KUSHNIROVICH, Ruppin Academic CENTER, Israel The Migration Industry: Labor Migrant Recruitment Practices in Israel 355.3 David TROUILLE, James Madison University, USA “Off the Clock”: Generating Resources in Temporary Agricultural Labor

356.3 Phi SU, University of California, Los Angeles, USA A Tale of Two Migration Streams: Vietnamese Immigrants and Refugees in Germany 356.4 Hiroshi KOJIMA, Waseda University, Japan Families, Friends or Foods?: Correlates of Integration and Wellbeing Among Muslim Immigrants in East Asia 356.5 David BARTRAM, University of Leicester, United Kingdom Social Connectedness Among European Migrants 356.6 Sofia GASPAR, CIES-IUL/ISCTE-IUL, Avenida das Forças Armadas, 1649-026 Lisbon – Portugal, VAT Nº PT 501510184, Portugal Social Integration of Chinese 1.5 and Second Generations in Portugal

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203

Sociology of Migration

Monday 11 July

355.4 Federica INFANTINO, University of Oxford, COMPAS, United Kingdom Mobilizing Networks to Circumvent Borders. the Migration Industry of Hiring Permissions in the Morocco-Italy Migratory System.

RC31

353.5 Santa Giuseppina TUMMINELLI, University of Palermo, Italy Common Places: Migrants in the Shared Spaces of the City

No. 356

Sociology of Migration

RC31

No. 357

Program–Session Details

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 356.7 Hsin-Chieh CHANG, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Social Integration and Post-Divorce Wellbeing Among Marriage Migrants: Evidence and Policy Implications 356.8 Ann KIM, York University, Canada The Importance of Relationships for Well-Being Among Transnational and Intact Migrant Families from South Korea 356.9 Lee SANGGU, Sogang University, South Korea Close Encounters with the Same Kind: The Limits of North Korean Refugees’ Imagined Communities 356.10 Yuki SEIDLER, University of Vienna, Austria Roles of Social Network in Japanese Women’s Prenatal Healthcare Utilization Patterns in the US - Implications to Migrants’ Maternal Wellbeing 356.11 Osten WAHLBECK, University of Helsinki, Finland Return Migration and Mixed Families: The Case of Finnish and Swedish Family Migration in a Transnational Context 356.12 Yuko NAKANISHI, Department of Sociology, Musashi University, Japan Ethnic Ties Stronger Than Family Ties: Ethnic Network Utilized By Japanese Immigrant Women in the US. 356.13 Mimoza DUSHI, University of Prishtina, Kosovo “Home” for Now or “Home” for Life: Migration Memories of Kosovar Albanian Migrants in West European Countries

16:00-17:30 357

RC31 Business Meeting

10:45-12:15 359

Immigration and Integration Policies from Comparative Perspectives

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Hideki TARUMOTO, Hokkaido University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 359.1 Peter KIVISTO, Augustana College Univ Trento and St Petersburg State University, USA Integrating Immigrant Religions in Comparative Perspective 359.2 Yasuhiro HITOMI, Nagoya Gakuin University, Japan Immigration Strategies of Burmese Refugee Diasporas: Between Burma and Japan 359.3 Domenico MADDALONI, University of Salerno, Italy; Rocío BLANCO GREGORY, University of Extremadura, Spain and Grazia MOFFA, University of Salerno, Italy Migration in Southern Europe: The Peripheral Incorporation in Crisis 359.4 Ruxandra-Ileana BOICU, University of Bucharest, Romania EU Integration Policies and Real Experiences of Romanian Migrants

359.5 Prema KURIEN, Syracuse University, USA The Incorporation of South Asian Minorities in Canada and the United States

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 Conceptualizing Suffering Among Migrant Returnees

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Erika BUSSE, University of Wisconsin River Falls, USA and Tania VASQUEZ LUQUE, Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, Peru AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 358.1 Melissa BLANCHARD, Idemec, France and Francesca SIRNA, CNRS, France Analyzing “Return Migration” and Suffering Among Italian Returnees in the Alpine Area from 1970’s Crisis until Today 358.2 Alisa PETROFF, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain; Leonardo DE LA TORRE, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain; Clara PIQUERAS, Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain and Thales SPERONI PEREIRA DA CRUZ, Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain Economic Crisis and Migrant Suffering: A Multilevel Analysis of Return Intentions of Bolivian Migrants in Spain 358.3 Meltem YILMAZ SENER, Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey and Secil Pacaci ELITOK, Koc University, Turkey Getting Adapted? a Comparative Study of ‘qualified’ Turkish Return Migrants from Germany and the US 358.4 Janroj Yilmaz KELES, Middlesex Uiversity, United Kingdom “Returning Home”: Experiences of British-Kurdish Young People in Kurdistan-Iraq

204

358.5 Agnieszka RADZIWINOWICZ, University of Warsaw, Poland Violence in the Experience of Deportation from the United States

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

358

RC31 Tuesday 12 July

359.6 Aslican KALFA TOPATES, Pamukkale University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Department of Labour Economics and Industrial Relations, Turkey; Nursel DURMAZ, Pamukkale University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Department of Labour Economics and Industrial Relations, Turkey and Hakan TOPATES, Pamukkale University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Department of Labour Economics and Industrial Relations, Turkey Iranian Asylum Seekers and Refugees in the Contradiction of Conservatism and Secularism: The Case of Denizli, Turkey 359.7 Natalya TREGUBOVA, TANDEM, St. Petersburg State University, Russia and Dmitrii ZHIKHAREVICH, St. Petersburg State University, Russia A Comparative Study of Labor Migrants’ Discontent in the Eurasian Societies in the Time of Economic and Financial Instability 359.8 Ian MORRISON, The American University in Cairo, Egypt Interculturalism and the Question of National Identity in Québec 359.9 SangJi LEE, IOM-MRTC, South Korea and Chang Won LEE, IOM-MRTC, South Korea The Impact of Government’s Integration Policy on Services of Religious NGOs for Immigrants 359.10 Alexandra MERGENER, Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training (BIBB), Germany and Tobias MAIER, Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training, Germany Skilled Migrants in the German Labour Market – What Is the Companies’ Perspective?

www.isa-sociology.org

RC31 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

360

Futures of Migration Research: Methodological Innovations and ‘PostMigrant’ Societies

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Magdalena NOWICKA, Humbold University,, Germany and Lukasz KRZYZOWSKI, Hubold University, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 360.1 Ann KIM, York University, Canada and Reem ATTIEH, York University, Canada Insights from Canada’s Settlement Industry: Exploring Agency Data on Migration 360.2 Paolo BOCCAGNI, University of Trento, Italy Home Tours: A New Way of Comparative Investigation into ‘Post-Migration’ Everyday Life 360.3 Rizza Kaye CASES, University of Trento, Italy Lessons from Utilising Retrospective Network Mapping and Visualisation: Comparing the Networks of Filipino Nurses, Domestics, and Careworkers in London and New York DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 360.4 Olga CRETU, Middlesex University Business School, United Kingdom ‘Londongrad’: A New ‘Home’ for ‘Migrants’ from the PostSoviet Space?

JS-43 Young Skilled Migrants: Hopes and Struggles in New Global Trends

361.5 Helge SCHWIERTZ, University of Osnabruck, Germany With or without Papers – We Will Always be Illegal: The Movement of Undocumented Youth Beyond Citizenship and Legislation 361.6 Larisa KOSYGINA, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Mexico and Martha Luz ROJAS WIESNER, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Mexico Non/Regularization of Guatemalans in Soconusco: Strategic Action As a Privilege DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 361.7 Maria GUERRA, Universidad de Valparaiso, Chile and Nicola NORTH, University of Auckland, New Zealand Undocumented Migrant Women and Their Children in Chile: Implications for Chile’s Crece Contigo Policy of a Child’s Rights to Health.

JS-48 Global Social Protection and Migration: Reproduction of Inequalities or Safety Net?

Committees: RC19 Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration See Joint Session Details for JS-48.

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 362

The Mediterannean Refugee Desaster and the EU

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

Committees: RC34 Sociology of Youth (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration

Session Organizer: Ludger PRIES, Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum, Germany

See Joint Session Details for JS-43.

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

16:00-17:30 361

Migrant “Illegality” and Non-Citizen Precarious Status in the Americas

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Luin GOLDRING, York University, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 361.1 Luin GOLDRING, York University, Canada and Patricia LANDOLT, University of Toronto, Scarborough, Canada The Chutes and Ladders of Migrant Incorporation: Legal Status Meets Canadian Newcomer Settlement Landscape 361.2 Lourdes GOUVEIA, University of Nebraska at Omaha, USA and Jasney COGUA-LOPEZ, University of Nebraska at Omaha, USA Fragmented Citizenships and Precarious Legality Among New Middle-Class Migrants: The Venezuelan Case. 361.3 Douglas MASSEY, Princeton University, USA; Jorge DURAND, University of Guadalajara, Mexico and Karen PREN, Princeton University, USA Legal Status and Working Conditions of Mexican and Central American Immigrants in the United States: A Multilevel Analysis

362.1 Anna GANSBERGEN, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany The Role of Asylum Related Organisations and Their Cooperation Networks at the Mediterranean Borders in the Context of the Common European Asylum System 362.2 Marko VALENTA, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway and Drago ZUPARIC-ILJIC, Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies, Croatia Welcome, but Please Don’t Stay: Refugee Crisis’ Implications in the South-East European Countries 362.3 Margit FEISCHMIDT, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary and Ildiko ZAKARIAS, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Social Sciences, Hungary Philanthropic Activities and Their Political Implications during the Refugee Crisis in Hungary 362.4 Lama KABBANJI, Institut de recherche pour le développement, France Exploring the Effects of Border and Immigration Policies on the Strategies of Refugees from Syria 362.5 Zoltan ELOD, MTA-ELTE-Peripato Comparative Social Dynamics Research Group, Hungary; Nikos FOKAS, MTAETE-Peripato Comaparative Social Dynamics Research Group, Hungary and Peter BODOR, Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary From Lesbos to Budapest and Beyond the Construction of the Refugee Problem in the Greek and Hungarian Dailies. 362.6 Ivana RUIZ ESTRAMIL, Universidad del País Vasco, University of the Basque Country, Spain Humanitarianism: Between Morality and Action

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205

Sociology of Migration

14:15-15:45

361.4 Gabriel ECHEVERRIA CUBELLO, Università degli Studi di Trento, Italy “Ni Es Lo Mismo, Ni Es Igual”. Ecuadorian Irregular Migrants in Amsterdam and Madrid.

RC31

359.11 Tomohisa HIRATA, Gunma University, Japan Internet Cafes of the People of Each Ethnicity, By the People of Each Ethnicity, for the People of Each Ethnicity: Temporary Migrant Workers in Singapore and Singaporean Policies of “Racial Harmony” in Hdb

No. 362

Sociology of Migration

RC31

No. 363

Program–Session Details

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 362.7 Maria da Saudade BALTAZAR, University of Evora, Portugal and Ana ROMAO, Academia Militar, Portugal The Human Security in the Euro-Mediterranean Relations: Contradictions on Migration to the Countries of Southern Europe

Migrations in the 2020. Trends and Policies

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Catherine WIHTOL DE WENDEN, Sciences Po, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 363.1 Hideki TARUMOTO, Hokkaido University, Japan The Future Trend of Migration in East Asia and Japan 363.2 Gustavo VERDUZCO, El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico Migration Policies and Migratory Facts in Mexico: A Vision for the 2020’S 363.3 Sofia GASPAR, CIES-IUL, Portugal Chinese Immigrant Communities in Portugal 363.4 Abdelkader LATRECHE, Expert, Algeria The Future of International Migration in Arab Countries

14:15-15:45 JS-54 Ageing in Place in a Mobile World: New Media and Older People’s Support Networks

Committees: RC11 Sociology of Aging (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration See Joint Session Details for JS-54.

How Can the Insights from Other Disciplines Enhance Sociological Research on Migration

See Joint Session Details for JS-60.

09:00-10:30 365

Well-Being Outcomes for Migrants: Fulfilment Vs. Disappointment

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building) Session Organizer: David BARTRAM, University of Leicester, United Kingdom Chair: Elaine CHASE, University College London, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 365.1 Raimund HAINDORFER, University of Vienna, Austria; Roland VERWIEBE, University of Vienna, Austria and Christoph REINPRECHT, University of Vienna, Austria Life Satisfaction and Subjective Assessments of Success Among East-West Commuters in the Central European Region 365.2 Justyna KIJONKA, University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland If I Had Only Known... (Spät-)Aussiedler Migrants from Upper Silesia in Poland to the Federal Republic of Germany Are Taking Stock of Their Lives 365.3 Emilia PIETKA-NYKAZA, University of West of Scotland, United Kingdom Should I Stay or Should I Go? Polish Migrants Settlement Practices in the UK, a Decade after Accession DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

10:45-12:15 366

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

Migration in Asia

Location: Hörsaal 07 (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Ewa MORAWSKA, University of Essex, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 364.1 Georg MUELLER, Univ. of Fribourg, Switzerland International Student Migration and the Field Theory of Kurt Lewin 364.2 Magdalena SZAFLARSKI, University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA and Lisa A. CUBBINS, Battelle Health & Analytics, USA Drawing on Interdisciplinary Perspectives to Understand Immigrant Mental Health 364.3 Angelika FRUHWIRTH, University of Vienna, Austria and Ana MIJIC, University of Vienna, Austria Tracing the Diasporic Condition—an Interdisciplinary Analysis of Identity-Formation within the Bosnian Diasporas in Vienna 364.4 Peter KIVISTO, Augustana College Univ Trento and St Petersburg State University, USA Sociology, Political Science, and Immigration Studies 364.5 Sara DE JONG, Open University, England Finding Pocahontas in Contemporary Europe: Migration Research Meets Historical Studies on Cultural Brokerage

206

Committees: RC31 Sociology of Migration (Host); RC55 Social Indicators

365.4 Elisabeth GRINDEL, Kaplan International Colleges, United Kingdom Disappointment or Cruel Optimism?

16:00-17:30 364

JS-60 Migration and Well-Being. Part III

Thursday 14 July

10:45-12:15 363

RC31 Thursday 14 July

Session Organizer: Eric FONG, University of Toronto, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 366.1 Saskia WITTEBORN, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Forced Migration and Mobile Communication Technologies 366.2 Junxiu WANG, Chinese Academy of Social Science, China Role Trust: A Trust Strategy of Newcomers in the Cities 366.3 James FARRER, Sophia University, Japan Postcolonial Urban Imaginaries and the Politics of Belonging Among Japanese Residing in Shanghai 366.4 Yiyin YANG, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Transitional Identity of the New-Generation of Migration Workers and Its Characteristics 366.5 Jaeyoun WON, Yonsei University, South Korea Toward Transnational Citizenship in East Asia: Taiwan, South Korea and China 366.6 Hsin-Chieh CHANG, National Taiwan University, Taiwan and Yang-chih FU, Academia Sinica, Taiwan Attitudes Toward Labor Migrants, Live-in Care Workers, and Skilled Migrants in a New Immigrant Destination: Does Social Contact Matter?

www.isa-sociology.org

RC31 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

366.7 Iresha LAKSHMAN, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka; Kavindra PARANAGE, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka and Praveena RAJKOBAL, Deakin University, Australia Exploring the Lives of Sri-Lankan Migrants Working in Korea

16:00-17:30

RC31

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

No. 366

JS-74 Migration and Well-Being. Part II Committees: RC31 Sociology of Migration (Host); RC55 Social Indicators See Joint Session Details for JS-74.

Sociology of Migration

14:15-15:45 JS-69 Migration and Well-Being. Part I Committees: RC55 Social Indicators (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration See Joint Session Details for JS-69.

NOTES

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207

Women in Society

RC32

No. 367

Program–Session Details ROUNDTABLES:

RC32

Roundtable A

Women in Society

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Program Coordinator: Akosua ADOMAKO AMPOFO, University of Ghana, Ghana and Josephine BEOKU-BETTS, Florida Atlantic University, USA

367.2 Heli AALTONEN, Abo Akademi, Finland Gender and Coaching 367.7 Heather LAUBE, University of Michigan-Flint, USA Mentoring for Institutional Transformation: Recommendations from a Comparative Analysis 367.13 Jussara BARBOSA DOS SANTOS RAXLEN, The New School for Social Research, USA Talking about Care: Communicative Tensions That Make or Un-Make the Practice of Caring

Sunday 10 July 09:00-10:30 JS-1

RC32 Sunday 10 July

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Family-Friendly Policies and Gender (In) Equality in Paid and Unpaid Work

Committees: RC06 Family Research (Host); RC32 Women in Society

367.17 Kristina BINNER, Johannes Kepler University, Austria and Fabienne DECIEUX, Johannes Kepler University, Austria Rising Demands and Varying Perspectives on Early Child Care

See Joint Session Details for JS-1.

Roundtable B

10:45-12:15 JS-7

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Intersectionality and Intergenerational Family Relationships

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC06 Family Research See Joint Session Details for JS-7.

12:30-14:00 JS-14 Women’s Activism in the Most Recent Cycle of Global Protests

367.12 Deniz GOKALP, American University in Dubai, United Arab Emirates Iraqi Media As an International Project: Gender Politics and Journalism in Iraqi Kurdistan DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 367.18 Licy DEVASSY, Carmel College, India Single Women- Choice or Chance?

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change See Joint Session Details for JS-14.

Roundtable C

14:15-15:45

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-17 Racial, Ethnic and National

Marginalization of Female Labor: Intersecting Inequalities at Work /La marginalisation raciale, ethnique et nationale de travailleures : des inégalités en intersection au travail

Committees: RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations (Host); RC32 Women in Society See Joint Session Details for JS-17.

Monday 11 July

367.3 Diana LENGERSDORF, University of Cologne, Germany and Julia HEIDLER, University of Cologne, Germany Gender and Materialities. How to Gain Access to Embedded Gendered Knowledge 367.16 Aleksandra HERMAN, University of Warsaw, Poland On the Need for Translation of Knowledge Between Generations. the Case in Ukrainian Minority in Poland in Gendered Perspective 367.15 Catherine BERHEIDE, Skidmore College, USA Uncovering Women’s Invisible Volunteer Work: The Role of Women’s Work in an Episcopal Church in the United States 367.9 Juliet WATSON, RMIT University, Australia Young Women, Homelessness and Social Justice

09:00-10:30 367

367.1 Verena MOLITOR, Bielefeld University, Germany Authority Belonging, Intersectionality and Gendered Rights: Lgbttiq Police Officers Between Executing Power, Right Claims and Discriminations

Roundtable 1: Gender Knowledge, Theory and Practice

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Marcia SEGAL, Indiana University South East, USA

Roundtable D ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 367.6 Ronald KRAMER, University of Auckland, New Zealand How Cultural Tolerance for Men’s Violence Against Women Influences the Sentencing of Assault Cases in Specialized Family Violence Courts 367.20 Tomoko KAWABATA, Hokkaido University, Japan The Situation of the Harassment Prevention in the Japanese Universities

208

www.isa-sociology.org

RC32 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

367.5 Gustavo MARIANO, Federal University of Goiás, Brazil and Fernanda FERREIRA, Universidade Federal de Goias, Brazil Transforming Genders: Subjectivity and the Struggle for Recognition of Transgender People

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 367.22 Andrea KRETSCHMANN, Centre Marc Bloch, Germany Regulating Carework: The Thin Line Between Law and a Better Future

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 367.11 Jeaney YIP, University of Sydney, Australia Colour Sisterhood: The Discursive Construction of an Imagined Community in Religious Humanitarian Practice 367.21 Poonam DARBAR, Silveroak college of engineering and technology, India Emerging Concern of ‘the Woman Question’- an Indian Perspective 367.19 Suzana IGNJATOVIC, Institute of Social Sciences, Serbia The Debate on Breastfeeding in Feminism 367.4 Maxim KUPOVYKH, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands The New Cold War? ‘Sexual Democracy’ Vs. ‘Sexual Sovereignty’ 367.10 Elli SCAMBOR, Institute for Gender and Masculinities Research Graz, Austria and Daniela JAUK, University of Graz, Austria “a Fatherland without Fathers?” – Actors and Discourses of Antifeminist Platforms in Austria DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 367.23 Gilberto JUNIOR, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande, Brazil La “Ley Maria Da Penha“ y La Alteración Del Paradigma Contra La Violencia a La Mujer

10:45-12:15 Author Meets Critic

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Evangelia TASTSOGLOU, Saint Mary´s University, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 368.1 Maria KONTOS, Institute of Social Research, Frankfurt Main, Germany Migrant Domestic Workers and Family Life. International Perspectives, 2015, Edited By Maria Kontos and Glenda Bonifacio 368.2 Gul OZYEGIN, College of William and Mary, USA New Desires, New Selves: Sex, Love, and Piety Among Turkish Youth (2015, NYU Press)

369

369.5 Chia-Ling YANG, Department of Sociology and Work Science, Gothenburg University, Sweden Motherhood Practices of Women Social Activists in Taiwan 369.26 Gulcin CON, Purdue University, USA Negotiating Care Responsibilities for Older Parents: Intersection of Gender and Socioeconomic Status in the Case of Turkish Siblings 369.13 Rima SABBAN, ZAYED UNIVERSITY, United Arab Emirates Precarious Motherhood

Roundtable E

368

Roundtable A: Global Perspectives on Family and Work

Roundtable 2: Gender Issues Across the Globe

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Melanie HEATH, McMaster University, Canada and Anita DASH, Ravenshaw University, India

369.20 Ewa KRZAKLEWSKA, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland and Marta WARAT, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland Precarity and Gender Equality – Experiences of Women and Men in Poland 369.8 Krista BRUMLEY, Wayne State University, USA Stalling out? Women and Men Navigate the Gendered Workplace in the “New” Global Economy 369.19 Sveta YAROSHENKO, St.Petersburg State University, Russia «Women›s Work» and Personal Well-Being: Thechnology of Exclusion in Postsoviet Russia

Roundtable B: Gender and Sexuality: Structure and Agency ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 369.17 Shweta ADUR, California State University Fullerton, USA Fraught Identities and Contentious Belongings 369.11 Umut BELEK ERSEN, Independent researcher, Turkey Gender Perceptions of Women from Different Social Categories 369.3 Liubov BRONZINO, Peoples’s Friendship University of Russia, Russia Gender Stereotypes in Modern Russia: Between Traditionalism and Postmodernism 369.25 A nna MORERO BELTRÁN, Departament de Sociologia i An� lisi de les Organitzacions, USA and Elisabet ALMEDA, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain Gestational Surrogacy in Spain: Parental Transformations in the XXI Century in Spain 369.23 Vanitha DAPPARABAIL, A.V.K College for Women , Hassan Karnataka, India Women Empowerment and Its Impact on Social Development in India 369.10 Mohammad Hossein PANAHI, Allameh Tabataba’i University, Iran Women’s Resources and Their Political Efficacy in Iran

Roundtable C: Gendered Migration and Racial/Ethnic Identities ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 369.16 Denise SPITZER, University of Ottawa, Canada “Buy This One!” Migrant Beer Sellers in Southeast Asia 369.24 Bhola GHOSH, Indian Statistical Institute, India Authority of Khasi Tribe Women in India

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209

Women in Society

ROUNDTABLES:

RC32

367.14 Hanna DEBSKA, Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland The Social Construction of Femininity in the Discourse of the Polish Constitutional Court

No. 369

RC32

No. 370

Program–Session Details

369.2 Andrea SCHAEFER, University of Bremen, Germany; Elke HOLST, DIW, Germany and Mechthild SCHROOTEN, HS, Germany Gender Specific Remittances from Germany before and after the Economic Crisis

Women in Society

369.9 Edwin SEGAL, University of Louisville, USA Subverting the Dominant Paradigm

RC32 Monday 11 July

14:15-15:45 370

Human Trafficking: The Labour and Sexual Exploitation of Women and Children

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

369.22 Shu-chuan LAI, National Dong Hwa University, Hualien, Taiwan, Taiwan The Renewal of Weaving Culture and Tribal Community for Tluku Women in Taiwan 369.15 Chioma Daisy ONYIGE, University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria Women, Indigenous Knowledge and Climate Change in the Niger DELTA Region of Nigeria

Roundtable D: Gendered Rights and Intervention ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizers: Chioma Daisy ONYIGE, University of Port Hartcourt, Nigeria; Laura CORRADI, University of Calabria, Political and Social Sciences Dept., Italy and Olkunle Michael FOLAMI, Transitional Justice Institute, University of Ulster, Londonderry, United Kingdom Chair: Chioma Daisy ONYIGE, University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria Co-Chair: Laura CORRADI, University of Calabria, Political and Social Sciences Dept., Italy Discussant: Olkunle Michael FOLAMI, Transitional Justice Institute, University of Ulster, Londonderry, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

369.18 Ligaya LINDIO MCGOVERN, Indiana University, USA Gender and Sustainability Issues in Tanzania and the Philippines

370.1 Julia LESER, Leipzig University, Germany and Anne DOLEMEYER, Leipzig University, Germany Building Cases: Victims of Trafficking As a Socio-Legal Category

369.4 Naoko YOSHIDA, University of Kyoto-Sangyo, Japan and Filomin GUTIERREZ, Department of Sociology University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines Japanese Female Police Officers --- Forced Marginalization?

370.2 Sawmya RAY, IIT Guwahati, India Of Vulnerability and Coercion: A Study of Sex Trafficking in Assam, India

369.6 Sunil KUMAR, KURUKSHETRA UNIVERSITY, India Police Reforms By Introducing Women Police Stations in Haryana: An Analysis in Context of Gender Justice 369.21 Ramani HETAL, Sociology Department, department of law, Veer Narmad South Gujarat University ,Surat, Gujarat, India, India Status of Women Lawyers with Their Rights - a Study of Surat City 369.14 Ruth NENGNEILHING, Women Studies and Research Centre, Rajiv Gandhi University, India Women in the Forefront: Women’s Movement in Manipur 369.27 Solange SIMOES, Eastern Michigan University, USA; Marlise MATOS ALMEIDA, NEPEM/UFMG, Brazil and Yumi GARCIA DOS SANTOS, Dept. de Sociologia, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais/Brasil, Brazil Women’s Agency in the Cash Transfer Program in Brazil: Fighting Precarity and Gender Inequality and Transforming the Role of the State in Public Policy Making

370.4 Idowu CHIAZOR, Covenant University, Nigeria Taming the Rape Scourge in Nigeria: Issues and Actions 370.5 Swati MALIK, Jindal Global Law School, O.P. Jindal Global University, India and Neha ANAND, Jindal Global Law School, O.P. Jindal Global University, India Socio- Legal Analysis of Status for Child Marriages in India

JS-32 Gender-Technology Interface:

Implications for Social Transformation and Development

Committees: RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development (Host); RC32 Women in Society See Joint Session Details for JS-32.

16:00-17:30

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 369.28 A nelise ESTIVALET, Unisinos, Brazil Una Nueva Historia De Las Mujeres: Un análisis En El Marco Del Proyecto “Mujeres De La Paz” En Brazil

Roundtable E: Gendered Space and Security

371

Twenty Years after Beijing: A CrossNational Approach to Feminist Movements and the Implementation of the Platform for Action

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 369.1 Shashi SAINI, Veer Narmad South Gujarat University, Surat-Gujarat, India Family and Community As a Perpetrator of Violence Against Girl-Child - a Study in Selected Districts of Haryana(India) 369.12 Bianca GRAFE, University of Osnabrück, Germany Handling Difficult Decisions in Professional Responses to DV in Germany – from Empowerment As Guiding Principle to “Entrance Card” Child Protection? 369.7 Ravinder BARN, Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom; Ráchael POWERS, University of South Florida, USA and Papia SENGUPTA, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India Rape Myths: Exploring Gendered Norms, Culture and Context to Promote Understandings

210

370.3 Angie NG, Durham University, United Kingdom Racial Segregation and Inhumane Treatment of Foreing Domestic Workers in Hong Kong

Session Organizers: Solange SIMOES, Eastern Michigan University, USA; Marlise MATOS ALMEIDA, Departamento de Ciencia Politica - UFMG, Brazil and Manisha DESAI, University of Connecticut, USA Chair: Solange SIMOES, Eastern Michigan University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 371.1 Sylvie BIJAOUI, College of Management Academic Studies, Israel Twenty Years after Beijing in Israel: An Intersectional Approach 371.2 Mayumi SAEGUSA, Nagoya University, Japan Local Response to Paradigm Shift in Gender Politics: An International Comparison of Sweden, France, and Japan

www.isa-sociology.org

RC32 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

371.5 Sri WULANSARI, the University of Tokyo, Japan Human Rights Activist Women’s Practice in Japan and Indonesia: A Comparative Analysis with Special Reference to Their Advocacy of Gender Equality

JS-36 Creating Safety for Youth in a Gendered World

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC34 Sociology of Youth See Joint Session Details for JS-36.

372.8 Christopher GRAGES, University of Hamburg, Germany and Thurid EGGERS, University of Hamburg, Germany The Introduction of Capitalism into the Family. New Forms of Paid Family Care and the Consequences for Gender Inequality

JS-38 Gender, Youth, and Migration:

Modalities and Trajectories for Development

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC34 Sociology of Youth See Joint Session Details for JS-38.

10:45-12:15

Tuesday 12 July

373

09:00-10:30 372

372.7 Maria Teresa MARTIN PALOMO, Carlos III University of Madrid, Spain; Evangelina OLID, University of Seville, Spain; Inmaculada ZAMBRANO, University Pablo de Olavide, Spain and Jose Maria MUNOZ TERRON, University of Almería, Spain Challenges in the Professionalization of Care: An Analysis from the Perspective of Southern Spain

Precarity and Gender in the Era of Neoliberal Globalization

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

Global Sociology and Feminist Perspectives on Care, Care Work and the Struggle for a Careful World

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Brigitte AULENBACHER, Johannes Kepler University, Austria; Brigitte LIEBIG, University of Applied Sciences of Northwest Switzerland, Switzerland and Encarnacion GUTIERREZ RODRIGUEZ, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, Germany Chair: Brigitte AULENBACHER, Department of Theoretical Sociology and Social Analyse, Austria Co-chairs: Brigitte LIEBIG, University of Applied Sciences of Northwest Switzerland, Switzerland and Encarnacion GUTIERREZ RODRIGUEZ, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 372.1 Sabrina SCHMITT, Women`s Academy Munich, Germany; Gerd MUTZ, Munich University of Applied Sciences, Germany and Birgit ERBE, Women`s Academy Munich, Germany International Feminist Perspectives on Care Economy 372.2 Rosario FERNANDEZ, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom Commodification of Domestic Labour and the Making of the Chilean Nation. 372.3 L. M. Anabel STOECKLE, Wayne State University, USA Surrogacy and the Meaning of Care Work 372.4 Ingrid MAIRHUBER, Working Life Research Centre (FORBA), Austria and Karin SARDADVAR, Working Life Research Centre (FORBA), Austria Working Family Carers in Austria: Tensions Between Institutional Frameworks and Lifeworld Realities 372.5 Sylka SCHOLZ, Friedrich-Schiller-Universitat Jena, Germany and Sophie RUBY, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Germany Care, Care Work and the Struggle for a Careful World from the Perspective of the Sociology of Masculinities 372.6 Deepali DUNGDUNG, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India Mapping Care in the Era of Post Welfarism: An Interrogation of the Contemporary ‘Market’ for Care Work in India

Session Organizers: Manisha DESAI, University of Connecticut, USA and Marlese DURR, Dept, of Sociology and Anthropology, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, USA Chair: Akosua DARKWAH, Centre for Gender Studies and Advocacy, Ghana AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 373.1 Manisha DESAI, University of Connecticut, USA Theorizing Precarity in a Global Era 373.2 Josephine BEOKU-BETTS, Florida Atlantic University, USA Gender, Precarity, and the Professions: African Women Scientists As Transnational Migrant Workers 373.3 Mary OSIRIM, Bryn Mawr College, USA Facing the Challenges of Precarity: African Women Migrants in a Globalized World 373.4 Bula BHADRA, University of Calcutta, India Precarity and Surrogacy: An Untold Tale of Assisted Reproductive Technologies of India DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 373.5 Kathleen LYNCH, University College Dublin, Ireland; Mariya IVANCHEVA, University College Dublin, Ireland and Kathryn KEATING, University College Dublin, Ireland Precarity, Gender, and Care: A View from the Neoliberal Academy 373.6 Ann BROOKS, Bournemouth University, United Kingdom Gender, Precarity and Sexuality: The Intersection of Gender, Ethnicity, Sexuality and Class in Relational Precarity in Neoliberal Society-the Influence of Lauren Berlant 373.7 Francesca Alice VIANELLO, University of Padua, Italy and Devi SACCHETTO, University of Padua, Italy The Precarization of Migrants’ Life: An Intersectional Analysis Based on the Italian Case 373.8 Margaret TALLY, State University of New York: Empire State College, USA; Dianne RAMDEHOLL, State University of New York: Empire State College, USA and Jaye JONES, Lehman College Institute for Literacy Studies, USA Talking Back: Resisting Neoliberalization in the Academy through Feminist/Womanist Lenses

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211

Women in Society

371.4 Benjamin AHULE, Benue State University, Makurdi, Nigeria Millenium Development Goals: Assessing the Efforts to Enhance Socio-Economic Status of TIV Women in NorthCentral Nigeria

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

RC32

371.3 Capitolina DIAZ, University of Valencia, Spain and Lydia GONZALEZ, University of Valencia, Spain A World Society Perspective for Women’s Rights and Women’s Empowerment: Thirty Years of the CEDAW in Spain (1984-2015)

No. 373

RC32

No. 374

Program–Session Details

JS-41 Gendered Human Rights, Human

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Dignity, and Intersecting Inequalities

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); TG03 Human Rights and Global Justice

Women in Society

See Joint Session Details for JS-41.

Knowledge Production: Feminist Perspectives in the 21st Century

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Akosua ADOMAKO AMPOFO, University of Ghana, Ghana Chair: Josephine BEOKU-BETTS, Florida Atlantic University, USA Discussant: Akosua ADOMAKO AMPOFO, University of Ghana, Ghana AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 374.1 Margaret ABRAHAM, Hofstra University, USA and Evangelia TASTSOGLOU, Saint Mary´s University, Canada Crossing Boundaries, Erasing Margins and (re)Contouring Knowledge Production: 374.2 Akosua DARKWAH, Centre for Gender Studies and Advocacy, University of Ghana, Ghana Southern Feminist Youths’ Contributions to Knowledge Production 374.3 Marcia SEGAL, Indiana University South East, USA Creating Feminist Knowledge and Praxis: Gendered Dilemmas and Contradictions 374.4 Consuelo CORRADI, University of Rome, Italy and Maria Carmela AGODI, University of Naples Federico I, Italy Women’s Voices in Europe: Alternative, Indigenous and Dominant Intellectual Traditions 374.5 Bandana PURKAYASTHA, University of Connecticut, USA Thinking about Knowledge Categories, Contexts, Voices and Silences.

16:00-17:30 375

376.3 Angelika ADENSAMER, Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford, United Kingdom and Nina POHLER, HafenCity Universitat Hamburg, Germany The Power to Define That We Have Been Hurt 376.4 Matthew EGHAREVBA, Covenant University, Ota Ogun State, Nigeria, Nigeria; Agatha EGUAVOEN, Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Nigeria, Nigeria; Tayo GEORGE, Covenant University, Department of Sociology, Nigeria, Nigeria and Barnabas SULEIMAN, Covenant University, Department of Sociology, Nigeria Appraising LEGAL Enforcement Promotion and Gender Violence Control in Nigeria 376.5 Sreyashi GHOSH, Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, India, India Justice-Served or Faked? a Critical Analysis of the Gender Just LAWS and LEGAL Procedures in India.

JS-50 Re-Imagining Gendered & Raced

Representations in the Public Sphere

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC25 Language and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-50.

10:45-12:15 377

Intersectionalities of Power in Research: Strategies for Action and Justice

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Roberta VILLALON, St. John’s University, USA and Alessandra DECATALDO, University of Milan Bicocca, Italy

RC32 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

Chair: Manisha DESAI, University of Connecticut, USA

Wednesday 13 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 376

376.1 Cheryl LLEWELLYN, University of Massachusetts Lowell, USA The Problems of Private Violence: Engaging Domestic Violence Asylum Cases and the U.S. Violence Against Women Act 376.2 Andrew EROMONSELE, Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Nigeria, Nigeria; Agatha EGUAVOEN, Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Nigeria, Nigeria and Matthew EGHAREVBA, Covenant University, Ota Ogun State, Nigeria, Nigeria Inheritance Laws, Wills and Women: A Study of Esan People of Edo State, South-South Nigeria.

14:15-15:45 374

RC32 Wednesday 13 July

Gender, Law, and the Courts: Local and Global Struggles Against Violence

377.1 Maaret JOKELA-PANSINI, University of Bern, Switzerland Studying Women’s Human Rights Activism: Position of the Researcher and the Role of in-and Outsiders in the Field

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

377.2 Julie SHAYNE, University of Washington Bothell, USA Pushing Back: The Publishing Hierarchy, Activist Scholars, and the Challenge of Solidarity

Session Organizers: Mangala SUBRAMANANIAN, Purdue University, USA; Preethi KRISHNAN, Purdue University, USA and Agatha EGUAVOEN, Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Nigeria, Nigeria

377.3 Oana MARCU, Universita Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy Whose Voice Is Critical? Research with Roma, Between Discourses of Tradition and Everyday Feminist Struggles

Chair: Laura CORRADI, University of Calabria, Political and Social Sciences Dept., Italy

212

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 377.4 Fatima FARINA, University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy and Maria Grazia GALANTINO, Unitelma Sapienza Roma, Italy Women in the Men’s House: Negotiating POWER in Military Settings

www.isa-sociology.org

RC32 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

09:00-10:30 379

Protected?

Committees: RC12 Sociology of Law (Host); RC32 Women in Society

Muslim Women’s Struggles for a Better World through Promoting Gender Equality

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

See Joint Session Details for JS-51.

Session Organizers: Masoumeh VELAYATI, Al-Maktoum College of Higher Education, Scotland, UK, United Kingdom and Nilay CABUK KAYA, Ankara University, Turkey

14:15-15:45

Chair: Nilay CABUK KAYA, Ankara University, Turkey

378

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Gender, Culture and Technologies in the Knowledge Economy

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Cynthia JOSEPH, Monash University, Australia and Linda MUZZIN, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, Canada Chair: Mary OSIRIM, Bryn Mawr College, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 378.1 Heather LAUBE, University of Michigan-Flint, USA Resistance and Replication: Feminists As Insiders and Outsiders in the Knowledge Economy

379.1 Siavash ROKNI, Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada Islamic Feminism in Iran: The Case of Zanan Magazine 379.2 Ayse SAKTANBER, Middle-East Technical University of Ankara, Turkey Between Equity and Equality: Muslim Women’s Dilemma in the Face of Gender Equality 379.3 Masoumeh VELAYATI, Al-Maktoum College of Higher Education, United Kingdom Multiple Strategies to Challenge Gender Inequality within Muslim Societies 379.4 Melanie HEATH, McMaster University, Canada How Does Polygamy Challenge Islamic Feminism? Gender Equality and Group Rights in Mayotte

378.2 Grit PETSCHICK, TU Berlin, Germany The Social Construction of Excellent Scientists 378.3 Linda MUZZIN, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, Canada Canadian Women College Presidents, Deans and Senior Faculty, Their Professional Identities and Contributions to the Hi Tech Knowledge Economy 378.4 Blanka NYKLOVA, Institute of Sociology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic The Chemistry of Time-Poor Gendered Lives: Institutional Gender Culture, Technology and the Politics of Knowledge Production 378.5 Wairokpam PREMI, central university of gujarat, India and Thounaojam SOMOKANTA, centre for studies in science, technology and innovation policy, India Gender, Technology and Work Relations: Case of Women Employees in Food Processing Industries in Manipur, India

379.6 Tahereh HAJHOSSEINI, no affiliation, Iran The Representation of Women in Iranian Cinema before and after Revolution(1979) DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 379.5 Ladan RAHBARI, PhD in sociology, Iran Gender and the Right to the Space: The Impact of Modern Architecture on Elimination of Private Spaces for Women in Iran 379.7 Marianna SIINO, University of Palermo, Italy The Difficult “Cohabitation”: Gender Violence and Religious Culture in a Mediterranean City

10:45-12:15 380

16:00-17:30 JS-59 Migrant Women’s Biographies within

the Economic Crisis: Transnationalism As a Coping Strategy Reconsidered

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC38 Biography and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-59.

Fights, Strategies and Projects for Women in Latin America and the Caribbean for a Fairer and More Equitable World.

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Alicia Itati PALERMO, National University of Lujan, Argentina, Argentina and Gay YOUNG, American University, Washington, D.C., USA Chair: Alicia Itati PALERMO, National University of Lujan, Argentina, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 380.1 Rochele FACHINETTO, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil and Alex Niche TEIXEIRA, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Gender and Public Security: An Analysis of Women in the Brazilian Polices. 380.2 Eva Raquel GUERECA TORRES, UAM Lerma, Mexico Mujeres, Conocimiento y Poder En La Conformación De La Sociedad Moderna En México

www.isa-sociology.org

213

Women in Society

JS-51 Women’s Migrant Worker : Have They

Thursday 14 July

RC32

377.5 Elisabeth Anna GÜNTHER, TU Wien, Austria and Sabine T. KOESZEGI, TU Wien, Austria In_Temperate Struggles – a Reflexive Debate on IntraOrganizational Research Projects on Intersectionality in a STEM University.

No. 380

Women in Society

RC32

No. 381

Program–Session Details

380.3 Anna-Britt COE, Umea University, Sweden and Darcie VANDEGRIFT, Drake University, Department for the Study of Culture & Society, USA “If We Get New Generations to Enter the Feminist Movement…It Will be Different, It Will be Fantastic”: Youth Gender Justice Activism in Peru and Ecuador. 380.4 Jenny COCKBURN, Carleton University, Canada Indigenous Women and the Struggle for Food Sovereignty: Engaging with State Policy in Bolivia 380.5 Maria Eugenia Sanchez Ramos SANCHEZ RAMOS, UNIVERSIDAD DE GUANAJUATO, Mexico Competitividad De La Mujer Investigadora En Las Universidad Pública 380.6 Maria GONZALEZ, Sindicatura General de la Nacion, Argentina La Situación De La Mujer Detenida y Su Rol De Madre

14:15-15:45 381

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 381.6 Abha CHAUHAN, University of Jammu, India Honor Killings and Gender-Based Violence in India: Women’s Activism and People’s Initiatives 381.7 Neerja AHLAWAT, M.D University, Rohtak, India The Dark Side of the Marriage Squeeze: Violence Against Cross Region Brides in Haryana, India

16:00-17:30 382

The Cities We Want: Using Visionary Methodologies to Create Feminist Alternatives to Urban Planning

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Anna-Britt COE, Umea University, Sweden and Chris HUDSON, Umea University, Sweden Chair: Anna-Britt COE, Umea University, Sweden

Empowering Women for a Better World. Activism and Leadership in the Global Movements to Fight Violence Against Women

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Consuelo CORRADI, Lumsa University, Italy and Glenda BONIFACIO, University of Lethbridge, Canada Chair: Consuelo CORRADI, University of Rome, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 381.1 YoungEun NAM, Sogang University, South Korea Female Activism, Empowerment, and Social Networks: In Case of Female Genital Mutilation 381.2 Catherine HOLTMANN, Muriel McQueen Centre for Family Violence Research, Canada Partnering for Change: A Collaborative Model for Research on Violence Against Women in Canada 381.3 Ladan RAHBARI, PhD in sociology, Iran Spaces of Terror and Women’s Activism for Realization of Right to the City: The Case of Serial Acid Attacks in Isfahan, Iran 381.4 Eva ESPINAR-RUIZ, University of Alicante, Spain and Carmen VIVES-CASES, University of Alicante, Spain Multiple Struggles in Fighting Violence Against Women: Implications Among Roma Women Leaders in Spain 381.5 Helena PARKKILA, Women’s and Gender Studies, Finland and Mervi HEIKKINEN, Women’s and Gender Studies, University of Oulu, Finland De- and Re-Constructing Violence with Residential Care Girls

214

RC32 Thursday 14 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 382.1 Elizabeth VALLEJO, Pontifica Universidad Catolica del Peru, Peru The Struggle Against Street Harassment in perú: New Media, Youth Feminism and International Political Advocacy 382.2 Anita BRANDON, State Institute of Rural Development, Rajasthan, India Reimagining Our Cities: Feminist Vision of Smart Cities for a Better World 382.3 Chris HUDSON, Umea University, Sweden Impossible Dream? Imagining an ‘Alternative’ City 382.4 Sneha SHARMA, Center for Development Research (Zentrum fur Entwicklungsforschung), Germany Re/Claiming the City - Questioning and Re-Imagining Public Spaces. Experiences from Three Cities in India. 382.5 Shweta ADUR, California State University Fullerton, USA How Effective Is the U.N’s Safe Cities Model? DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 382.6 Arturo ALVARADO, El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico “Urban Mobility and Gender Inequality in the Modern World.” an Assessment of UN Habitat -- UN Women Programs to Eradicate Sexual Harassment Against Women in the Urban Transportation System. 382.7 Tal MELER, Zefat Academic College, Israel The Right to Adequate Housing – Palestinian-Single Mothers in Israel 382.8 Lydia Nicole FANELLI, Concordia University, Canada Herstories of Urban Homelessness: A Sociocultural Examination of Inuit Women Living in Situations of Homelessness in Montreal

www.isa-sociology.org

RC33 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

No. 384

RC33

Logic and Methodology in Sociology

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Sunday 10 July

383.6 Natalia NEMIROVA, Saint-Petersburg State University, Russia New Way: Renaissance of Neokantian Tradition in Sociology of 21 Century

09:00-10:30

383.7 Guillermina JASSO, New York University, USA Two Types of Formal Generative Mechanisms

JS-3

Contextualizing Cases and Types through Qualitative Multi-Level-Analysis

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology and WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology

10:45-12:15 384

See Joint Session Details for JS-3.

10:45-12:15

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

JS-11 Comparison in Ethnographic Research Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-11.

Session Organizers: Elisabeth SCHILLING, Fachhochschule für Öffentliche Verwaltung NRW, Germany; Sina-Mareen KÖHLER, Universität Hannover, Germany; Sebastian SCHINKEL, Universität Duisburg-Essen, Germany; Regina SOREMSKI, Institut of Education, Germany and Alexandra KOENIG, University of Wuppertal, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

12:30-14:00 JS-15 The Complex Discursivity of Global

Futures in the Making: Analyzing Transnational Orders of Discourse 2

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-15.

384.1 Helga ZEIHER, German Society for Time Policy, Germany Time and Space in Daily Life Decision Processes - Concept and Research Method 384.2 Marianna SIINO, University of Palermo, Italy Triangulating Two Techniques of Studying Longitudinal Data: A Case Study on Italian Families’ Leisure over the Last Thirty Years 384.3 Verena KOECK, University of Graz, Austria Approaching Young Adults’ Future Conceptions of Life in Old Age: Methodological Challenges

Monday 11 July

384.4 Stefania ANIMENTO, University of Milan Bicocca, Italy “Should I Stay or Should I Go?”: Interrogating Online Forums about the Time and Tempo of Migration

09:00-10:30 383

The Futures We Expect: Time and Future Concepts As a Methodological Challenge in Qualitative and Mixed Methods Research

Social Theory and Its Methods

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jorge GALINDO, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana - Cuajimalpa, Mexico AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 383.1 Gert ALBERT, Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany Figurational Sociology and Methodological Relationalism – on the Ontology and Methodology of Nobert Elias 383.2 Olga Alejandra SABIDO RAMOS, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Mexico and Adriana GARCIA ANDRADE, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Mexico Methodological Reflections on the Relational Study of the Loving Couple As a Sensible Experience 383.3 Jorge GALINDO, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Cuajimalpa, Mexico Methodological Outline of the Theory of the Social Reduction of Contingency

384.5 Jenny RINALLO, LEST-CNRS, France Is Time to Leave the Nest? Describing and Explaining Time in the Transition from Youth to Adulthood 384.6 Jonas GRUTZPALK, FHoV NRW, Germany “Ahead of Time”. Police Work in the Future DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 384.7 Karl MATON, University of Sydney, Australia; Sarah HOWARD, University of Wollongong, Australia; Jodie MARTIN, Australian Catholic University, Australia and Elena LAMBRINOS, University of Sydney, Australia Time and Knowledge-Building: How Knowledge Practices in Education Embody Temporal Principles 384.8 Ivana ACOCELLA, University of Florence, Italy; Silvia CATALDI, University of Cagliari, Italy and Katia CIGLIUTI, University of Florence, Italy The Biographical Approach and the Analytic Induction for Develop the Identity-Building Processes: An Empirical Case with Young “Italian” Muslim Women

www.isa-sociology.org

215

Logic and Methodology in Sociology

Program Coordinator: Martin WEICHBOLD, University of Salzburg, Austria and Nina BAUR, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany

383.5 Nikola VENKOV, University of Sofia, Bulgaria What’s in the Cracks Between Concepts? Meeting Bourdieu and Laclau-Mouffe for a Multi-Level Analysis of Urban Conflicts

RC33

383.4 Jakub MLYNAR, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic Beyond Micro and Macro: Is There Anything to Gain from Ethnomethodology?

RC33

No. 385

Program–Session Details

384.9 Sina-Mareen KOHLER, Leibniz University, Germany The Relevance of Future Expectations Referring the Schoolto-Work Transition

Logic and Methodology in Sociology

14:15-15:45 385

Sociological Hermeneutics – Methods and Methodology

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Regine HERBRIK, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany and Silvana FIGUEROA-DREHER, University of Constance, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 385.1 Gabriele DOS ANJOS, Fundacao de Economia e Estatistica, Brazil Social Sciences and the Making of Brazil’s Intangible Cultural Heritage 385.2 Werner BINDER, Masaryk University, Czech Republic Structural Hermeneutics Reconsidered 385.3 Nicole WITTE, University of Goettingen - Center of Methods in Social Sciences, Germany Express the Inexpressible - Sketches As Data for a Reconstructive Analysis 385.4 Nicole KIRCHHOFF, TU Dortmund, Germany The Image Discourses of Adolescents: “Group Work Process” As a Catalyst to Talk about Bodies

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 386

Generalizing Results from Experimental Research

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Stefanie EIFLER, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, Germany; Marc KEUSCHNIGG, LMU München, Germany; Susanne VOGL, Universität Wien, Austria and Tobias WOLBRING, Universität Mannheim, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 386.1 Andreas SCHNECK, LMU Munich, Germany and Katrin AUSPURG, LMU Munich, Germany Convincing Evidence? a Meta-Analysis on Field Experiments on Ethnic Discrimination in the Housing Market 386.2 Ilona REINDL, University of Vienna, Austria; Roman HOFFMANN, University of Vienna, Austria and Bernhard KITTEL, University of Vienna, Austria Let the Others Do the Job: Comparing Public Good Contribution Behavior in the Lab and in the Field 386.3 Knut PETZOLD, Catholic University of EichstattIngolstadt, Germany Behavioral Willingness and Real Behavior in “Normal” Situations. a Horn-Honking Experiment in Field and Survey 386.4 Chiara RESPI, Università di Milano-Bicocca, Dipartimento di Sociologia e Ricerca Sociale, Italy and Emanuela SALA, Universita di Milano Bicocca, Italy Do Personalized Salutations in Text Messages Lead to Higher Response Rates? Results from an Experiment

216

RC33 Tuesday 12 July

10:45-12:15 387

The New Data “Revolution” in Sociology: Methodological and Epistemological Issues

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Enrica AMATURO, Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, Italy and Biagio ARAGONA, Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 387.1 Victoria DUDINA, St. Petersburg State University, Russia Transformations of Sociological Methodology in the Context of Digital Data 387.2 Sarah HOWARD, University of Wollongong, Australia; Karl MATON, University of Sydney, Australia; Ellie RENNIE, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; Jun MA, University of Wollongong, Australia; Jie YANG, University of Wollongong, Australia; Julian THOMAS, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; Matthew CIAO, One Education Australia, Australia and Rangan SRIKHANTA, One Education Australia, Australia Big Data, Big Theory: Moving Beyond New Empiricism to Generate Powerful Explanations 387.3 Vera TOEPOEL, utrecht University, Netherlands Survey Data Versus Big Data: A Review of Issues and Approaches 387.4 Alphia POSSAMAI-INESEDY, University of Western Sydney, Australia and Alan NIXON, Western Sydney University, Australia Crisis of Analysis and the Power of Data 387.5 Modesto ESCOBAR, University of Salamanca, Spain; Luis MARTINEZ, Fundación Juan March, Spain and Alexander ZLOTNIK, Hospital Universitario Ramón y Cajal, Spain Proposals for Social Network Analysis of Big Data DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 387.6 Maria Paola FAGGIANO, Communication and Social Research Department (CoRiS) - Sapienza Rome, Italy and Loris DI GIAMMARIA, Communication and Social Research Department (CoRiS) - Sapienza Rome, Italy Big Textual Corpora and Mixed-Method Approach. Analysis of the M5S Institutional Blog in Rome. 387.7 Jeffrey SWINDLE, University of Michigan, USA The Potential and Limit of Google Ngram Data and Other Historical Corpora in Sociological Research

14:15-15:45 388

Datalinkage. Beyond Asking for Consent

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Emanuela SALA, Universita di Milano Bicocca, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 388.1 Joseph SAKSHAUG, University of Manchester, United Kingdom and Joerg DRECHSLER, Institute for Employment Research, Germany Using Administrative Data to Adjust for Nonresponse Bias in the National Educational Panel Study 388.2 Heather MCLAUGHLIN, Oklahoma State University, USA Does Sport Participation Foster Civic Engagement? Conflicting Findings from Self-Reported and Official Voting Data

www.isa-sociology.org

RC33 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

388.5 Emanuela SALA, Universita di Milano Bicocca, Italy and Gundi KNIES, Institute for Social and Economic research, United Kingdom An Assessment of the Current State and Uses of Data Linkage in Household Surveys

Wednesday 13 July 389

09:00-10:30 JS-63 Contextualizing Inter- & Multinational

Survey Research. Discussing Regional Perspectives on Effects & Outcomes of Global Trends / Linear & Non-Linear (Multi-Level-)Modelling with Aggregate or Regional Data for Policy Analysis & Evidence Based Councelling

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology and WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-63.

10:45-12:15 JS-65 The Complex Discursivity of Global

Futures in the Making: Analyzing Transnational Orders of Discourse 1

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC14 Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture and WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-65.

RC33 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

NOTES

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217

Logic and Methodology in Sociology

388.4 Ilona WYSMULEK, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland; Olena OLEKSIYENKO, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland; Przemyslaw POWALKO, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland; Marta KOLCZYNSKA, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland; Marcin ZIELINSKI, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland; Kazimierz M. SLOMCZYNSKI, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland and Irina TOMESCU-DUBROW, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences and Ohio State University, Poland Linking National Surveys, Administrative Records and Mass Media Content: Methodological Issues of Constructing the Harmonized Data-File.

Thursday 14 July

RC33

388.3 Stefan ANGEL, Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria; Nadja LAMEI, Statistik Austria, Austria and Richard HEUBERGER, Statistik Austria, Austria Using Register Data in Income Statistics in the Austrian EUSILC: (Why) Do People Get Poorer?

No. 389

Sociology of Youth

RC34

No. 390

Program–Session Details

390.8 Nuno ALVES, ISCTE-IUL, Portugal Coping with Precariousness in Austerity Times

RC34

Sociology of Youth Program Coordinator: Ani WIERENGA, University of Melbourne, Australia; Howard WILLIAMSON, University of South Wales, United Kingdom and Clarence BATAN, University of Santo Tomas, Philippines Youth in the Global South: Emerging Theories, Methodologies, Histories and Policies

Session Organizers: Sharlene SWARTZ, University of Cape Town, South Africa and Kiran ODHAV, North West University, South Africa

Sunday 10 July 09:00-10:30 390

Uncertainty and Precarity in Youth Employment: Public Policies, Institutional Mediations and Subjective Strategies. Part I

Language: Spanish, English Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Lena NARE, University of Helsinki, Finland Chairs: Izaskun ARTEGUI ALCAIDE, University of the Basque Country, Spain and Lucia MERINO MALILLOS, Universidad del Pais Vasco, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 390.1 Daria KRIVONOS, University of Helsinki, Finland and Lotta HAIKKOLA, University of Helsinki, Finland (Mis)Recognition of Migrant Youth Employability: Ethnographic Account of Activation Labour Market Policies in Finland 390.2 Marc MOLGAT, University of Ottawa, Canada Uncertainty and Policy Disconnections in the Experiences of Young Adults Enrolled in High School Vocational and Technical Education Programs in Canada 390.3 Mareike FRITZ, Institute for Regional Innovation and Social Research e.V. Dresden (IRIS), Germany and Enrico NERLI BALLATI, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy Neet Experience As Driver of Social Exclusion? Strengths and Limitations of a Definition: Evidence from a Qualitative Analysis of Biographical Trajectories. 390.4 Diego CARBAJO PADILLA, Universidad del Pais Vasco // Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, Spain Becoming Self-Entrepreneurs through the Debt. the Processes of Residential Emancipation of the Young People in the Basque Country (Spain). 390.5 Jenny RINALLO, LEST-CNRS, France Multidimensional Precarity: A Challenge for Young People. DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 390.6 Lidia YEPES, Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain Labour Trajectories of Young People: The Role of Social Networks 390.7 Siyka KOVACHEVA, University of Plovdiv, Bulgaria Coping with Uncertainty in the Transitions to Autonomy of Arab Youth

218

RC34 Sunday 10 July

390.9 Steven Sek-yum NGAI, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Factors Leading to Development or Stagnation in the School-to-Work Transition of Economically Disadvantaged Youths 390.10 Stefania ANIMENTO, University of Milan Bicocca, Italy Heading North: Unraveling Subjective Strategies of Young Migrants to Face Precarity 390.11 Teresa BALDI, Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy Becoming Adults. How the Transmission of Inequalities Changes in a Time of Work Uncertainty 390.12 Nadia STEIBER, Wittgenstein Centre for Global Human Capital, Austria; Monika MUHLBOCK, University of Vienna, Austria and Bernhard KITTEL, University of Vienna, Austria Heterogeneous Effects of Youth Unemployment on Well-Being 390.13 Elina PAJU, University of Helsinki, Finland and Lena NARE, University of Helsinki, Finland Practices of Making Active Citizens: Disciplining the Body in Finnish Youth Activating Workshops 390.14 Rosangela LODIGIANI, University Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy and Mariagrazia SANTAGATI, University Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy Rethinking Youth Work Socialization. the Role of Employment and Educational Policies in Italy 390.15 Hannah SCHILLING, Center for Metropolitan Studies, Technische Universitaet Berlin, Germany Urban Youth’s Making of Social Infrastructures in a Context of Precariousness 390.16 Funda KARAPEHLIVAN, Marmara University, Sociology Department, Turkey Invisibility of Intern’s Labour: Is It Working? Is It Training? Is It Playing? 390.17 Tomohiko ASANO, Tokyo Gakugei University, Japan A Puzzle of Happiness of Japanese Youth

10:45-12:15 391

The Localization and Globalization of Youth Cultures: New Styles, Fandoms and Consumption Patterns

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Mikito TERACHI, Ibaraki University, Japan and Dan WOODMAN, University of Melbourne, Australia Discussant: Izumi TSUJI, Chuo University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 391.1 Eugenio GUZMAN, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile and Miguel Angel FERNANDEZ, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile Two Generations, Two Social Systems 391.2 Valer VERES, Babes-Bolyai University Cluj / HAS CSS Minority Research Institute, Romania and Julia SZABO, Corvinus University Budapest, Hungary Changing from Local-National to Global: Cultural Consumption and Youth Festivals in Romania 391.3 Esra DEMIRKOL, University of Sussex, United Kingdom and Figen UZAR OZDEMIR, Bülent Ecevit Üniversitesi, Turkey From South Korea to Turkey: Interactions of Youth Culture through South Korean TV Serials and Korean Music in Turkey

www.isa-sociology.org

RC34 Sunday 10 July

Program–Session Details

391.6 Paul EISEWICHT, Technical University Dortmund, Germany Blurred Boundaries - Challenges for the Analysis of Hybridized, Mediated and Glocalized Communities of Interest DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 391.7 Jordi LOPEZ, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain Young People’s Leisure Patterns: Testing Social Age, Social Gender and Linguistic Capital Hypotheses 391.8 Anna DANIEL, Institute of Sociology, FernUniversitat Hagen, Germany The History of DIY – from Punk to Everyday Culture 391.9 Geraldina ROBERTI, University of L’Aquila, Italy Brands and Consumption Cultures Among University Students 391.10 Eriko KIMURA, Japan Women’s University Faculty Integrated Art and Social Sciences, Japan Self-Expression Via Clothing Fashion on Social Media: Focus on Japanese Youth Culture

392.7 Eric ANANGA, University of Winneba, Ghana; Vincent ADZAHLIE-MENSAH, University of Winneba, Ghana; Christine ADU-YEBOAH, University of Cape Coast, Ghana; Barbara CROSSOUARD, Centre for International Education, University of Sussex, United Kingdom and Mairead DUNNE, University of Sussex, United Kingdom Gender and Youth Citizenship in Contexts of Postcoloniality: The Marginalisation of Muslim Youth in Ghana 392.8 Rachid JARMOUNI, University of Mohammed V in Rabat, Morocco Muslim Youths and the Effects of the Social and Poliitical Change Towards the Birth of a New Generation 392.9 Zahedus SADAT, UC Davis, USA Halaqa As a Place for Navigating Identities and Cultures: An Ethnographic Study of Muslim, Bangladeshi American Youth in Bay Area, California 392.10 Azeema VOGELER, COMSATS University Islamabad, Pakistan Creating New Modernities: A Study of Attitude of Pakistani Youth 392.11 Boris GEIER, Germany Youth Institute, Germany Everyday Lives of Young Muslims in Germany. Effects of Living Conditions on Lifestyle and Well-Being 392.12 Chris HEINHOLD, University of Chester, United Kingdom Ethnogeography As a Theoretical Framework for Examining Generational Dynamics within Transnational Shia Networks

12:30-14:00

14:15-15:45

392

393

Muslim Youth, Contemporary Challenges and Future Prospects

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Ali Akbar TAJMAZINANI, Allameh Tabataba’i University, Iran and Mohammad ZOKAEI, Allameh Tabataba’i University, Iran AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 392.1 Mairead DUNNE, Centre for International Education, University of Sussex, United Kingdom; Barbara CROSSOUARD, Centre for International Education, University of Sussex, United Kingdom and Naureen DURRANI, Centre for International Education, United Kingdom Fracturing the Nation: Muslim Youth Accounts of Belonging in Nigeria, Pakistan, and Senegal 392.2 Michela FRANCESCHELLI, UCL Institute of Education, United Kingdom Identity and Upbringing: South Asian Young British Muslims, Love Relationships and Views of Marriage 392.3 Sofia LAINE, Finnish Youth Research Network, Finland Meta-Analysis on Youth Political Engagement in Tunisia, Egypt, Morocco, Lebanon and Algeria - and Beyond 392.4 Susan LEE, GK SOCLIFE, University of Cologne, Germany Religion, Identity, and Muslim Second Generation School Outcomes in Europe 392.5 Stefanie STRULIK, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies Geneva, Switzerland “Sometimes I Feel Lost in Transition”. Muslim Middle Class Youth in India 392.6 Kenneth ROBERTS, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom CLASS and Politics Among Young People in South and EAST Mediterranean Countries* *This Paper Has Been Prepared within the Research Project FP7-Ssh-2013-2 Sahwa: Empowering the Young Generation; Towards a New Social Contract in South and East Mediterranean

Youth and Social Justice in the Global South: Building Alternative Strategies to Entrenched Social Inequalities. Part I

Language: Spanish, English Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Rosa Maria CAMARENA-CORDOVA, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Chairs: Hernan CUERVO, The University of Melbourne, Australia and Ana MIRANDA, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 393.1 Siyka KOVACHEVA, University of Plovdiv, Bulgaria Change and Continuity in School-to-Work Transitions of Young People in the MENA Countries 393.2 Ada FREYTES FREY, Universidad Nacional de Avellaneda, Argentina Construyendo Estrategias Para Combatir Desventajas Juveniles En El Mercado Laboral: Explorando Tramas Institucionales Locales En El Sector De La Construcción En El Gran Buenos Aires. 393.3 Marlize RABE, Department of Sociology, University of South Africa, South Africa; Ignatius SWART, Research Institute for Theology and Religion, University of South Africa, South Africa and Stephan DE BEER, Centre for Contextual Ministry, University of Pretoria, South Africa Faith Based Organisations and Marginalised Youth in Pretoria, South Africa 393.4 Sally KANTAR, Mote Oo Education, Thailand Educational Tools for Social Change Among Youth on the Thai-Burma Border 393.5 Patricia RODRIGUEZ, Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico Capital Social, Los Jóvenes Como Actores De Cambio

www.isa-sociology.org

219

Sociology of Youth

391.5 Katrin TIIDENBERG, Tallinn University, Estonia and AiriAlina ALLASTE, Tallinn University, Estonia “Adulting Is Hard” or Digital Back-Tracking Online

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

RC34

391.4 Babette KIRCHNER, Institute of Sociology, Germany and Julia WUSTMANN, Technical University Dortmund, Germany Doing – Undoing – Redoing? the Everyday Representation of Gender Patterns in Youth Scenes

No. 393

RC34

No. 394

Monday 11 July

Understanding Youth Activism in Local, National and Transnational Contexts: Innovative Methodological Approaches

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Carles FEIXA, UDL, Spain; Hilary PILKINGTON, University of Manchester, United Kingdom and Marion FERRER, Pompeu Fabra University, Spain, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 394.1 Rob WATTS, RMIT University, Australia and Judith BESSANT, RMIT, Australia Ecologies of Meaning: Methods and Youth Politics 394.2 Marta SABARIEGO, University of Barcelona, Spain; Ana Belen CANO, University of Barcelona, Spain; Pilar FOLGUEIRAS, University of Barcelona, Spain; Ferran CORTES, University of Barcelona, Spain and Gemma PUIG LATORRE, FLACSO Mexico, Mexico Participatory Assessment As a Tool for Exploration and Transformation of Youth Participation from a Community Perspective: The Case of L’hospitalet De Llobregat (Catalonia) 394.3 Daniela CHERUBINI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy; Ilenya CAMOZZI, University of Milan Bicocca, Italy and Paola RIVETTI, Dublin City University, Ireland Transnational Views on/from Arab Mediterranean Youths: Challenges and Potentialities 394.4 Natalia WAECHTER, University of Graz, Austria Arab Youth and the ‘facebook Revolution’: The Role of Social Media and Youth Culture 394.5 Mohammad ZOKAEI, Allameh Tabataba’i Unversity, Iran Neo Tribes Mourning: Pashaei’s Death in Iran

10:45-12:15 395

RC34 Monday 11 July

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 394

Sociology of Youth

Program–Session Details

Young Cybogs: Interrogating Technology’s Paradox with, for and By Youth

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Kate TILLECZEK, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 395.1 Ron SRIGLEY, UPEI, Canada and Kate TILLECZEK, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada Young Cyborgs? Youth and the Digital Age 395.2 Justine GANGNEUX, College of Social Sciences, The University of Glasgow, United Kingdom Young People’s Understandings of Social Media : Changing Perceptions and Reflective Practices 395.3 Dorota SZPAKOWICZ, University of Strathclyde, Scotland More Choices but No Chances? Making Sense of Neet Young People and Digital Technologies

395.6 Liang-Wen LIN, University of California, Los Angeles, USA Not/All about Having Fun: Social Norms of Belonging Amongst College Students on Facebook 395.7 Lucia MERINO MALILLOS, Universidad del Pais Vasco, Spain Youth’s Emotional Attachment to Mobile Phones 395.8 Kenichi ITO, Gunma University, Japan What Makes Teenagers’ Addiction to the Internet Serious: On a Survey of the Problematic Internet Use of Schoolchildren in Japan 395.9 Katya BOZUKOVA, Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom Close Friends or Virtual Strangers: Interrogating Young People’s Conceptualisation of Online Friendships

14:15-15:45 396

Youth and Social Justice in the Global South: Building Alternative Strategies to Entrenched Social Inequalities. Part II

Location: Hörsaal BIG 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Rosa Maria CAMARENA-CORDOVA, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Chairs: Mariana CHAVES, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina and Frank Nilton MARCON, UFS - UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DE SERGIPE, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 396.1 Melissa DE MATTOS PIMENTA, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil and Liana DE PAULA, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil Young Offenders in Brazil: Analyzing the Interplay of Family, Peer Group and Social Context As Risk Factors for Youth Involvement with Crime and Violence 396.2 Abeer MUSLEH, Bethlehem University, Palestine Youth Led Organizing in Jerusalem: How Does Gender Change the Game for Young People 396.3 Kabir AGARWAL, Dept. of Economics, University of Mumbai, India; Kuntal AGARWAL, Urban Health Resource Centre, India and Siddharth AGARWAL, Urban Health Resource Centre, India Overcoming Social Disadvantage and Inequality through Self-Confidence, Education, Team-Skills Development in Slum Youth-Children Collectives 396.4 Daniel GIORGETTI, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina Construcción De Subjetividades Políticas Juveniles En Barrios: El Papel De Las Organizaciones 396.5 Marcos MUTUVERRIA, National University General Sarmiento UNGS Argentina, Argentina Politic Activism from the State DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 396.6 Franka WINTER, Maynooth University, Ireland Young Middle-Class People Looking for Political Alternatives in Lima, Peru

395.4 Manfred ZENTNER, Donau-Universität Krems, Austria and Aga TRNKA-KWIECINSKI, Donau-Universität Krems, Austria Online Worlds As Playground for Identity Building. What Is Virtual, What Real?

16:00-17:30

395.5 Kate TILLECZEK, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada and Elliott ELLIOTT TILLECZEK, U of Toronto, Canada Young Cyborgs: Rituals of Resistance to Technology

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC34 Sociology of Youth

220

JS-36 Creating Safety for Youth in a Gendered World

See Joint Session Details for JS-36.

www.isa-sociology.org

RC34 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

397.9 Javeed AHMAD, Sher-e-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences(SKIMS), India Mapping the Social Policy Issues of Unemployed Youth: A Case Study of Kashmiri Youth

09:00-10:30

397.10 Christina KOBLBAUER, Johannes Kepler Universität, Austria Youths Not in Employment, Education or Training: A Comparison of Austrian Federal Provinces

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC34 Sociology of Youth

397.11 Ondrej HORA, School of Social Studies / Masaryk University, Czech Republic and Tomas SIROVATKA, School of Social Studies, Masaryk University, Czech Republic Institutional Determinants of Early Job Insecurity in Nine European Countries

Modalities and Trajectories for Development

See Joint Session Details for JS-38.

10:45-12:15 397

Uncertainty and Precarity in Youth Employment: Public Policies, Institutional Mediations and Subjective Strategies. Part II

Language: Spanish, English Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Izaskun ARTEGUI ALCAIDE, University of the Basque Country, Spain and Lucia MERINO MALILLOS, Universidad del Pais Vasco, Spain Chair: Ada FREYTES FREY, Universidad Nacional de Avellaneda/ Universidad Nacional Arturo Jauretche, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 397.1 Marina MENDONCA, Keele University, United Kingdom and Clare HOLDSWORTH, Keele University, United Kingdom Becoming a Young Entrepreneur in the UK and in Portugal 397.2 Enzo COLOMBO, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy and Luisa LEONINI, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy How the Economic Crisis Is Affecting Young People. a Research in the Milan Area 397.3 Mi Ah SCHOYEN, NOVA Norwegian Social Research, Oslo & Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway and Christer HYGGEN, NOVA Norwegian Social Research, Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway Early Job Insecurity and Labour Market Exclusion: Structural Conditions, Institutions, Active Agency and Capability 397.4 Johanna WYN, Youth Research Centre The University of Melbourne, Australia Generation Y Confronts Precarity 397.5 Rene BENDIT, FLACSO, Argentina and Ana MIRANDA, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO, Argentina Job Placement at the Beginning of 21st Century: Precarious Work of Young People

397.12 Diego MESA, Catholic University in Milan, Italy The Impact of Youth Guarantee Programme in Italy 397.13 Becky HOLLOWAY, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom Fitting in: How Young People in Employment at 16 and 17 Find a Place for Themselves in Policy and in Their Communities. 397.14 Chrysanthi ZACHOU, AMERICAN COLLEGE OF GREECE -DEREE, Greece and Evaggelia KALERANTE, University of W. Macedonia, Greece Occupational Prospects, Life Trajectories and Transnationalism: The Case of Second Generation Albanian Students amidst the Greek Debt Crisis 397.15 David IMHONOPI, Department of Sociology, Covenant University, Nigeria; Ugochukwu URIM, Department of Business Management, Covenant University, Nigeria; Young WARIBO, Department of Business Management, Covenant University, Nigeria and Taiwo KASUMU, Department of Sociology, Covenant University, Nigeria The Politics of Change, Precariatised Youth Unemployment and Active Labour Market Policies in Nigeria 397.16 Mauricio PADRON-INNAMORATO, Instituto de Investigaciones Juridicas. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Jóvenes, Trabajo y Derecho. Condiciones Para La Construcción De La Ciudadanía En México y Uruguay

14:15-15:45 JS-43 Young Skilled Migrants: Hopes and Struggles in New Global Trends

Committees: RC34 Sociology of Youth (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration See Joint Session Details for JS-43.

16:00-17:30

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

398

397.6 Ross FERGUSSON, The Open University, United Kingdom Anti-Social Policy: Governing Youth Unemployment in the UK

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

397.7 Augustin DERADO, Ivo Pilar Institute of social sciences, Croatia Career and Education Strategies of Young Adults in Croatia: The Role of Capitals and Habitus in Transition to Employment 397.8 Mariana CHAVES, CONICET-LECyS, FTS y FCNyM, UNLPCEIPSU,UNLP, Argentina Positions and Perception of Social Mobility in Young People and Their Families from Popular Sectors in La Plata, Argentina.

The Futures We Want, the Pasts Left behind

Session Organizer: Ani WIERENGA, University of Melbourne, Australia Panelist: Helena HELVE, University of Tampere, School of Social Sciences and Humanities, Finland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 398.1 Lyudmila A. NURSE, Oxford XXI, United Kingdom Jürgen Hartmann on Youth Mobility and Cultural Contacts and Their Relevance to the Youth Research of the 21st Century. 398.2 David EVERATT, Wits School of Governance, South Africa Perspectives from Africs

www.isa-sociology.org

221

Sociology of Youth

JS-38 Gender, Youth, and Migration:

RC34

Tuesday 12 July

No. 398

RC34

No. 399

Program–Session Details

398.3 Tom DWYER, University of Campinas, Brazil Perspectives from South America, Reflecting on Key Messages from Chinese and Brazilian Undergraduate Students

Sociology of Youth

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 398.4 Tatiana KIRILINA, Russian State Social University, Russia and Nadezda KIRILINA, Higher School of Economics National Research University, Russia The Model of the Future and the Social Ideal in the Consciousness of Modern Russian Youth

10:45-12:15 400

Connecting with and Confronting Inequality - the Role of Youth Work

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 The Future Is Not What It Used to be: Young People’s Future Visions in Youth Styles and Spaces of Engagement

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Ilaria PITTI, University of Bologna, Italy; Nicola DE LUIGI, University of Bologna, Italy and Alessandro MARTELLI, University of Bologna, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 399.1 Carmen LECCARDI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy and Daniela CHERUBINI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy Arab Mediterranean Youth and the Representation of the Future 399.2 Cristina BACALSO, Youth Policy Labs, Canada; Alex FARROW, Youth Policy Labs, United Kingdom; Ellen EHMKE, Youth Policy Labs, Germany and Andreas KARSTEN, Youth Policy Labs, Germany Getting Squeezed: Spaces for Youth Engagement 399.3 Maria TSEKOURA, Catholic University of Chile, Chile Exploring Youth Participation Strategies in Chile 399.4 Surangrut JUMNIANPOL, Chulalongkorn University Social Research Institute, Thailand Perception of the Youth Movement Toward an Equal Society: A Case Study of Thailand 399.5 Fawzia HAERI MAZANDERANI, University of Sussex, United Kingdom The Future Is Not What We Thought It Would be: The Gap Between Aspirations and Actualisation in Post-Apartheid South Africa DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 399.6 Jeylan MORTIMER, University of Minnesota, Department of Sociology, USA; Arnaldo MONT’ALVAO, Rio de Janeiro State University, Sociology Department, Brazil and Pamela ARONSON, University of Michigan-Dearborn, USA Decline of “the American Dream?” Outlook Toward the Future Across Three Generations 399.7 Zoe BAKER, The University of Sheffield, United Kingdom ‘Making Their Way through the World’: Socioeconomically Underrepresented Youth Perceptions of Future Education and Employment Trajectories. 399.8 Garth STAHL, University of South Australia, Australia and Sue NICHOLS, University of South Australia, Australia ‘I Tend Not to Take Things Too Seriously’: Australian Men’s’ Conceptions of Their Futures 399.9 Judith BESSANT, RMIT, Australia; Rys FARTHING, Oxford University, United Kingdom and Rob WATTS, RMIT University, Australia Generational Precarity and Youth Politics in an Age of ‘Anti-Politics’.

222

399.10 Ali Akbar TAJMAZINANI, Allameh Tabataba’i University, Iran Youth Civic Participation in Iran: Explanations and Prospects

Session Organizer: Trudi COOPER, Edith Cowan University, Australia

Wednesday 13 July 399

RC34 Wednesday 13 July

400.1 Cristina BACALSO, Youth Policy Labs, Canada and Andreas KARSTEN, Youth Policy Labs, Germany Nice Words but Little Action? 400.2 Maurice DEVLIN, Centre for Youth Research and Development (CYRD), Maynooth University, Ireland and Hilary TIERNEY, CYRD, MAYNOOTH UNIVERSITY, Ireland Youth Work and Inequality: Discourse and Practice 400.3 Helen JONES, University of Huddersfield, United Kingdom Is Youth Work an Endangered Profession in England? 400.4 Charlie COOPER, University of Hull, United Kingdom Imagining Different Ways of Working with Young People – the Utility of Utopian Dreams 400.5 Kerry MONTERO, RMIT University, Australia Doing Youth Work in the ‘Asian Century’: Let a Hundred Schools of Thought… 400.6 Wayne RICHARDS, University of Worcester, United Kingdom Complex Lives - Intentionality, Hope and Change 400.7 Aurelie MARY, University of Tampere, Finland Youth Actors Cooperation Essential to Improve School Advice Services and Ease the School-to-Work Process DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 400.8 Satoshi OTAYA, the University of Tokyo, Japan The Role of Spaces As Support for Social Inclusion of Youth in Japan 400.9 Arno HEIMGARTNER, University of Graz, Austria Die Future of Youth Work: Changes of Society and Profession 400.10 Ema INOUE, Kyoto University, Japan Formation and Transformation of Support for the Young People with Crisis in Transition: From the Perspective of Social Capital 400.11 Sotirios CHTOURIS, University of the Aegean, Greece; Dionyssis BALOURDOS, National Center for Social Research, Greece; DeMond MILLER, Rowan University, USA; George STALIDIS, Alexander Technological Educational Institute of Thessaloniki, Greece and Malama RENTARI, University of the Aegean, Greece Labor Integration and Job Embeddedness and the Role of Social Factors on the Transitional Phases of Greek Youth in the Time of Economic Crisis 400.12 Aline PIRES, Universidade Federal de Sao Carlos, Brazil Young Workers in the Information Technology Area: A Speech about the Flexibility of the Y Generation in Work 400.13 Tim CORNEY, Queens College University of Melbourne, Australia Rethinking Youth Mentoring: Limitations and Possibilities for Youth Work

www.isa-sociology.org

RC34 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

JS-56 Young Activists, Subjectivity and “the Future They Want”

Committees: RC34 Sociology of Youth (Host); RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements

402.3 Manfred ZENTNER, Donau-Universität Krems, Austria The Influence of Social Networks on Decision Making for Education Pathways 402.4 Karina FERNANDEZ, University of Graz, Austria Trajectories of Homeless Youth in Austria

10:45-12:15

16:00-17:30

JS-66 Youth Mental Health: Intersections and

401

Youth Justice - a Mirror of Social Justice? Young People at the Edge of the Law in Times of Inequality

Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Andreas KARSTEN, Youth Policy Labs, Germany; Maurice DEVLIN, Maynooth University, Ireland, Ireland and Howard WILLIAMSON, University of South Wales, United Kingdom

Directions

Committees: RC49 Mental Health and Illness (Host); RC34 Sociology of Youth See Joint Session Details for JS-66.

14:15-15:45 403

Youth and Climate Change / Youth in the Global South (2 Themes)

ROUNDTABLES:

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Roundtable A

Session Organizers: Jeylan MORTIMER, University of Minnesota, USA and Sharlene SWARTZ, University of Cape Town, South Africa

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 401.2 Maurice DEVLIN, Maynooth University, Ireland, Ireland “Youth Work” and “Youth Justice Work”: What a Difference a Word Makes? 401.1 Liana DE PAULA, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil Citizenship Rights for Young Offenders: The Impacts of the 1990’s Reforms on the Youth Justice System in Brazil DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 401.3 Rashalee MITCHELL, The University of the West Indies Mona campus, Jamaica, Jamaica An Exploration of the Literature on the Sex Work Industry and the Case for Labour Rights for Commercial Sex Workers in Jamaica

Thursday 14 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 403.1 Vinod CHANDRA, J N P G College, Lucknow University, India Young People’s Experience and Understanding of Climate Change and Natural Disasters in India 403.2 Harriet THEW, University of Leeds, United Kingdom UK Youth Participation in Climate Change Decision-Making: Perceptions of the International Climate Negotiations. 403.3 Clarence BATAN, University of Santo Tomas, Philippines; Debbie Mariz MANALILI, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines and Keith Aaron JOVEN, Mabalacat City College/University of the Philippines, Philippines Growing-up in the Global South: Theorizing EducationEmployment Nexus, Youth Scholarship, and Methodologies in the Philippines 403.4 Jessica SCHWITTEK, University of Wuppertal, Germany Negotiating Transition into Adulthood in Kyrgyzstan

09:00-10:30 402

Discussant: Natalia WAECHTER, University of Graz, Austria

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Austrian Youth in Transition

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Natalia WAECHTER, University of Graz, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 402.1 Carina ALTREITER, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria On Becoming a Young Blue-Collar Worker: Classed Transitions in Working Life

403.5 Ani WIERENGA, University of Melbourne, Australia Too Small to Make a Difference? Participation, Engagement and Agency

16:00-17:30 404

RC34 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal II (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

402.2 Roland ATZMUELLER, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Department of theoretical sociology and social analysis/ Institute of Sociology, Austria and Alban KNECHT, FH-Campus Wien, Austria Contradictions of Social Investment Strategies for Disadvantaged Youth in Times of Crises

www.isa-sociology.org

223

Sociology of Youth

See Joint Session Details for JS-56.

RC34

14:15-15:45

No. 404

Conceptual and Terminological Analysis

RC35

No. 405

Program–Session Details

RC35

Conceptual and Terminological Analysis Program Coordinator: Elke WAGNER, JGU Mainz, Germany and David STRECKER, University of Jena, Germany

Monday 11 July

Mass, Crowd and Individuality As Challenging Classical and Contemporary Concepts

Language: English, Spanish Session Organizers: Alejandro BIALAKOWSKY, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina; Pablo DE MARINIS, Universidad de Buenos Aires/CONICET, Argentina; Jochen DREHER, University of Konstanz, Germany and Hisashi NASU, Waseda University, Japan Chair: Silvana FIGUEROA-DREHER, University of Konstanz, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 405.1 Pablo DE MARINIS, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Insituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani, CONICET, Argentina and Alejandro BIALAKOWSKY, Instituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani - Facultad de Ciencias Sociales - Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina “Mass Society”: A Simultaneous Approach of David Riesman and Gino Germani 405.2 Jochen DREHER, University of Konstanz, Germany Complete Loss of Individuality – Phenomenological Reflections on Mass Action 405.3 Mercedes KRAUSE, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina On the Family As a Collective Subjectivity 405.4 Daniel ALVARO, Paris 8, France; Emiliano TORTEROLA, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina; Victoria HAIDAR, Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina; Eugenia FRAGA, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina and Juan TROVERO, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina En Los Márgenes Del Canon Sociológico. La Cuestión De Las Masas En Los Umbrales Del Siglo XX: Gustav Le Bon, Gabriel Tarde, Georg Simmel y Robert Park.

10:45-12:15 Time and Society: Cultural, Personal and Institutional Ways to Relate Past, Present and Future

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Hartmut ROSA, University of Jena, Germany Chair: Hartmut ROSA, University of Jena, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 406.1 Justyna KRAMARCZYK, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland and Mireille DIESTCHY, Universite Paris-Saclay, France How Past, Present and Future Are Constructed By Slow Livers? Using Qualitative Methods to Measure Temporal Practices and Values in France and Poland.

224

406.3 Hideo HAMA, Keio University, Japan Stopped Clocks and Watches: Rethinking Modern Society and Clock Time

14:15-15:45 407

Reconceptualizing Memory and PostTraumatic Growth from a Crosscultural Perspective

Session Organizers: Sachiko TAKITA-ISHII, Yokohama City University, Japan and Gabriela FRIED, Department of Sociology, California State University Los Angeles, USA Chair: Mariana ON TEIXEIRA, Unicamp (University of Campinas), Brazil, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

406

406.2 Gilles VERPRAET, University Paris OUest Nanterre, France Reorganization of Time and Cultural Regimes during the Economic Crisis : How to Construct a Future

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

09:00-10:30 405

RC35 Monday 11 July

407.1 Sachiko TAKITA-ISHII, Yokohama City University, Japan and Gabriela FRIED, Department of Sociology, California State University Los Angeles, USA The Intersubjective Dimension of Memory: What Has Been “Left out” 407.2 Eri NAKAMURA, Hitotsubashi University, Japan “Invisible” War Trauma in Japan: Medicine, Society and Military Psychiatric Casualties 407.3 Lorenzo D’ORSI, bicocca, university of milan, Italy Moral Silence of the Fighter or Traumatic Silence of the Survivor? Different Cultural Construction of Selfhood Among Former Revolutionists in Turkey

16:00-17:30 408

Challenges for a Global Sociology I: Extending the Postcolonial Critique

Language: Spanish, English Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Oliver KOZLAREK, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás, Mexico and Gurminder BHAMBRA, University of Warwick, United Kingdom Chair: Ipek DEMIR, University of Leicester, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 408.1 Gurminder BHAMBRA, University of Warwick, United Kingdom Connected Sociologies: From Cosmopolitan Europe to Postcolonial Europe 408.2 John HOLMWOOD, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Moral Economy Versus Political Economy: Provincializing Polanyi 408.3 Floris BISKAMP, University of Kassel, Germany Provincializing Frankfurt. Towards a Conversation Between Habermasian Critical Theory and Postcolonial Critique 408.4 Jose Maria PEREZ-AGOTE, Public University of Navarra, Spain Eurocentrismo y Modernidad: Apuntes Sobre La Crítica Decolonial/ Eurocentrism and Modernity: Some Notes on the Decolonial Critique

www.isa-sociology.org

RC35 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

Tuesday 12 July

RC35

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 411.1 Wolfgang KNOEBL, Hamburg Institute for Social Research, Germany Social Theory in a Global Context

09:00-10:30 409

No. 414

Subject or Subjectivation?

Session Organizer: Frank WELZ, Innsbruck University, Austria Chair: Frank WELZ, Innsbruck University, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 409.1 Paola REBUGHINI, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy What Is Left of the Subject, What Is Missing in Subjectivation: A Dialogue 409.2 Dietmar WETZEL, University of Basel, Switzerland Subjectivation As Process of Becoming a Subject – Transgressing Foucault with Butler 409.3 Vyacheslav KOMBAROV, Institute of Economics and Industrial Engineering of Russian Academy of Science (Siberian Branch), Russia Rediscovering the «Subject» in Post-Foucauldian Era of Conceptualization 409.4 Jan SPURK, LASCO-IMT (Paris), Universite Paris Descartes, France The Futures That Subjects Could Want

411.3 Frank WELZ, Innsbruck University, Austria Global or Local Sociology? the Battlefields of Theories in a Historical-Comparative View 411.4 Stefan FORNOS KLEIN, Universidade de Brasilia (UnB), Brazil Dependence Theory and the Center-Periphery Relation (revisited) As Critical Stance

16:00-17:30 412

RC35 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30

10:45-12:15

413

410

Language: Spanish, English

Social Exclusion and Power

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building) Session Organizer: David STRECKER, University of Jena, Germany

Modernity at New Crossroads I: Rethinking Classic Modernity

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

Chair: Craig BROWNE, University of Sydney, Australia

Session Organizer: Jose Maria PEREZ-AGOTE, Public University of Navarra, Spain

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Chair: Josetxo BERIAIN, Universidad Publica de Navarra, Spain

410.1 Gianfranco CASUSO, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru, Peru Power, Exclusion, and Critique: Between Cognitive Dissonance and the Social Constitution of the Space of Reasons 410.2 Sergio COSTA, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany Downsizing Exclusion, Bringing Inequality Research Back in 410.3 David STRECKER, University of Jena, Germany Social Exclusion and the Right to Justification: The Case of Slavery 410.4 Mariana ON TEIXEIRA, Unicamp (University of Campinas), Brazil and Arthur BUENO, USP (University of Sao Paulo), Brazil Social Exclusion: Pathology or Misdevelopment?

413.2 Maya AGUILUZ-IBARGUEN, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), Mexico Ejercer La Suspensión Sobre La Modernidad Como Génesis De La Existencia Social Presente.

10:45-12:15 414

Modernity at New Crossroads II: Diversifiying Western Modernity

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jose Maria PEREZ-AGOTE, Universidad Publica de Navarra, Spain

Challenges for Global Sociology II: Colonialism, Modernity, and Eurocentrism

Chair: Jose Maria PEREZ-AGOTE, Universidad Publica de Navarra, Spain

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Gurminder BHAMBRA, University of Warwick, United Kingdom and Oliver KOZLAREK, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás, Mexico Chair: Maya AGUILUZ-IBARGUEN, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), Mexico

413.1 Estefania DAVILA, Universidad Publica de Navarra, Spain Pensar El Presente. Una Reconstrucción Teórica Del Concepto Moderno De Tiempo.

Language: English, Spanish

14:15-15:45 411

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 414.1 Josetxo BERIAIN, Universidad Publica de Navarra, Spain Modernities in Conflict 414.2 Lazaro CHAVEZ, Sistema de Universidad Virtual de la Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico La Modernidad y Su Eterno Retorno Moral, o La Voluntad Por Lo Correcto

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225

Conceptual and Terminological Analysis

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

411.2 Oliver KOZLAREK, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás, Mexico From Macrosociology to an Experiential Critique of Global Modernity

RC35

No. 415

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

16:00-17:30

415

416

Social Ontology in Social Theory

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

Modernity Re-Visited: The Role of Technology and Engineering

Location: Hörsaal 45 (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Craig BROWNE, University of Sydney, Australia Conceptual and Terminological Analysis

RC35 Wednesday 13 July

Session Organizers: Dieter NEUBERT, University of Bayreuth, Germany and Elisio MACAMO, University of Basel, Switzerland

Chair: Arthur BUENO, Max-Weber-Kolleg, Germany

Chair: Alexandra HOFMÄNNER, University of Basel, Switzerland

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 415.1 Stefan FORNOS KLEIN, Universidade de Brasilia (UnB), Brazil Critique Between Renewal and Negativity: Some Comments on Social Ontology

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 416.1 Elisio MACAMO, University of Basel, Switzerland Attractiveness and Destruction: Polanyi and the Ambivalence of Products of Modernity

415.2 Francisco LEON, Universitat de Girona, Spain Social Ontology and Model-Building Practices of Generative Social Science

416.2 James MERRON, University of Basel, Switzerland Uncaptured Modernities and the “Pure Exteriority” of Technology and Engineering

415.3 Suzi ADAMS, Flinders University, Australia On ‘Direct’ and ‘Indirect’ Social Ontologies: Rethinking Castoriadis, Ricoeur, and the Human Condition

416.3 Rene UMLAUF, Martin-Luther University Halle/ Wittenberg, Germany Fixing Diseases - Locating Modernity. the Role of Technology for Improving Uganda’s Health System

NOTES

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226

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RC36 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

Alienation Theory and Research

Monday 11 July

Location: Seminar 34 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Ekaterina LYTKINA, National Research University Higher School of Economics Laboratory for Comparative Social Research, Russia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 419.1 Lauren LANGMAN, Loyola University, USA and Devorah KALEKIN-FISHMAN, Univeristy of Haifa, Israel Alienation: Past, Present and Future

09:00-10:30 From Alienation to Critical Theory, Past, Present and Future.

Location: Seminar 34 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Lauren LANGMAN, Loyola University of Chicago, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 417.1 Michael THOMPSON, William Paterson University, USA The Loss of Alienation in Contemporary Critical Theory 417.2 Craig BROWNE, University of Sydney, Australia The Dialectic of Control: From the Past to the Future of Critical Social Theory 417.3 Alex STONER, Salisbury University, USA What Does Climate Change? Value As the Continual Necessity of the Present 417.4 Gregory ZUCKER, Rutgers University, USA The Critique of Instrumental Reason As Alienated Reason 417.5 Riad AZAR, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom Spatialities of Alienation: Deskilling and Precarious Labor in 21st Century London

419.2 Michael THOMPSON, William Paterson University, USA The Automaton Society: On the Relation Between Anomie and Alienation 419.3 Kornelia SAMMET, University of Bielefeld, Germany and Franz ERHARD, University of Leipzig, Germany Alienation, Anomie and Fatalism: Durkheim Revisited 419.4 Matthew HUGHEY, University of Connecticut, USA Anomic and Alienated Fragility: The Generic Processes of White Racial Identity Formation 419.5 Jacek BIELINSKI, Institute of Sociology, Collegium Civitas, Poland Rethinking Durkheim’s Social Regulation. Theoretical Reconstruction, Indicators and Empirical Test. 419.6 Andreas HOVERMANN, Institute for interdisciplinary Research on Conflict and Violence, University of Bielefeld, Germany; Eva GROSS, LCSR National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia and Steven F. MESSNER, SUNY Albany, NY, USA Institutional Imbalance and a Marketized Mentality in Europe - a Multilevel Elaboration of Institutional Anomie Theory

16:00-17:30 420

10:45-12:15 418

Anomie and Alienation Theories Revisited

Alienated Bodies, Selves, and Social Interaction

Location: Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

Alienation in a Neo-Liberal Age

Location: Seminar 34 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Andrew BLASKO, IPHS, BAN, Bulgaria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 418.1 Gregory ZUCKER, Rutgers University, USA The Alienated Political Activism of Occupy Wall Street 418.2 Tanya JUKKALA, Södertörn University, Sweden Alienation and Interaction: A Symbolic Interactionist Perspective 418.3 Luis BERRUECOS, Metropolitan Autonomous University, Xochimilco Campus, Mexico The Future We Want in Mexico and Its Struggle for a Better World 418.4 Nils C. KUMKAR, University of Leipzig, Germany When the Existing Ceased to be Real: Alienation and the Tea Party’s Conspiratorial Mode of Interpretation

Session Organizer: Tanya JUKKALA, Södertörn University, Sweden AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 420.1 Matthias SOMMER, TU Chemnitz, Germany The Sociology of Lament. an Existential Mode of Critique? 420.2 Lynn CHANCER, Hunter College, USA Revisiting Sadomasochism in Everyday Life 420.3 Vessela MISHEVA, Uppsala University, Sweden Neo-Liberalism and the Liberal-Democratic Public Sphere 420.4 Andrew BLASKO, IPHS, BAN, Bulgaria Adopting the Role of the Other-in-Submission: Colonialism Today within Modern Societies 420.5 Olga SIMONOVA, National Research University - Higher School of economics, Russia and Maria KOZLOVA, National research university “Higher school of economics”, Russia Moral Emotions and the New Work Ethic Among the Rural Population of Modern Russia: Alienation As a Strategy of Adaptation in Callenging Socio-Economic Conditions

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227

Alienation Theory and Research

Program Coordinator: Vessela MISHEVA, Uppsala University, Sweden and David EMBRICK, Loyola University-Chicago, USA

419

RC36

14:15-15:45

RC36

417

No. 420

RC36

No. 421

Tuesday 12 July

422.4 Richard MISKOLCI, UFSCar - Federal University of Sao Carlos, Brazil Digital Media and Visibility Regimes: New Connections Between Homosexualities, Politics and Technology

RC36 Roundtable Session

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: David EMBRICK, Department of Sociology, USA and Nikolay ZAKHAROV, Sodertorn University, Sweden ROUNDTABLES:

14:15-15:45 423

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 421.8 Reo MAWATARI, The University of Tokyo, Japan Critical Theory of Alienated Labor in Japan 421.2 Celeste NAVA, Universidad de Guanajuato, México, Mexico Relevance of Critical Theory in the Tourism Research: A New Formulation 421.4 Annalisa DORDONI, University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy Retail Shift Workers: The Times and Rhythms of Emotional Labour. a Qualitative Case Study in Milan, Italy 421.6 Duarte ROLO, Universite Paris Descartes, France Travail Et Aliénation : Retour Aux Sources D’un Binôme Fondamental

Alienation, Anomie, and Working Life ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 421.7 Domonkos SIK, University Eötvös Loránd, Hungary Alienation and Psychopathologies: Towards an Alternative Grounding of Critical Theory 421.3 Agita MISANE, Advanced Social and Political Research Institute, University of Latvia, Latvia Anomie, Anomia and Anomy - Distinct Concepts and Distinct Research Approaches? a View from Latvia. 421.1 Inta MIERINA, University of Latvia, Latvia Political Alientation in Post-Communist Countries - a Sign of Social Anomie? 421.5 Tomohiro UOZUMI, The University of Tokyo, Japan The Meaning of Exile of Erich Fromm from Frankfurter School

10:45-12:15 Alienation in a Mediated World

Location: Seminar 34 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Vessela MISHEVA, Uppsala University, Sweden AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 422.1 David EMBRICK, Loyola University of Chicago, USA Social Exclusions: Leisure, Play, Power, and Race in 21st Century Online Experiences

Session Organizer: Richard MISKOLCI, UFSCar - Federal University of Sao Carlos, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 423.1 Tyler PECKIO, City University of New York, Graduate Center, USA The Possibility of Aristotelian Friendship in Digital Public Spheres and Social Media 423.2 Lisa WALDENBURGER, Foeg - Forschungsinstitut Öffentlichkeit und Gesellschaft, Switzerland and Christian CASPAR, Foeg - Forschungsinstitut Öffentlichkeit und Gesellschaft, Switzerland Intimization of Public 423.3 Jorge MACHADO, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil and Marcio MORETTO, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil Under the Eyes of Big Brother: Risks and Uncertainties in Using Facebook As a Plataform of Political Activism

16:00-17:30 424

Alienation and the Intersection of Science and Fiction: Imagining Dis/ Utopias

Location: Seminar 34 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Matthew HUGHEY, University of Connecticut, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 424.1 Ashley DOANE, University of Hartford, USA What Is Utopia? the Science Fiction of Arthur C. Clarke and the Road Ahead 424.2 Tyler PECKIO, City University of New York, Graduate Center, USA Zombie Utopia: Conceptualizing Utopia in Contemporary Pop Culture 424.3 Juliana PRADO, State University of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil Romantic Utopias and Affective Morality in the Use of Digital Media As Emotional Support 424.4 Colin CREMIN, University of Auckland, New Zealand Going Back to the Future of the Culture Industry 424.5 Dmitry IVANOV, St.Petersburg state university, Russia The Past, Present and Future in the Perspective of Dialectical Theory

422.2 Elena GREMIGNI, University of Pisa, Italy Forms of Symbolic Violence in the Web

228

The Impact of the Use of Digital Media in Social Life

Location: Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

Alienation in Late Modern Societies

422

RC36 Tuesday 12 July

422.3 Talmadge WRIGHT, Loyola University Chicago, USA The Emotional Labor of Social Interactions in Digital Play: Negotiating Play Performances

09:00-10:30 421

Alienation Theory and Research

Program–Session Details

www.isa-sociology.org

RC36 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

Wednesday 13 July

RC36

425.2 Cristiano GIANOLLA, Centre For Social Studies, VAT NUMBER: 500825840 - University of Coimbra (& University Sapienza of Rome - Italy), Portugal Populism and the Democratisation of Democracy

10:45-12:15 Committees: RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change (Host); RC36 Alienation Theory and Research

425.4 Rasim Ozgur DONMEZ, Abant Izzet Baysal Universitesi, Turkey Generating Antagonistic Nationalist Collective Identities and Lynching Regimes through Social MEDIA in Turkey

See Joint Session Details for JS-53.

14:15-15:45 Populist Movements and the Media

425.5 Joanna BIELECKA-PRUS, Maria Curie-Sklodowska University (UMCS), Poland Too Week or Too Strong Social Bonds? the Narratives of Migrants on Feeling Alienated

Location: Seminar 34 (Juridicum) Chair: Miri GAL-EZER, Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee, Israel AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 425.1 Dobrinka PEICHEVA, The Neofit Rilski Univeristy in Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria and Lilia RAYCHEVA, The St. Kliment Ohridski Sofia University, Bulgaria Bulgaria: The Populist Political Communication Miileau

16:00-17:30 426

RC36 Business Meeting

Location: Seminar 34 (Juridicum)

NOTES

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229

Alienation Theory and Research

425.3 Hillel NOSSEK, The Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee, Israel “Anonymous Soldiers”: The First Facebook Protest of Israeli Soldiers

JS-53 Emotions and Social Movements

425

No. 426

Sociology of Arts

RC37

No. 427

Program–Session Details

RC37 Sunday 10 July

428.3 Sari PEKKOLA, Kristianstad University, Sweden Coping with Migration: Celebrations of Community, Identity and Belongingness By Andean Diaspora

RC37

Sociology of Arts Program Coordinator: Paulo MENEZES, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, Brazil

Sunday 10 July

428.4 Lucas OLIVEIRA, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil Aesthetic Experiences in Movement: Literary Production in the Periphery of São Paulo

14:15-15:45 429

Analyzing Art Works As a Way to Social Knowledge

14:15-15:45

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

JS-22 Perspectives and Challenges of Working

Session Organizer: Paulo MENEZES, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, Brazil

with Images and New Media

Committees: RC37 Sociology of Arts (Host); WG03 Visual Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-22.

Monday 11 July

Art and Public Space

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Andrea GLAUSER, Universität Luzern, Switzerland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 427.1 Virag MOLNAR, The New School for Social Research, USA Street Art and the Changing Urban Public Sphere 427.2 Jacqueline HENKE, Purdue University, USA Public Art from the Ferguson Unrest 427.3 Saswati BHATTACHARYA, Lady Shri Ram College for Women, India Analysing a Spectacle: Durga Puja and the Possibilities of a Temporal Art Form 427.4 Betty DOBRATZ, Iowa State University, USA and Lisa WALDNER, University of St. Thomas, USA The Greek Social and Political Crisis As Shown in Street Art in Athens 2015 427.5 Takashi ISHIGAKI, Tokai University, Japan Film Showing in Public Spaces: Exploring an Impact of Cinema on Local Communities in Japan

10:45-12:15 428

429.1 Laia FALCON, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain Adolescent Students As Media Fictional Characters: Preventing and Repairing Poor Engagements Between Teenagers and School through Media Literacy. 429.2 Paulo MENEZES, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, Brazil 70 Years after Auschwitz: Revisiting Night and Fog (Alain Resnais)

09:00-10:30 427

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Creativity and Innovation: Perspectives from the Sociology of Art

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Eduardo DE LA FUENTE, James Cook University, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 428.1 Tasos ZEMBYLAS, Vienna University of Music and Performing Arts, Austria The Interplay of Various Forms of Artistic Knowing 428.2 Arturo RODRIGUEZ MORATO, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain and Matias ZARLENGA, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain Cultural Resonance and Creativity Processes

429.3 Mauro ROVAI, Federal University of São Paulo, Brazil A Sociological and Aesthetical Essay on Alain Resnais’s Film Hiroshima Mon Amour 429.4 Liubov BRONZINO, Peoples’s Friendship University of Russia, Russia The Representation of Fear in Contemporary Russian Cinema:the Fear of Everyday Life 429.5 Christian SCHNEIJDERBERG, University of Kassel, Germany Films Conscript Interesting Life-Styles to Serve a Plot – or about Humane Scientists and Sciences As the Great Adventure of Our Time

16:00-17:30 430

Global Perspectives on Music and Migration

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Jeffrey HALLEY, The University of Texas San Antonio, USA and Marisol FACUSE, University of Chile, Chile AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 430.1 Jeffrey HALLEY, University of Texas San Antonio, USA and Marisol FACUSE, University of Chile, Chile Migration and Music in Texas and Chile: Mestizaje, Hybridization, and Identity 430.2 Pablo ALBORNOZ MORALES, Universidad de Chile, Chile “Nostalgia and Deracination in the Latin-American Immigrants Music” 430.3 Luciana MENDONCA, UFPE - Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil Brazilian Drums in Portugal: Migration and Identities 430.4 Mariko HARA, Hedmark University College, Norway and Arild BERGH, Norwegian Defence Research Establishment (FFI), Norway Pathways of Professional Immigrant Musicians: Collaborations As Vehicles to Foster Social Mobility 430.5 Amanda GUERREIRO, Instituto de Ciencias Sociais Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal Music, Musicians and the Brazilian Community in Lisbon

230

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RC37 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45 433

09:00-10:30 431

Art Autonomy, Ethics and the Freedom of Speech

Session Organizer: Ana Lucia TEIXEIRA, Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil

Session Organizer: Malfrid Irene HAGEN, Temporarily working freelance, Norway AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 431.1 Kenichi KAWASAKI, Komazawa University, Japan After the Death of Lee Kuan Yew Will Freedom of Art Espressions Are Possible in Singapore? 431.2 Marta HERRERO, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom Cultural Foundations and Brand Philanthropy: Rethinking the Role of Contemporary Art 431.3 Mashrur HOSSAIN, Jahangirnagar University, Bangladesh On Lifting the Quilts: Ethics, Autonomy, and South Asian Queer Films 431.4 Anna SZYLAR, University of Warsaw, Poland Measuring Unmeasurable - Evaluation of Studio Visits and Residencies

10:45-12:15

433.1 Tasos ZEMBYLAS, Vienna University of Music and Performing Arts, Austria Contested Issues. Public Conflicts in the German-Speaking Literary World 433.2 Ana Lucia TEIXEIRA, Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil Franz Kafka, Fernando Pessoa e Mário De Andrade: On the Meanings of a Minor Literature 433.3 Jan VANA, Sociology, Czech Republic „before, They Were Passing Petitions Under the Tables, Now They Do It with Drugs“ : Analysis of Construction of Dis/Continuity Between the Periods before and after the Revolution of 1989 in Czech Prose 433.4 Ceren ALKAN USTUN, Maltepe University, Turkey Hope and Revolution in a Critical Dystopia: The Hunger Games 433.5 Julia GUENTHER, University of Vienna, Austria Subjectivity Formations, Resistance and Sociological Knowledge of Dalit Writers in Telangana, South India

16:00-17:30

Sociological Problems Regarding Construction of the Artistic Value

434

Language: English, French, Spanish

Arts in Dialogue. Part I

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Mariana Eva CERVINO, Universidad de Buenos Aires- Conicet, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 432.1 Jan MARONTATE, School of Communication, Simon Fraser University, Canada Collectors As Curators in Public Arts Institutions? Aesthetics and Market Values in Contemporary Art Worlds 432.2 Michael HUTTER, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB), Germany Top Gallerists As Key Players in the Globalized Visual Art Game 432.3 Adam HAVAS, Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary The Genesis of the Hungarian Theatre Field in the 19th Century 432.4 Marjorie GLAS, IRIS / EHESS, France Le Théâtre Public Français Entre 1950 Et 1980 : Art Engagé Contre Théâtre Commercial Au Risque De L’institutionnalisation

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 434.1 Mariana Eva CERVINO, Universidad de Buenos AiresConicet, Argentina Gay Ethos and Countercultural in Argentina’s Artistic Field during the Transition to Democracy 434.2 Malfrid Irene HAGEN, MI Hagen, Norway Using Art to Signal Economical and Political Power 434.3 Madhura JOSHI, JAWAHARLAL NEHRU UNIVERSITY, India Marathi Experimental Theatre: A Sociological Enquiry 434.4 Marta CASALS BALAGUER, CECUPS, University of Barcelona, Spain Artistic-professional strategies in music art scene in Barcelona. The case of modern music and jazz

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30

432.5 Anna UBOLDI, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy Champ Culturel Et Sens Pratique Du Galeriste. Une Recherche Qualitative Sur Les Intermédiaires D’art Dans La Ville De Milano

435

Arts in Dialogue. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum) AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 435.1 Max HOLLERAN, New York University, USA Pop-up Engagement: Design Thinking, Museum ‘Labs,’ and Urban Problem-Solving 435.2 Eva SLESINGEROVA, Masaryk University, Czech Republic Bio-Art, Sci-Art – Encounter Human Technogenesis 435.3 Paul LOPES, Colgate University, USA Rival Narratives of Autonomy in American Film: Auteur Martin Scorsese and Experimental Film

www.isa-sociology.org

231

Sociology of Arts

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

432

Literature and Sociological Knowledge

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

RC37

Tuesday 12 July

No. 435

Sociology of Arts

RC37

No. 436

Program–Session Details

435.4 Maria Carolina VASCONCELOS-OLIVEIRA, Cebrap, Brazil The Dance Coming from the Streets: Understanding Recognition and Consecration in Independent Artistic Contexts 435.5 Ana GONÇALVES, Institute of Social Sciences - Lisbon University, Portugal On the Track of Fado

16:00-17:30 438

RC37 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30

10:45-12:15 436

439

Art and Power

Artistic Production and Neoliberalism: Challenges and Opportunities

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

Language: English, Spanish

Session Organizer: Ilaria RICCIONI, Free University of Bozen,, Italy

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 436.1 Barbora VACKOVA, Masaryk University, Czech Republic Modern Art, Architecture and Urbanism in the Frame of Two Ideological Regimes: Modes of Dealing with Cultural Contradictions and Continuities in the Bata Company Town of Zlín. 436.2 Ozan GUNEL, Beykent University, Turkey and Zeynep BAYKAL, Beykent University, Turkey Love in Turkish Cinema: I Don’t Know Why I Love You 436.3 Wojciech SOBOLEWSKI, Institute of Applied Social Sciences, University of Warsaw, Poland Managing the Process of Production of Theatre Play 436.4 Michael TSANGARIS, University of Piraeus, Greece and Iliana PAZARZI, Okypus Theatre Company, Greece “Gender Occupational Segregation in Films” Does the Story Still Goes on?

14:15-15:45 437

Session Organizer: Marta HERRERO, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 439.1 Olga GUROVA, University of Helsinki, Finland Voluntary Precarious. Clothing Designers As Entrepreneurs in Russia and in Finland 439.2 Zuhal KAVACIK, Universitat Hamburg, Germany Economics in Art and Artists in Economy 439.3 Julia ROTHENBERG, Queensborough Community College, USA Theaster Gates: Chicago’s Entrepeneurial Artist 439.4 Wenceslas LIZE, University de Poitiers - GRESCO, France The Role of Intermediaries of Artistic Work in the Rise of the “Entrepreneurial Regime” of Artistic Production. the Case of Popular Music in France 439.5 Ieva MOORE, University of Latvia, Latvia Artistic Integrity and Contemporary Business Models.

10:45-12:15

Art Scenes As Trading Zones

440

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Jan MARONTATE, Simon Fraser University, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 437.1 Sabrina PARRACHO SANT’ANNA, UFRRJ, Brazil The Creative District in Rio De Janeiro and the Rio Art Museum As Trading Zone 437.2 Ilaria RICCIONI, Free University of Bozen, Italy Youth Music Bands and Transitional Values in a Trilingual Region 437.3 Julie REN, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong and Martin FULLER, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany Proximity, Art Openings and Potentiality 437.4 Claire CLOUET, EHESS, centre Georg Simmel, France Ce Que Fait La Musique : Espaces D’écoutes En Foyer De Travailleurs Migrants 437.5 Ignacio RIVERA VOLOSKY, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom Latinoamerican Music, Aesthetics and Politics in the Global Stage: The Case of ‘el Sueño Existe’ Festival in Wales

232

RC37 Thursday 14 July

Changing Modes of Production and the Arts

Location: Hörsaal 14 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Jorge GONZALEZ, University of Ottawa, Canada Discussant: James DICKINSON, Rider University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 440.1 James DICKINSON, Rider University, USA Assembly Line Art; Modes of Making Art in the Era of Capitalist Production 440.2 Michaela RUDYJOVA, Commenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia Faces of Rurban Mobility of Artists in Slovakia 440.3 Elzbieta NIEROBA, Opole University, Poland The Involvement of Art Institutions in the Construction of a New Symbolic Order. Polish Art Institutions after 1989 440.4 Hideaki SASAJIMA, Osaka City University, Japan Institutional Changes of the Arts in NYC before and after WWII

www.isa-sociology.org

RC38 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

442

Biography and Society

Sunday 10 July

Session Organizers: Minna-Kristiina RUOKONEN-ENGLER, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany and Irini SIOUTI, University of Vienna, Austria Chair: Minna-Kristiina RUOKONEN-ENGLER, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 442.1 Sara DE JONG, Open University, England Unanticipated Routes and Windows of Opportunity: Biographical Narratives of Migrant NGO Staff

09:00-10:30 Visual Biographies in Media Communication

Committees: RC38 Biography and Society (Host); WG03 Visual Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-4.

Monday 11 July JS-28 Biography and Mental Health Committees: RC38 Biography and Society (Host); RC49 Mental Health and Illness See Joint Session Details for JS-28.

14:15-15:45 441

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

In-Mobilities: Migration and Social Mobility in the Age of Globalization. Part I

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

442.2 Milena PREKODRAVAC, Soziologisches Forschungsinstitut Gottingen (SOFI), Germany and Janina SOEHN, Soziologisches Forschungsinstitut Gottingen (SOFI), Germany Adult Immigrants Biographies and Social Mobility in Transnational Perspective: The Ambivalent Role of Credentials and Educational Participation 442.3 Sevgi SÖYLER, Friedrich-Alexander-Universitaet Nuremberg, Germany Migration, Education, Resilience – a Biographical Study on ‘Educationally Successful’ Persons in Germany Who Have a Turkish Migration History 442.4 Jungim HA, Ecoles des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France Parcours Migratoire Et Soutien Familial Chez Les étudiants Coréens De France

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30

Session Organizers: Minna-Kristiina RUOKONEN-ENGLER, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany and Irini SIOUTI, University of Vienna, Austria

443

Chair: Minna-Kristiina RUOKONEN-ENGLER, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 441.1 Victoria SEMENOVA, Institute of Sociology Russian Academy of Science, Russia Social Mobility and Life Course Trajectory: Combining Biographical Approach and Mass Survey Data 441.2 Tina SPIES, University of Potsdam, Germany Behind Methodological Nationalism? How to Analyze Migration and Social Mobility in Biographical Research 441.3 Lorena IZAGUIRRE, Universite Catholique de Louvain, Belgium Social (Im)Mobility and Subjective Mobility: Peruvian Migrants in Sao Paulo, Brazil 441.4 Rosa SORIANO-MIRAS, Department of Sociology of University of Granada (Spain), Spain; Antonio TRINIDADREQUENA, Department of Sociology at University of Granada (Spain), Spain and Marlene SOLIS, Colef, Mexico Work on the Export Industry in Tanger (Morocco) from the Biography of Women: An Intersectional Analysis 441.5 Katarzyna WANIEK, University of Lodz, Poland Neglected Motives behind Migration Processes

Practices in Biographical Research in the Context of Globalization

Session Organizers: Rixta WUNDRAK, Georg-August-University of Goettingen, Germany and Maria POHN-LAUGGAS, University of Vienna, Department of Sociology, Austria Co-chairs: Rixta WUNDRAK, University of Goettingen, Germany and Maria POHN-LAUGGAS, University of Vienna, Department of Sociology, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 443.1 Ina ALBER, University of Goettingen, Germany Your History and My History - Doing Biographical Research within the Framework of German-Polish Relations 443.2 Silke LAUX, University of Hannover, Germany Biographical Self-Presentations of International Students ‘being on the Move’ 443.3 Gwendolyn GILLIERON, phd Candidate, Switzerland Plural Affiliations in Biographies: A Complex Positioning in Different Social Contexts. 443.4 Sabrina LUIMPOCK, University of Vienna / Dep. Sociology// University of Applied Scienes Burgenland, Austria Refugees Doing Biography. Intercultural and Multilingual Interview Settings Enriching Data

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Biography and Society

Program Coordinator: Roswitha BRECKNER, University of Vienna, Austria and Lena INOWLOCKI, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Germany

In-Mobilities: Migration and Social Mobility in the Age of Globalization. Part II

RC38

16:00-17:30

RC38

JS-4

No. 443

Biography and Society

RC38

No. 444

Program–Session Details

10:45-12:15 444

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

On the Uses of the Reconstructive Analysis of Autobiographical and Work Narratives for Professional Discourse and Self-Reflection

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Lena INOWLOCKI, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Germany and Gerhard RIEMANN, Technische Hochschule Nuremberg Georg Simon Ohm, Germany Chair: Gerhard RIEMANN, Technische Hochschule Nuremberg Georg Simon Ohm, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 444.1 Miriam SCHAEFER, Georg-August-University Goettingen, Germany Biographical and Work Narratives of German Police Officers. Implications for an Empirical Study of the Institution with Statexs Monopoly on the Use of Force. 444.2 Mamoru TSUKADA, Sugiyama Jogakuen University, Japan A Japanese Nurse’s Self-Awareness of Caring: An Analysis of Biographical Understanding of Caring Experiences 444.3 Dana PAJKOVIC, University of Applied Sciences St. Poelten, Austria Interprofessional Research Between Social Work, Biographical Analysis and Psychoanalysis with Young Women Who Experienced Violence in Their Childhood and Adolescence 444.4 Maria KONTOS, Institute of Social Research, Frankfurt Main, Germany The Impact of Professionalization Processes of Migrant Trade Union Members on Their Positioning Towards AntiImmigrant Public Discourses 444.5 Tazuko KOBAYASHI, Hitotsubashi University, Japan Voices and Self-Reflective Discourse of Facilitators Involved in Japan’s Autobiographical Writing Movement 444.6 Georgios TSIOLIS, University of Crete, Greece The Drug Addiction Treatment As Biographical Work: The Narrative Construction of a Reconstructed Self. 444.7 Johannes KLOHA, Universität Bamberg, Germany “Coming to Terms” with One’s Own Professional Practice – the Possible Role of Narrative Interviews for Self-Reflection and Self-Assurance of School Social Workers

14:15-15:45 445

Biographies of Outsiders and Outsider Groupings

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Gabriele ROSENTHAL, Georg-August University of Göttingen, Germany and Arne WORM, University of Goettingen, Center of Methods in Social Sciences, Germany Chair: Marita HAAS, Vienna Technical University, Austria

234

RC38 Tuesday 12 July

445.1 Anna RANSIEK, University of Goettingen, Institute of Sport Sciences, Germany Patterns of Presenting and Experiencing Racism in Germany 445.2 Hermilio SANTOS, Universidade Catolica Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Outsiders inside the Favela: The Double Process of Being Outsider 445.3 Hendrik HINRICHSEN, Georg-August University of Göttingen, Germany and Ahmed ALBABA, Georg-AugustUniversity Goettingen, Germany Fragmentation in Palestinian Society in the West Bank Different Figurations of Palestinian Refugees Inside and Outside the Camps 445.4 Martina SCHIEBEL, Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Germany “the Respected and the Outlaws in Social and Political Change” 445.5 Ina SCHAUM, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany From Outsider to Insider through „Discourse Splitting“ DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 445.6 Lena KAHLE, Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany Alteration and Non-Belonging As Forms of Agency in Societies of Conflict

16:00-17:30 446

Children and Juveniles in an Outsider Position

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Gabriele ROSENTHAL, Georg-August University of Göttingen, Germany and Arne WORM, University of Goettingen, Center of Methods in Social Sciences, Germany Chair: Martina SCHIEBEL, Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 446.1 Aya EZAWA, Leiden University, Netherlands The Enemy within: Japanese Children Born of War and Discourses on WWII 446.2 Eva BAHL, Center of Methods in Social Sciences, University of Goettingen, Germany Outsiders in the Moroccan-Spanish Border Zone: Life Stories of Juveniles in Ceuta and Melilla 446.3 Yvonne NIEKRENZ, University of Rostock, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany and Matthias WITTE, University of Mainz, Germany The ‘GDR Children of Namibia’. Outsiders with a Problematic Sense of Belonging 446.4 Phil C. LANGER, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universitat Frankfurt, Germany Voices of Hope from the Shadows of War: Accounts of Peace in the Life-Stories of Young People in Afghanistan 446.5 Agnieszka GOLCZYNSKA-GRONDAS, Dept. of Applied Sociology and Social Work, Institute of Sociology, University of Lodz, Poland Outsiders or Insiders in “the Own Society”? – the Experience of Adults Raised in Residential Care Institutions

www.isa-sociology.org

RC38 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 447

Embodied Biographies, Virtual Bodies

Session Organizers: Susan BELL, Drexel University, USA and Kathy DAVIS, VU University, Netherlands Chair: Susan BELL, Drexel University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 447.1 Julia DIEZ, Social and Cardiovascular Epidemiology Research Group. Universidad de Alcala, Madrid, Spain, Spain; Paloma CONDE ESPEJO, Social and Cardiovascular Epidemiology Research Group. Universidad de Alcala, Madrid, Spain; Maria URTASUN, Social and Cardiovascular Epidemiology Research Group. Universidad de Alcala, Madrid, Spain; Marta SASTRE, Villaverde Health Promotion Centre, Madrid City Council, Spain, Spain; Luisa RUIZ, Villaverde Health Promotion Centre, Madrid City Council, Spain, Spain; Maria SANDIN, Social and Cardiovascular Epidemiology Research Group. Universidad de Alcala, Madrid, Spain and Manuel FRANCO, Social and Cardiovascular Epidemiology Research Group. Universidad de Alcala, Madrid, Spain A Food Environment Photovoice Project in Madrid: A Tool to Gain Empowerment and Reconstruct Neighborhood Biographies 447.2 Darja KLINGENBERG, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany Consuming Europeannes, Eating Deliciously and Digesting the Soviet. Changing Tastes and Food Practices Among Russian Speaking Middle Class Migrants in Germany 447.3 Lukasz POSLUSZNY, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland Biography of Thing and Thing in a Biography 447.4 Efrat BEN ZEEV, Ruppin Academic Center, Israel; Habtom MEHARI, Hebrew University of Jerusalm, Israel and Nir GAZIT, Ruppin Academic Center, Israel Borders and Bodies: Eritrean Asylum Seekers’ Biographical Narratives of Their Journey of Escape

10:45-12:15 448

New Directions in Biographical Research

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Kathy DAVIS, VU University, Netherlands Chair: Lena INOWLOCKI, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Germany Panelists: Phil C. LANGER, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, Germany; Irini SIOUTI, University of Vienna, Austria; Kathy DAVIS, VU University, Netherlands; Roswitha BRECKNER, University of Vienna, Austria and Elisabeth TUIDER, University of Kassel, Germany

449.2 Dominique HEYBERGER, Georg-August-Universitat Gottingen, Germany Live Stories Between Self-Sacrifice, Dependency, Overprotection and Neglect

Biography and Society

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

449.1 Anja PANNEWITZ, HTWK Leipzig - University of Applied Sciences, Germany Material Spatiality As Condition of Female Violence. Qualitative Analysis Regarding Biographies of Young Female Offenders

449.3 Hermilio SANTOS, PUCRS, Brazil Women As Violent? Women’s Biographic Experiences of Violence 449.4 Johanna SIGL, Georg-August-University of Goettingen, Germany The Importance of Violence for Former Female Right-Wing Extremists 449.5 Nicole WITTE, University of Goettingen - Center of Methods in Social Sciences, Germany Palestinian Women in Haifa – Resistance As Biographical Work DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 449.6 Katharina BRIZIC, University of Freiburg, Germany What I Am Not. Violence, Displacement, and Liberation from ‘origin’ in the Kurdish-Turkish Conflict.

16:00-17:30 450

RC38 Business Meeting

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

JS-59 Migrant Women’s Biographies within

the Economic Crisis: Transnationalism As a Coping Strategy Reconsidered

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC38 Biography and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-59.

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30 451

Making Individual Memory Visible in the Public Space

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Julia VAJDA, ELTE University Budapest, Hungary and Julia SZEKELY, Central European University Budapest, Hungary Chair: Julia VAJDA, ELTE University Budapest, Hungary

14:15-15:45

Co-Chair: Julia SZEKELY, Central European University Budapest, Hungary

449

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Women and Violent Action

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Hermilio SANTOS, Universidade Catolica Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil and Michaela KOETTIG, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Germany Chair: Michaela KOETTIG, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Germany

451.1 Monika PALMBERGER, Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Vienna, Austria and Eva SCHWAB, Department of Landscape, Spatial and Infrastructure Sciences, Institute of Landscape Architecture, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria Shaping Perceptions, Meaning and Use of Holocaust Memorial Spaces: Two Case Studies from Vienna 451.2 Johannes BECKER, University of Göttingen, Germany Outsiders’ Silence about Their Past in the City

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RC38

Wednesday 13 July

No. 451

235

Biography and Society

RC38

No. 452

Program–Session Details

451.3 Eren YETKIN, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany Remembrance on the Doorsteps of the Appropriated Armenian Property in Van

452.3 Monica MASSARI, University of Naples Federico II, Italy Transnational Biographies Across the Desert and the Sea: Migrants’ Memories of Mediterranean Crossings 452.4 Polina SAZONOVA, Tomsk State University, Russia The Migration History of the Family As a Source of the Formation of Siberian Identity

451.4 Katinka MEYER, Center of Methods in Social Sciences University of Göttingen, Germany Silencing of Memories – Interactions Between Memory, Discourse and Social Changes

452.5 Maren SCHORCH, University of Siegen, Germany Narrative Consolidation of Transnational Biographies in Qualitative Interviews.

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 451.5 Julia BENNETT, Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom ‘I Can Feel It, That’s Where I Belong’: Using Nostalgia and Authenticity in Telling Stories of Belonging in Place

14:15-15:45 453

10:45-12:15 452

RC38 Thursday 14 July

Social and Political Participation of Refugees: Transnational and Biographical Perspectives

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building)

Transnational Migrations and Biographical Narratives

Session Organizers: Michaela KOETTIG, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Germany and Irini SIOUTI, University of Vienna, Austria

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Ursula APITZSCH, University of Frankfurt am Main, Germany

Co-chairs: Michaela KOETTIG, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Germany and Irini SIOUTI, University of Vienna, Austria

Chair: Ursula APITZSCH, Goethe University, Germany

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

453.1 Claudia TAZREITER, University of New South Wales, Australia Invisible, Anonymous, Yet Politically Present. the Life-World of an Afghan Asylum Seeker in-Between Presence and Oblivion in the Asia-Pacific

452.1 Arne WORM, Center of Methods in Social Sciences, University of Goettingen, Germany Constructions of Belonging As Stigma and/or Capital in Transnational Spaces - Biographies and Courses of Migration of Syrian Refugees in the Spanish-Moroccan Border Region. 452.2 Faime ALPAGU, University of Vienna, Austria Migration Narratives Juxtaposed: A Sociological Analysis of Photos, Letters and Biographies of “Guest Workers” from Turkey Living in Austria

453.2 Zeynep TEKIN BABUC, 15891, Turkey Crises and Changes in Marital and Familial Life of Syrian Refugee Families: A Case Study in Mersin

NOTES

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RC39 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

455.1 Merja RAPELI, Ministry of Social Affairs and Health, Finland Social Capital in Social Work Disaster Preparedness Plans: The Case of Finland

Sociology of Disasters

Monday 11 July

455.2 Adam CHORYNSKI, Institute for Agricultural and Forest Environment, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland; Dariusz GRACZYK, Institute for Agricultural and Forest Environment, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland and Iwona PINSKWAR, Institute for Agricultural and Forest Environment, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Forgotten Fever. How Municipalities (do not) Adapt to Heat Waves. 455.3 Lisa ZOTTARELLI, San Antonio College, USA and Thankam SUNIL, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA Global Climate Change Risk and Millennium Development Goals Achievement: A Cross-National Comparative Study

09:00-10:30 Local Social Services in Times of Disasters and Crisis

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Carin BJORNGREN-CUADRA, University of Lund Sweden, Sweden and Gudny EYDAL, University of Iceland, Iceland AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

455.4 Shih-Kai HUANG, Jacksonville State University, USA; Hao-Che WU, Okahoma State University, USA; Michael LINDELL, University of Washington, USA and Charles D. SAMUELSON, Texas A&M University, USA Individuals’ Responses to Tornado Warning Polygons

14:15-15:45

454.1 Valerie INGHAM, Charles Sturt University, Australia and Sarah REDSHAW, Charles Sturt University, Australia Will the Twain Ever Meet? the Experience of the Emergency Services and the Local Community Services through the Blue Mountains Fires of October 2013

456

454.2 Shun HARADA, Rikkyo University, Japan and Makoto NISHIKIDO, Hosei University, Japan Local Social Services to Support Wide-Area Evacuees Following the Great East Japan Earthquake and Fukushima Nuclear Disaster

Session Organizer: Sudha ARLIKATTI, Rabdan Academy, United Arab Emirates

454.3 Daniel F. LORENZ, Disaster Research Unit (DRU), Freie Universität Berlin, Germany; Cordula DITTMER, Disaster Research Unit (DRU), Freie Universität Berlin, Germany; Jessica REITER, Disaster Research Unit (DRU), Freie Universität Berlin, Germany and Katja SCHULZE, Disaster Research Unit (DRU), Freie Universität Berlin, Germany Local Services, Vulnerabilities and Responses in the EU Migrant Crisis in Germany 454.4 Helge RENA, Department of Administration and Organization theory, University of Bergen, Norway Organizing First Responders’ Crisis Response: Facilitating or Limitating? 454.5 Erna DANIELSSON, Mid Sweden University, Sweden Unrecognised Crisis Management – Normalizing Everyday Life DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 454.6 Gudny EYDAL, Iceland University, Iceland; Carin BJORNGREN CUADRA, Malmö University, Sweden; Rasmus DAHLBERG, DEMA and the University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Bjorn HVINDEN, NOVA, Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway; Ingibjorg Lilja OMARSDOTTIR, University of Iceland, Iceland; Merja RAPELI, Ministry of Social Affairs and Health, Finland and Tapio SALONEN, Malmö University, Sweden Social Services in Five Nordic Countries in Times of Disaster

10:45-12:15 455

Climate Change, Preparedness, Reponse, and Mitgation

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Disasters and Health: Response, Recovery and Vulnerability in the Global North and South

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 456.1 Francisca DUSSAILLANT, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile and Mauricio APABLAZA, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile A Simple Algorithm to Predict Post Traumatic Stress (PTS) Symptom Prevalence and Local Distribution 456.2 Tamas HAJDU, Institute of Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, CERS, Hungary and Gabor HAJDU, Institute for Sociology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary The Effect of Temperature Shocks on Health at Birth 456.3 Mitsuru MATSUTANI, Chukyo University, Japan; Yusuke SAKAGUCHI, St. Andrew’s University, Japan; Kayo USHIJIMA, Aichi Prefectural University, Japan and Woncheol SUNG, Chukyo University, Japan Social Determinants of Health Anxiety after the Fukushima Nuclear Accident: Child and Maternal Health Study. 456.4 Sudha ARLIKATTI, Rabdan Academy, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates; Simon ANDREW, University of North Texas, USA and Orkhan ISMAILOV, University of North Texas, USA Infectious Disease (EBOLA) Management: A Challenge for Public Administration in USA 456.5 Elisabeth MAYRHUBER, Centre for Public Health, Medical University of Vienna, Austria; Ruth KUTALEK, Centre for Public Health, Medical University of Vienna, Austria; Brigitte ALLEX, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna, Austria; Hans-Peter HUTTER, Centre for Public Health, Medical University of Vienna, Austria; Peter WALLNER, Centre for Public Health, Medical University of Vienna, Austria; Renate EDER, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna, Austria and Arne ARNBERGER, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna, Austria Heat Vulnerabilities in Urban Migrant Communities: A Mixed-Methods Study from Vienna

Session Organizer: Sudha ARLIKATTI, Rabdan Academy, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

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Sociology of Disasters

Program Coordinator: Andrea LAMPIS, National University of Colombia, Colombia and Michele COMPANION, University of Colorado, USA

RC39

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC39

454

No. 456

Sociology of Disasters

RC39

No. 457

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30

14:15-15:45

457

459

Compensation and Culpability: Regulatory and Legal Challenges of Disasters

RC39 Tuesday 12 July

Gender and Disasters: The Importance of Incorporating Feminist and Masculinities Lenses

Location: Hörsaal 5A G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Susan Marie STERETT, Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech, USA

Session Organizer: DeMond MILLER, Rowan University, USA

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 457.1 Masayuki MURAYAMA, Meiji University, Japan Looking Back the Nuclear Compensation Process in the Tepco Nuclear Power Plant Accident (Tentative) 457.2 Lee MILLER, Sam Houston State University, USA Systemic Risk: Increased Technological Hazards and Current Regulatory Frameworks in the U.S. 457.3 Takayuki II, Senshu University, Japan Change of Japanese Lawyers after the East Japan Great Earthquake and Tsunami of 2011 457.4 Heloise PILLAYRE, EHESS, France The Compensation of Asbestos-Related Illnesses in France

459.1 Jayashree PARIDA, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, India and Niharranjan MISHRA, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, India The Gendered Nature of Vulnerability: Evidence from Natural Disasters in India 459.2 Steven FOLMAR, Wake Forest University, USA Social Tremors: Gendered Psychological Impacts of the 2015 Earthquake in Nepal 459.3 Daniela KRUGER, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany and Martin VOSS, Freie Universität Berlin, Disaster Research Unit, Germany Bodies of Vulnerabilities: Using the Intersectionality Lens in Disaster Research 459.4 Mieko YOSHIHAMA, University of Michigan, USA Vulnerability to Gender-Based Violence: Socio-CulturalPolitical (DE)Construction through Feminist Lenses

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 458

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Lessons Learned: Success, Failures, and Government Accountability in Disaster Mitigation and Response

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Andrea LAMPIS, National University of Colombia, Colombia Co-Chair: Michele COMPANION, University of Colorado, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 458.1 Jose MENDES, Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, Portugal Extreme Events, Catastrophes and the Racialisation of the Exploited: The Real Nature of the State 458.2 Victor MARCHEZINI, CEMADEN - Brazilian Early Warning and Monitoring Center for Natural Disasters, Brazil and Rachel TRAJBER, CEMADEN - Brazilian Early Warning and Monitoring Center for Natural Disasters, Brazil People-Centered Early Warning System: Barriers, Bridges and Windows of Opportunity 458.3 Takashi TSUJI, Nagoya University, Japan Citizen Participation in the Disaster Reconstruction Process: Lessons from the Great East Japan Earthquake 458.4 Valerie ARNHOLD, Centre de Sociologie des Organisations (Sciences Po Paris/CNRS), France Learning from Experience? the Role of the “Lessons” of the Fukushima Accident for Nuclear Safety Regulation 458.5 Marlon ERA, De La Salle University-Manila, Philippines Vertical and Horizontal Accountability Among Stakeholders in Disaster Mitigation and Response in the Philippines

459.5 DeMond MILLER, Rowan University, USA Eco-Masculinity and the Aftermath of Catastrophic Events: Masculinity and the Role of Livelihood Security

16:00-17:30 460

RC39 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building)

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 461

Indigenous, Rural and Traditional Forms of Knowledge: Incorporating Cultural Difference into Discussions of Climate Change, Adaptation, Mitigation, and Cultural Diversity

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Shirley LASKA, University of New Orleans Center for Hazards Assessment, Response & Technology, USA Co-Chair: Kristina PETERSON, Lowlander Center, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 461.1 Shinya UEKUSA, University of Auckland, New Zealand Social Vulnerability in Disasters: Migrants Experiences in Canterbury and Tohoku 461.2 Thorsten HEIMANN, Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Germany Knowledge, Social Space and Climate Change: Cultural Differences in Handling Flood Risks in European Coastal Areas 461.3 Irena CONNON, University of Dundee, United Kingdom Contested Spaces, Diverse Places: Socio-Cultural Diversity and Weather-Related Hazard Mitigation Policy in Contemporary Rural Scotland

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RC39 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

Words Matter: The Impact of Different Stakeholder Understandings of Disaster Concepts on Policy Creation, Enactment, and Local Communities

RC39

Thursday 14 July

10:45-12:15 462

No. 466

09:00-10:30 464

Rural and Community Ties

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Session Organizer: Alonso BRENES TORRES, Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences - General Secretariat, Costa Rica

Session Organizer: Morio ONDA, Ryutsu Keizai University, Japan

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 462.1 Cansu CIVELEK, PhD Candidate, University of Vienna, Social Anthropology, Austria Playing with Catastrophe: Law, Urban Regenerations and Contestations in Turkey 462.2 Barbara LUCINI, Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Italy Italian Lesson Learned and How Words Can Save Us: A Resilient Communication Model for Future Disaster Planning 462.3 Panchi PATHAK, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India Women and Vulnerability during Disasters: From Policy Perspective

14:15-15:45 463

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 464.1 Morio ONDA, Ryutsu Keizai University, Japan Rebuilding Communities Following the Great East Japan Disaster: Restoration of Ties Among the Victims 464.2 Peter LOEBACH, Weber State University, USA Livelihoods, Precarious Work and Disaster Vulnerability: Nicaragua and Hurricane Mitch 464.3 Eric HSU, University of South Australia, Australia On the Temporal Definition of Disasters: The Need for Complexity and Balance 464.4 Lena BLEDAU, Freie Universität Berlin, Disaster Research Unit (DRU), Germany and Oskar MARG, Freie Universität Berlin, Disaster Research Unit (DRU), Germany Cultures and Catastrophes - a Theoretical Framework to Evaluate the Social Context of Catastrophes

10:45-12:15

Political Economy of Disasters

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

465

Session Organizer: Lee MILLER, Sam Houston State University, USA

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizer: Ziqiang HAN, Sichuan University, China

463.1 Danielle VESIA, University of California, Irvine, USA The Political Economy of Natural Disasters: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis of Disaster Capitalism 463.2 April PORTERIA, University of the Philippines-Diliman, Philippines Making Money out of People’s Misery: Has Disaster Capitalism Taken over Post-Haiyan Philippines? 463.3 Kiril SHARAPOV, University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom Environmental Disasters and Vulnerability to Human Trafficking and Exploitation: Initial Findings of a Pilot Research Study in Mongolia 463.4 Robert J.S. ROSS, Clark University, USA Killing - Converging Narratives of Disaster at Rana Plaza: The Race to the Bottom in the Rag Trade and Corruption and Incompetence in Government. 463.5 Steve MATTHEWMAN, University of Auckland, New Zealand Political Economy and Everyday Disaster

The Impact of Disasters on Cultural and Livelihood Survival and Material Goods

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 465.1 Michele COMPANION, University of Colorado-Colorado Springs, USA The Production of Material Goods As Resilience Adaptation By Impelled Migrants in Malawi 465.2 FuHsing LEE, Kyoto University, Japan Local Residents Empowerment in Post 3.11 Community Reconstruction-Creating Disaster Game”Crossroad:Oarai” 465.3 Andrea ROCA, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil Disaster, Violence and State of Exception: Memories of Lootings in the Aftermath of the 2010 Chilean Earthquake 465.4 Jing-Chein LU, Central Police University, Taiwan and Chuan-Chung DENG, National Science and Technology Center for Disaster Reduction, Taiwan, Taiwan Patterns of Relocation and Livelihood Change of Aboriginal and Han Chinese Communities after Typhoon Morakot in Taiwan 465.5 Ziqiang HAN, Sichuan University, China Sustainable Livelihood Recovery after the 2008 Wenchuan Earthquake in China

14:15-15:45 466

Urban Vulnerabilities and Resilience

Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Andrea LAMPIS, National University of Colombia, Colombia

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Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Sociology of Disasters

RC39

No. 466

Program–Session Details

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC39 Thursday 14 July

466.4 Teresa DA-SILVA-ROSA, Vila Velha University, Brazil; Acacio Augusto SEBASTIAO JR, Vila Velha University, Brazil; Tulio Gava MONTEIRO, Vila Velha University, Brazil; Caterine REGINENSI, Ecole Nationale d Architecture de Toulouse/ENSAT/ LRA, France; Michelly DE ANGELO, Vila Velha University, Brazil; Maria Araguacy SIMPLICIO, Vila Velha University, Brazil; Mirian COSTA, Vila Velha University, Brazil; Marcelo SATHLER, Vila Velha University, Brazil; Ana Paula LYRA, Vila Velha University, Brazil and Marcos MENDONCA, Rio de Janeiro Federal University, Brazil Socio-Environmental Vulnerability, Resilience and Disasters in Modern Urban Contexts: The Case of Vila Velha (ES, Brazil)

466.1 Ming-chi CHEN, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan The Elephant in the Room: Living and Dying with Hazardous Chemicals in Urban Settings in the Disasters of 2014 Kaohsiung Gas Explosions and 2015 Tianjin Chemical Explosions 466.2 Pinar SARACOGLU, Middle East Technical University, Turkey Reframing the Inner Dynamics of Urban Rent and Disaster Risk 466.3 Steve MATTHEWMAN, University of Auckland, New Zealand Electricity and Urban Vulnerability: A Sociology of Power

466.5 Mauricio DOMINGUEZ, Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan, Mexico Analyzing the Theoretical and Practical Implications of Resilience Transferences Among Social Groups in Merida City, Mexico

NOTES

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RC40 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

Sociology of Agriculture and Food

14:15-15:45

Monday 11 July

469

Social Innovation in Agriculture and Food: Old Wine in New Bottles? Part III: Transformative Social Innovation?

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizer: Pierre-Benoit JOLY, INRA, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30

469.1 Cordula KROPP, Hochschule Munchen, Germany Afns As Transformative Social Innovation

Social Innovation in Agriculture and Food: Old Wine in New Bottles?. Part I: Values in Social Innovations

Language: French, English Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizers: Allison LOCONTO, INRA, France; Yuna CHIFFOLEAU, INRA, France and Pierre-Benoit JOLY, INRA, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 467.1 Tania SILVA, Universidade Federal de Sergipe, Brazil; Wilson ENGELMANN, Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos, Brazil and Raquel VON HOHENDORF, Unisinos, Brazil New Technologies and Citizenship: A Discussion of Nanotechnologies Applied to Food and the Regulation of Its Risks 467.2 Tatiana CASTELLOTTI, CREA, Italy and Giuseppe GAUDIO, CREA, Italy Civic Agriculture in Calabria: What Next ? 467.3 Pei-Hui TSAI, Shih Hsin University, Taiwan and Yu-Hua CHEN, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Transforming Our Agri-Food System: The Case Study of Homemakers Union Consumer Co-Op, Taiwan

10:45-12:15 Social Innovation in Agriculture and Food: Old Wine in New Bottles? Part II: Framing Institutions

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizer: Yuna CHIFFOLEAU, INRA, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 468.1 Nora MCKEON, Rome 3 University, Italy The Committee on World Food Security As a Locus of Social Innovation? Framing the Concept of “Connecting Smallholders to Markets”. 468.2 Yi-ting CHUNG, National Cheng-Kung University, Taiwan and Hua TAI, National Cheng-Kung University, Taiwan Transition to Sustainable Agri-Food System through CSA Initiatives: The Social Innovation Attempts of the University and Local Communities 468.3 Sabrina ARCURI, University of Pisa, Italy; Francesca GALLI, University of Pisa, Italy; Stefano GRANDO, University of Pisa, Italy; Fabio BARTOLINI, University of Pisa, Italy and Gianluca BRUNORI, University of Pisa, Italy Innovating food assistance practices towards food and nutrition security

469.2 Yuna CHIFFOLEAU, INRA, France and Allison LOCONTO, INRA, France Labelling Social Innovations: A Solidarity Label in France and a Participatory Guarantee Scheme in Namibia 469.3 Valentin FIALA, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria; Bernhard FREYER, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria and Jim BINGEN, Michigan State University, USA Social Innovation - the Core of the Conversion to Organic 469.4 Renato MARIN, University of Barcelona, Spain Are Hipster Tomatoes Socially Innovative? Forms of Urban Agriculture and Its Potential of Social Innovation

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 470

Contested Sustainability Discourses: From Food Sovereignty to Sustainable Intensification. Part I

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizers: Douglas CONSTANCE, Sam Houston State University, USA; Jason KONEFAL, Sam Houston State University, USA and Maki HATANAKA, Sam Houston State University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 470.1 Maki HATANAKA, Sam Houston State University, USA Consumers on the Farm: Participatory Governance and Sustainability Transitions 470.2 Marvin Joseph MONTEFRIO, Yale-NUS College, Singapore (Re)Defining Sustainable Food Discourses in Philippine Cosmopolitan Spaces 470.3 Jonathan BEACHAM, Lancaster University, United Kingdom Back to the Land Ethic? Sustainable Food Futures in the Age of Austerity: Perspectives from a British Case Study 470.4 Jenny COCKBURN, Carleton University, Canada Realizing Food Sovereignty in Bolivia: Collaborations and Contradictions 470.5 Sungwoong JUNG, Graduate School of Economics, Kyoto University, Japan; Shuji HISANO, Graduate School of Economics, Kyoto University, Japan and Joost JONGERDEN, Kyoto University, Japan Emergence of Agrarian Prosumer (AP)

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Program Coordinator: Allison LOCONTO, INRA, France and Maki HATANAKA, Sam Houston State University, USA

468

RC40

468.4 Balint BALAZS, Environmental Social Science Research Group, Hungary Challenging Notions of Food Sovereignty – The Case of Hungarian Agri-Food System

RC40

467

No. 470

RC40

No. 471

Program–Session Details

Wednesday 13 July

10:45-12:15 471

Contested Sustainability Discourses: From Food Sovereignty to Sustainable Intensification. Part II

Sociology of Agriculture and Food

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizers: Douglas CONSTANCE, Sam Houston State University, USA and Jason KONEFAL, Sam Houston State University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 471.1 Les LEVIDOW, Senior Research Fellow, United Kingdom Sustainable Intensification: Agroecological Appropriation Versus Contestation? 471.2 Douglas CONSTANCE, Sam Houston State University, USA; Jason KONEFAL, Sam Houston State University, USA and Kaitlin GRANT, Sam Houston State University, USA Unpacking Sustainable Intensification: Discourses from Agribusiness 471.3 Livia BOSCARDIN, University of Basel, Switzerland Greenwashing the Animal-Industrial Complex: Sustainable Intensification and Happy Meat 471.4 Jason KONEFAL, Sam Houston State University, USA and Maki HATANAKA, Sam Houston State University, USA A Network Analysis of Sustainability Governance: A Case Study of United States Agriculture 471.5 Mariana GAMEIRO, Universidade Federal de Sao Carlos, Brazil The Social Construction of the Image of Ethanol As a Sustainable Fuel: Conflicting Discourses

14:15-15:45

09:00-10:30 473

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work (Host); RC40 Sociology of Agriculture and Food See Joint Session Details for JS-42.

Food Security, Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainable Agriculture. Part I

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizer: Emmanuel DAS, Sam Higginbottom Institute of Agriculture, Technology and Services, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 473.1 Subir Kumar BARDHAN ROY, CENTRE FOR STRATEGIC STUDIES, India Rice Production Sustainability and Livelihood Improvement in Rice Farmers of Fragile Environment in West Bengal, India. 473.2 Mukesh RANGA, Institute of Business Management, CSJM University,Kanpur, India Sealing Knowledge Gap for Sustainable Agriculture Practice 473.3 Emmanuel DAS, Sam Higginbottom Institute of Agriculture,Technology and Sciences, India Adoption of Improved Wheat Production Practices in District Agra of Uttar Pradesh,India 473.4 Megumi NAKAGAWA, Yamagata Prefectural Yonezawa Women’s Jounior Collage, Japan Thinking about Alternative and Local Food Networks in Japan: Exemplification of Organic Food Groups Facing the Fukushima Nuclear Accident

10:45-12:15 474

JS-42 Farm Work Issues within Globalization.

Food Security, Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainable Agriculture. Part II

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizer: Emmanuel DAS, Sam Higginbottom Institute of Agriculture,Technology and Sciences, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

16:00-17:30 472

RC40 Wednesday 13 July

Globalized Agrarian Economy and Women Labour: Analysing Situations in Asia

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizers: Bishnu Charan BARIK, SRTM University,Nanded-431 606,Mahareathra,INDIA, India and Subir Kumar BARDHAN ROY, Centre for Strategic Studies, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 472.1 Dilip KHAIRNAR, Deogiri College,Aurangabad(M.S.), India and Arun CHAVAN, Vidyabharti College, Amravati, India “Identity Crisis in Rural Peasant: A Study of Villages Around Aurangabad City” 472.2 Arpita SABATH, UTKAL UNIVERSITY, BHUBANESWAR ,ODISHA,INDIA, India Nuakhai the Replica of FOOD Culture of Western Orissa Tribal People a Case Study 472.3 Smita VERMA, Isabella Thoburn College, India Gender , Agriculture and Sustainable Development in India : Women’s Marginalization or Empowerment 472.4 Maitreyee BARDHAN ROY, Basanti Devi College, India Women in Modern Agricultural Families –Its Politico – Economic and Social Impact

474.1 Marvin Joseph MONTEFRIO, Yale-NUS College, Singapore Food Insecurity and the Green Economy Project in Ancestral Domains in the Philippines 474.2 Sherry MARASIGAN, University of the Philippines Los Banos, Philippines and Joane SERRANO, UP Open University, Philippines Negotiating the Role of Heirloom Rice in Food Security: Narratives of the Contested Views of the Ifugaos in the Philippines 474.3 Luis LLANOS HERNANDEZ, Autonomous University of Chapingo, Mexico Food Security and Environmental Risk Indigenous Community of Zinacantan 474.4 Srinivas SAJJA, Birla Institute of Technology & Science Pilani, Hyderabad Campus, India From Agrarian Distress to Sustainable Agriculture through Indigenous Knowledge: Case Studies from Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, India.

16:00-17:30 475

Cultural Approaches to Food and Agriculture

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizer: Marie-Christine RENARD, Universidad de Chapingo, Mexico

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RC40 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

475.1 Min-shen YE, Wuhan University, China and Changcheng ZHOU, Wuhan University, China Peasants’ Demands of the Rural Public Cultural Service and Decision- Making Mechanism

476.1 Mercy OZOYA, Covenant University, Nigeria; Charles IRUONAGBE, Covenant University, Nigeria; Patrick EDEWOR, Covenant University, Nigeria and Idowu CHIAZOR, Covenant University, Nigeria We Want a Food Secure Future: Addressing Public Policy Failures for a Food Secure World 476.2 Bibhuti MALIK, Department of Sociology, Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India Poverty, Lean Period of Food Availability and Scarcity: A Case of Dalits of Eastern Uttar Pradesh, India

475.3 Elaine AZEVEDO, Universidade Federal do Espirito Santo/ Federal University of Espirito Santo, Brazil Heathy Food: To Whom?

476.3 Sayamol CHAROENRATANA, CUSRI, Thailand Transforming Rural and Indigenous Farming Communities in Thailand: Household Food Security and Globalization in the Twenty-First Century

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30 476

476.4 Deepa KOZHISSERI, Indian Institute of Technology, India Conservation Project Triggers Food Security Crisis: Attappady Hills, South India

Food Security, Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainable Agriculture. Part III

476.5 Mercedes BIOCCA, IDAES, Universidad Nacional de San Martín, Argentina The Silences of Agrarian Change in Two Indigenous Communities in Chaco Province, Argentina

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building) Session Organizers: Valentin FIALA, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria; Bernhard FREYER, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria and Milena KLIMEK, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria

10:45-12:15 477

RC40 Business Meeting

Location: Prominentenzimmer (Main Building)

NOTES

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475.2 Sergey KRAVCHENKO, Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO-University), Russia Globalization: From Food to Non-Food

RC40

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

No. 477

Sociology of Population

RC41

No. 478

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30

RC41

481

Sociology of Population Program Coordinator: Jonathan ANSON, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

Monday 11 July

The Socio-Demographic World System

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Ofra ANSON, Ben Gurion University, Israel AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 478.1 Dmitry ZAKOTYANSKY, LCSR, National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE), Russia Fertility in Societies That Have Passed Demographic Transition: Values As Indicator and Factor of Fertility 478.2 Shuichirou IKE, Teikyo University, Japan Fertility Decline and Background Independence 478.3 Mohammad Reza ALIPOUR, University of Minho, Portugal Iran and Challenges of Aging Population - Complicated Problem of Childbearing and Population Golden Opportunity Window 478.4 Sawako SHIRAHASE, the University of Tokyo, Japan Income Inequality Among Families with Children in the Society with Low Fertility Rates: Focusing on Japan with a Cross-National Perspective 478.5 Rogelio SAENZ, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA The Demography of Race and Inequality: An Illustration of Latinos in the United States

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Gloria Luz NELSON, University of the Philippines Los Baños, Philippines 481.1 Elena BASTIDA-GONZALEZ, Florida International University, USA; Claudia SERNA, Oral Residency Program University of Florida, USA; Ramandeep KAUR, Florida International University, USA; Alberto RAVELO, Florida International University, USA and Carlos BARRETO BECK, The University of Texas at Austin, USA Identifying Human Resources in an Immigrant Community: The Role of Natural Helpers in the Implementation of a Community Based Intervention 481.2 Mohammad ISLAM, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh; Sayema BIDISHA, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh and Israt JAHAN, South Asian Network on Economic Modeling (SANEM), Bangladesh Effects of Remittances on Health Expenditure and Types of Treatment of International Migrants’ Households in Bangladesh 481.3 Brahim EL HABIB DRAOUI, University of Alicante, Spain; Maria JIMENEZ DELGADO, University of Alicante, Spain and Raul RUIZ CALLADO, University of Alicante, Spain El Estudio De La Segregación Residencial y Escolar Frente a Las Limitaciones De Las Estadísticas Oficiales. El Caso De La Zona Norte De La Ciudad De Alicante (España). 481.4 Oliver WINKLER, Martin-Luther-University HalleWittenberg, Germany Occupational Classes of Immigrants in East-Germany

Tuesday 12 July 482

Population Problems in India: Challenges and Solutions

Current Challenges in Population Health

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Gurusamy SELLAMUTHU, Gandhigram University, India Discussants: Rajendra PATIL, Shivaji University, India; R. MARUTHAKUTTI, Dr, India; Sukant CHAUDHURY, Dr, India and Augustus Julian LAZMEY, Mr, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 479.1 Gurusamy SELLAMUTHU, Gandhigram University, India Round Table: Population Problems in India

Session Organizer: Elena BASTIDA-GONZALEZ, Florida International University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 482.1 Douglas MASSEY, Princeton University, USA; Brandon WAGNER, Princeton University, USA; Sara MCLANAHAN, Princeton University, USA; Daniel NOTTERMAN, Princeton University, USA; Louis DONNELLY, Princeton University, USA; Jeanne BROOKS-GUNN, Columbia University, USA; Irwin GARFINKLE, Columbia University, USA and Colter MITCHELL, University of Michigan, USA Neighborhood Disadvantage and Telomere Length: Results from the Fragile Families Study 482.2 Favour NTOIMO, Federal University Oye-Ekiti, Nigeria, Nigeria Family Structure and Men’s Health Behaviour in Nigeria

14:15-15:45 480

Language: English, Spanish

09:00-10:30

10:45-12:15 479

Demographic Trends and Consequences of Labor Migration

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 478

RC41 Monday 11 July

RC41 Business Meeting

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Chair: Jonathan ANSON, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

482.3 Iuliana PRECUPETU, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romania and Cosmina Elena POP, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romanian Academy, Romania Health Status and Health Selection Processes in IntraGenerational Mobility When Living in Precarious Prosperity 482.4 Guillermo GONZALEZ PEREZ, University of Guadalajara, Mexico and Maria Guadalupe VEGA LOPEZ, University of Guadalajara, Mexico Traffic Injuries, Life Expectancy and Road Policies in Mexico and Spain.

244

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RC41 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

Poster Session: Addressing Population Change through Sound Policy to Build a Better Future

484

Fertility of Ethnic Minorities

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Farhat YUSUF, University of Sydney, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Arcade Courtyard (Main Building) Session Organizer: Andrzej KULCZYCKI, University of Alabama, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 483.1 Usha PATIL, Mahavir Mahavidyalaya, India A Study of Retired Old People in Kolhapur City

484.1 Fernando URREA-GIRALDO, Social Sciences Department, Social Sciences and Economics Faculty, Universidad del Valle, Colombia The Demographic Transition in the Nasa Indigenous People and Black Populations of Northern Cauca (Colombia)

483.2 Bahubali PATIL, C.S.I.B.E.R, University Road, Kolhapur, India, India A Study of Home for Aged in Kolhapur,India

484.2 Andrzej KULCZYCKI, University of Alabama, USA and Peter LOBO, New York City Department of City Planning, USA Intermarriage and Assimilation Among Arabs in the United States: Estimates, Causes, and Trends, 1990-2010

483.3 Smriti BHOSLE, SNDT Women’s University, Mumbai., India India’s Aging Population: Policy Options and Programmes

484.3 Jo. M. MARTINS, Macquarie University, Australia Changes in Ethnic Composition and Fertility of the Australian Population

483.4 Yukiko SENDA, Tohoku-gakuin University, Japan The Sharp Decline of Ctfr and Its Cause in Japan

484.4 Rosa Maria CAMARENA-CORDOVA, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Reproductive Trajectories of Indigenous Mexican Women

483.5 Sofia MEDVEDEVA, Higher School of Economics Moscow, Russia From Cohabitation into Official Marriage: New Form of Partnerships in Russia

484.5 Farhat YUSUF, The University of Sydney, Australia Fertility of Ethnic Minorities in China

483.6 Pushplata SAKATE, Samtawadi Women’s Forum, Maharashtra, India, India and Pandurang SALUNKHE, K.B.P College, Islampur, Sangli, Maharashtra, India India’s National Policy on Senior Citizens: An Overview 483.7 Patria ROJAS, Florida International University, USA and Mario DE LA ROSA, Florida International University, USA Socio-cultural determinants of substance misuse among adult Latinas: a longitudinal study of a community-based sample 483.8 Shailaja DHRUVA, S.L.U. Arts and H. & P. Thakore Commerce College For Women, India A Sociological Study of Retired Government Employees in Ahmedabad 483.9 Jagan KARADE, Shivaji University, Kolhapur, India, India Ageing in Rural India: A Sociological Analysis 483.10 Toshihiko HARA, Sapporo City University, Japan Educational Attainments of Women and Lowest Low Fertility of Japan 483.11 K.B. CHANDRIKA, Number and Name of RC: 41 Sociology of Population, India and Shamalabai B. DASOG, Dept of Sociology,M.Ms Arts, Commerce, Science and HomeScience College, India Health Care System of Elderly in India : A Sociological Perspective 483.12 Maria Guadalupe VEGA LOPEZ, University of Guadalajara, Mexico and Guillermo GONZALEZ PEREZ, University of Guadalajara, Mexico Violence, Firearms and Life Expectancy in Mexico

16:00-17:30 485

L’institut National D’études Démographiques (Paris). Research and Survey

Language: French, English Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Loic TRABUT, Institut National d’Etudes Démographiques / National Institute of Population Studies, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 485.1 Christelle HAMEL, Ined, France; Magali MAZUY, Ined, France and Mathieu TRACHMAN, Ined, France Violence and Gender Relations: Contexts and Consequences of Violence Against Women and Men, Virage 485.2 Marie BERGSTRÖM, Ined, France; Wilfried RAULT, INED, France and Arnaud REGNIER-LOILIER, Ined, France “the French “Study of Individual and Conjugal Trajectories” Survey (2014)” 485.3 Sophie PENNEC, Ined, France The Survey on End-of-Life in France 485.4 Veronique HERTRICH, Ined, France Following Population Dynamics and Family Changes in Rural Africa. “Slam”, a Longitudinal Study in Mali. 485.5 Eva LELIEVRE, Ined, France Family Configurations and Territorial Imprint. Initial Findings of the Famille Et Logements Survey

483.13 Nathalie SAWADOGO, Institut Supérieur des Sciences de la Population (ISSP) - Université de Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso and Madeleine WAYACK PAMBE, Institut Supérieur des Sciences de la Population (ISSP) - Université de Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso Gestion De La Santé En Zone Urbaine Ouest-Africaine: Quelles Perceptions, Attitudes Et Réponses Dans Les Ménages Défavorisés De Ouagadougou ?

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Sociology of Population

10:45-12:15 483

483.14 Sibusiso MKWANANZI, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Teenage Pregnancy and Racial Heterogeneity in South Africa

RC41

482.5 John WILLIAMSON, Boston College, Department of Sociology, USA and Katherine WULLERT, Dept of Sociology, Stanford Univesity, USA Democracy, Anocracy, and Autocracy: An Analysis of the Link Between Regime Type and Population Health in Africa

No. 485

RC41

No. 486

RC41 Wednesday 13 July

Wednesday 13 July

Session Organizer: Walter BARTL, University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany

09:00-10:30

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

486 Sociology of Population

Program–Session Details

Max Planck Studies in Demography

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Vladimir SHKOLNIKOV, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 486.1 Kieron BARCLAY, London School of Economics, United Kingdom and Mikko MYRSKYLA, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany Fertility postponement could reduce child mortality: Evidence from 228 Demographic and Health Surveys covering 77 developing countries 486.2 Domantas JASILIONIS, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany and Vladimir SHKOLNIKOV, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany Education and longevity: a demographic perspective

488.1 Frank SWIACZNY, Federal Institute for Population Research, Germany Demographic Change and Regional Population Dynamics in Germany - the Impact of Internal Migration on Regional Population Decline 488.2 Svetlana SIVOPLYASOVA, Institute of Sociopolitical Researches RAS, Russia and Evgenia SIGAREVA, Institute of Siciopolitical Researches RAS, Russia Regional Diversity of Components of the Natural Movement of People and Migration in Russia 488.3 Marika GRUBER, Carinthia University of Applied Sciences, Austria Migration As a Chance for Rural Regions – an Austrian Example 488.4 Sigrid KROISMAYR, Club of Vienna, Austria School Closures in Rural Areas – Starting or End Point for Municipalities

486.3 Christian DUDEL, Max Plack Institute for Demographic Research, Germany Recent Trends in US Working Life Expectancy By Sex, Education, and Race and the Impact of the Great Recession

488.5 Ceylan ENGIN, Texas A&M University, USA and Dudley POSTON, Texas A&M University, USA Natural Increase/Decrease in Turkey: Is Turkey Starting to Follow the European Pattern?

486.4 Rachel MARGOLIS, University of Western Ontario, Canada and Mikko MYRSKYLA, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany The Importance of Parental Happiness for Understanding Low Fertility

488.6 Uliana NIKOLAEVA, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia and Mikhail DENISSENKO, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia Demographic Diversity in the Kostroma Region in Russia: Indicators and Dynamics of Local Communities

10:45-12:15

16:00-17:30

487

489

Families and Households: Implications for Men, Women and Children’s Health

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Favour NTOIMO, Federal University Oye-Ekiti, Nigeria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 487.1 Patricia THOMAS, Purdue University, USA and Debra UMBERSON, University of Texas at Austin, USA Relationship Quality with Adult Children: Gender and Cognitive Limitations Among Older Adults 487.2 Anshul SAXENA, Florida International University, USA; Michele JEAN-GILLES, Florida International University, USA; Rhonda ROSENBERG, Florida International University, USA and Jessy DEVIEUX, Florida International University, USA Effect of Gender-Based Violence on Mental Health Among a Sample of Haitian Women 487.3 Chandrikaben RAVAL, Gujarat University, India Social and Health Status of Aged People of Ahmedabad 487.4 Thankam SUNIL, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA; Lisa ZOTTARELLI, San Antonio College, USA and Vijayan PILLAI, University of Texas at Arlington, USA Utilization of Maternal Health Care in Yemen 487.5 Sibusiso MKWANANZI, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Where Is My Father?...........the Association Between Single Female Headedness and Teenage Pregnancy in South Africa

14:15-15:45 488

Regional Demographic Decline and Immigration

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Dudley POSTON, Texas A&M University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 489.1 Hideki KAMIYAMA, Teikyo University, Japan An Explanation for the Increased Rate of First Marriage of the Cohort Born in the Year of the Fire Horse Using a Two Sex Model Based on the Concept of the “Encounter” 489.2 Sehar EZDI, Institute for Gerontology, University of Vechta, Germany and Harald KUENEMUND, University of Vechta, Germany Changing Sex Ratios and the Elderly Missing Women Problem in East Asia: Causes and Consequences 489.3 Bethany DESALVO, U.S. Census Bureau, USA; Maria PEREZ-PATRON, Texas A&M University, USA and Huanjun ZHANG, Texas A&M University, USA Do Chinese Mothers in the United States Have More Male Births Than White Mothers? 489.4 Qiushi FENG, National University of Singapore, Singapore; Yi ZENG, Duke University, Singapore; Zhenglian WANG, Duke University, USA and Wei-Jun YEUNG, National University of Singapore, Singapore Age of Retirement and Human Capital in China, 2015-2050 Age of Retirement and Human Capital in China, 2015-2050 489.5 Misae SASANO, Seoul National University, South Korea Life Course of the Low Fertility Generation in Japan 489.6 Nayoung HEO, Texas A&M University, USA Natural Increase/Decrease in the Subareas of South Korea: Is South Korea Following the Pattern of Japan?

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

246

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RC41 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

09:00-10:30 490

Population Aging: Opportunities and Challenges Ahead.

Session Organizer: Rajendra PATIL, Shivaji University, India

490.2 Smita VERMA, Isabella Thoburn College, India Feminization of Old Age in India: Experiences of Subalternity in Urban Spaces

491.3 Anne GOUJON, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/ÖAW, WU), Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria; Michaela POTANCOKOVA, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/ÖAW, WU), Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria and Markus SPERINGER, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/ÖAW, WU), Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria Modeling Past and Future Global Population By Levels of Education

490.3 Peng XU, Institute of Sociology, Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, China Empirical Research Related to the Quality of Life in Chinese Urban Elderly People

491.4 Wolfgang LUTZ, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenburg, Austria Interactions of Population Trends with the Social, Economic and Natural Environment

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 490.1 Gurusamy SELLAMUTHU, Gandhigram University, India Social Determinants of Senicide, a Cultural Killing of Elderly People in South Tamilnadu: An Empirical Reflection.

490.4 Sujata KARADE, Smt. C.B. Shah Mahila Mahavidyalaya, Sangli, India Ageing Problem and Old Age HOME in Sangli, India 490.5 Ionut FOLDES, Babes-Bolyai University, Romania Transnational Families in Romania. Facing New Opportunities and Risks of Intergenerational Solidarity 490.6 K.B. CHANDRIKA, Number and Name of RC: 41 Sociology of Population, India Healthy Ageing:Interventions to Improve the Quality of Life

10:45-12:15 491

Human Capital and Global Population Dynamics

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Marc LUY, Vienna Institute of Demography, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 491.1 Tomáš SOBOTKA, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/ÖAW, WU), Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria; Caroline BERGHAMMER, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/ÖAW, WU), Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria; Zuzanna BRZOZOWSKA, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/ÖAW, WU), Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria; Anna MATYSIAK, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/ÖAW, WU), Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria, Austria; Natalie NITSCHE, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/ÖAW, WU), Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria, Austria and Maria Rita TESTA, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, VID/ÖAW, WU), Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria Education and Fertility in Europe: Stylized Facts, Expected and Surprising Findings

14:15-15:45 492

Demography of Sexuality in a Changing Social and Legal Landscape

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Amanda BAUMLE, University of Houston, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 492.1 Jamie BUDNICK, University of Michigan, USA What We Ask about When We Ask about Sex: Measuring Non-Heterosexual Behavior and Identity in Survey Research 492.2 Jagan KARADE, Shivaji University, Kolhapur, India, India Third Gender: The Challenges for Developing Countries 492.3 Sofia MEDVEDEVA, Higher School of Economics Moscow, Russia To Marry or Not to Marry: Financial Aspects of Cohabitation Couples in Russia 492.4 Patria ROJAS, Florida International University, USA Socio-cultural determinants of HIV Risky Sexual Behaviors among adult Latinas: a longitudinal study of a community-based sample

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Sociology of Population

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building)

491.2 Marc LUY, Vienna Institute of Demography, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria, Austria; Marina ZANNELLA, Vienna Institute of Demography, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria, Austria; Yuka M. SUGAWARA, Sophia University Tokyo, Faculty of Liberal Arts, Japan; Christian WEGNER-SIEGMUNDT, Vienna Institute of Demography, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria and Graziella CASELLI, University of Rome “La Sapienza”, Department of Statistical Sciences, Italy The Effect of Increasing Human Capital on Increasing Life Expectancy: A Demographic Decomposition

RC41

Thursday 14 July

No. 492

Social Psychology

RC42

No. 493

Program–Session Details DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

RC42

Social Psychology Program Coordinator: Clara SABBAGH, University of Haifa, Israel

Sunday 10 July

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology (Host); RC18 Political Sociology

Gender Stereotypes and STEM Education: Global and Local Perspectives

See Joint Session Details for JS-30.

See Joint Session Details for JS-5.

14:15-15:45 494

Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology

Location: Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

14:15-15:45

Session Organizer: Guillermina JASSO, New York University, USA

JS-19 Drug Use and Local and Global Public

Policies of Health: New Tensions, Complementation or Changes for Not Change?

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology (Host); RC49 Mental Health and Illness and RC15 Sociology of Health See Joint Session Details for JS-19.

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 Transition, Social Justice and Identity: Social Psychological Insights

Location: Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Charles PUTTERGILL, University of Pretoria, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 493.1 Grace KHUNOU, University of Johannesburg, South Africa The Contested Positioning of Black Women in the South African Academy: What Should Come First, Their Race or Their Gender? 493.2 Alvina KUBEKA, University of Cape Town, South Africa Identity Capital Acquisition Among South African Youth 493.3 Jon Gunnar BERNBURG, The University of Iceland, Iceland Protest Motivation in an Economic Crisis: The Role Relative Deprivation in the Icelandic “Pots and Pans Revolution” 493.4 Olga LAVRINENKO, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Social Identity, Procedural Justice and Political Outcomes: Testing of the Social Activists’ Involvement in AntiAuthoritarianism Struggles in Belarus 493.5 Seyed A. HOSSEINI FARADONBEH, The University of Newcastle, Australia and Lawrence SAHA, Australian National University, Australia What Makes Us More ‘Critically Open-Minded’ in a Globalized World? an Australian Perspective

248

10:45-12:15 Preferences and Political Outcomes. Part I

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology (Host); RC04 Sociology of Education

493

493.6 Kearabetswe MOKOENE, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Labour Migration in Contemporary South Africa and Its Negative Effect on the Livelihoods of Families in the North West Province

JS-30 Economic Inequality, Distributive

09:00-10:30 JS-5

RC42 Sunday 10 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 494.1 Guillermina JASSO, New York University, USA; Robert SHELLY, Ohio University, USA and Murray WEBSTER, UNCC, USA Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: Justice and Impartiality 494.2 Alla MARCHENKO, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Faculty of Sociology, Ukraine and Mykola SYDOROV, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Faculty of Sociology, Ukraine Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: The Role of Ideological Issues in Friendship 494.3 Hermann DUELMER, University of Cologne, Germany and Edurne BARTOLOME PERAL, University of Bilbao, Spain Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: Comparing (Dis-) Trust in Outgroups in Germany and Spain 494.4 Volker LANG, Bielefeld University, Germany and Martin GROSS, University of Tuebingen, Germany Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: Testing within Respondent Variance Homogeneity in Factorial Surveys 494.5 Katrin AUSPURG, LMU Munich, Germany; Claudia DIEHL, University of Konstanz, Germany and Thomas HINZ, University of Konstanz, Germany Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: The Role of Economic and Cultural Threat for Explaining Support of Immigration Control in Switzerland 494.6 Claudia FINGER, WZB Berlin Social Science Center, Germany Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: Institutional Constraints and Social Inequality in University Application Plans

16:00-17:30 495

Emotion and Inequalities. Part I

Location: Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Marci COTTINGHAM, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Netherlands Chair: Sandra SULZER, Xavier University of Louisiana, USA

www.isa-sociology.org

RC42 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

495.1 Marci COTTINGHAM, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands and Rebecca ERICKSON, University of Akron, USA Toward a Critical Interactionist Approach to Emotion-As-Practice

495.3 Melissa SLOAN, University of South Florida SarasotaManatee, USA Gender and Interpersonal Emotion Management in the Workplace 495.4 Gary FINE, Northwestern University, USA and Ugo CORTE, Department of Sociology, University of Uppsala, Sweden Group Pleasures: Collaborative Commitments, Narrative Gratification, and Fun in Unequal Micro-Cultures 495.5 Francisco Antar MARTINEZ GUZMAN, Universidad de Colima, Mexico Happiness As a Governmental Dispositive in Neoliberal Societies: The Case of Latin American and Mexican Contexts

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 496

Group Processes and Structural Social Psychology

Location: Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Alison BIANCHI, University of Iowa, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 496.1 Kimberly ROGERS, Dartmouth College, USA Affective Dynamics on Campus: Behavior, Emotion, and Event Likelihood 496.2 Jan STETS, University of California, Riverside, USA; Scott SAVAGE, University of Houston, USA; Peter BURKE, University of California, Riverside, USA and Phoenicia FARES, University of California, Riverside, USA Identity, Exchange Networks, and the Emergence of Inequality 496.3 Ann SHELLY, Ashland University, USA and Robert SHELLY, Ohio University, USA The Emergence of Inequality in Task Groups: How Task Type Affects Interaction Dynamics. 496.4 Alison BIANCHI, University of Iowa, USA and David BIAGAS, College of Wooster, USA The Social Construction and Enactment of Newcomers’ Race/Ethnicity: The Case of Chinese Students at the University of Iowa

10:45-12:15 497

Keynote Address By Karen A. Hegtvedt: Doing Justice Beyond Social Psychology

Location: Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Clara SABBAGH, University of Haifa, Israel

14:15-15:45 498

RC42 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

499

Facets of Inequality

Location: Hörsaal 48 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Clara SABBAGH, University of Haifa, Israel ROUNDTABLES:

Social Psychology

495.2 David GLISCH-SANCHEZ, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA “How Does It Feel to be a Problem?”: Social Harm, Algorithms of Pain, and the Potential for Social Change

16:00-17:30

RC42

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

No. 499

Gender Inequality in Educational Opportunities ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 499.10 Aude KERIVEL, INSIDE, Luxembourg L’émotion a-t-Elle Un Genre ? Filles Et Garçons Face à La Violence Et Aux Incivilités à L’école élémentaire 499.4 Rossella BOZZON, Department of Sociology and Social Research, University of Trento, Italy and Annalisa MURGIA, Department of Sociology and Social Research, University of Trento, Italy Precarious Researchers in Italy: Gender Asymmetries in a STEM Department 499.5 Madlen PREUSS, Institute for Interdisciplinary Research on Conflict and Violence, Germany and Andreas ZICK, Institute for Interdisciplinary Research on Conflict and Violence, Germany Severe Worries and Anxieties? Concerned Citizens and Their Attitudes Towards Asylum Seekers and Refugees 499.1 Sandra FACHELLI, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain The Same Job but Different Earnings. the Women Graduates’ Experience from Catalan Universities. 499.8 Elisabeth Anna GÜNTHER, TU Wien, Austria The »Ideal« Student. Intersectional Interference in STEM Education.

Measurement of Inequality ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 499.11 Felix STUMPF, Friedrich-Alexander University ErlangenNuremberg, Germany Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: The Prospects of Professional Recognition in Germany – a Factorial Survey on the Acceptance of Officially Recognized Foreign Certificates in German Firms 499.12 Konstantin MOZER, University Konstanz, Germany Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: External Validation of a Factorial Survey with Longitudinal and Administrative Data 499.9 Andrii GORBACHYK, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine and Iryna LOKTIEVA, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: Study of Perception of the Justice of Governmental Support Distribution Among Socially Excluded Groups 499.7 Gerhard PAULINGER, University of Vienna, Austria How Do Wealth and Attitudes Towards Wealth Distribution Correspond? Contrasting and Complementary Typologies Based on Objective and Subjective Measures from the Hfcs. 499.3 David MACRO, Utrecht University, Netherlands Measuring Social Motives: The Reliability and Validity of Parametric Estimates Derived from Dictator Game Choices. 499.6 Dora BARI, Corvinus University of Budapest Doctoral School of Sociology, Hungary The Impact of Education on Work Attitudes in Hungary 499.2 Anja EDER, University of Graz, Austria Title: Public Support for State Redistribution in Times of Increasing Inequalities Subtitle: A Cross-National Comparative Trend Analysis of Fifteen Countries

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249

RC42

No. 500

Wednesday 13 July

Emotion and Inequalities. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Marci COTTINGHAM, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

501.4 Rachel THEODORE, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, France The “Inequality of Conditions”, a Social Imaginary: Distinctions, Recognition and Democracy in Contemporary Chile.

14:15-15:45

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 500.1 Rachel SHERMAN, New School for Social Research, USA Uneasy Street: Privilege, Ambivalence and Moral Worth Among Wealthy and Affluent New Yorkers 500.2 Yi-fu CHEN, Department of Sociology, National Taipei University, Taiwan Criminogenic Knowledge Structure and Youth Violent Behavior: The Role of Co-Evolution of Friendship Network 500.3 Julia PUASCHUNDER, Harvard University, USA The Beauty of Ivy: When Inequality Meets Equality 500.4 Stefanie EIFLER, Catholic University of EichstattIngolstadt, Germany Factorial Surveys in Social Psychology: Using Different Modes of Presentation in a Factorial Survey on Fear of Crime DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 500.5 Tatiana KANASZ, The Maria Grzegorzewska University; NIP: 525-00-05-840, Poland Helping Relation: Between Pride and Shame. Buying Food for a Hungry Person in Poland: A Case of an Internet Discussion

10:45-12:15 501

Economic Inequality, Distributive Preferences and Political Outcomes. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Juan Carlos CASTILLO, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Chile AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 501.1 Rodrigo YANEZ ROJAS, PhD student EHESS, France Perceived and Just Salary Gaps Across Time. the Chilean Case. 501.2 Tim ENGARTNER, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany; Till VAN TREECK, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany; Eva SCHWEITZER, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany; Silvia BLUM, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany and Philipp KORTENDIEK, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany In the Eye of the Beholder: Students’ Attitudes on Inequality in the European Economic Crisis

502

Cooperation, Trust, and Group Processes

Location: Hörsaal 4C KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Zbigniew KARPINSKI, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland and Kinga WYSIENSKA-DI CARLO, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 502.1 Yusuke INAGAKI, The Institute of Statistical Mathematics, Japan; Takashi NAKAMURA, The Institute of Statistical Mathematics, Japan and Yoo Sung PARK, The Institute of Statistical Mathematics, Japan An Investigation of Meanings of “Trust” and Their Transition in the Surveys on the Japanese National Character and Other Related Surveys 502.2 Gabor HAJDU, Institute for Sociology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary; Julia KOLTAI, Institute for Sociology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary; Luca KRISTOF, Institute for Sociology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary and Bori SIMONOVITS, TÁRKI Social Research Institute, Hungary Determinants of Social Cooperation: A Survey Experiment 502.3 Masahito TAKAHASHI, Yamaguchi University, Japan How to Survive a Tsunami: An Individualistic Maxim in Japanese Collectivism 502.4 Wojtek PRZEPIORKA, Utrecht University, Netherlands; Diego GAMBETTA, European University Institute, Italy and Joel BERGER, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Signals of Trustworthiness in Social Exchange: A Theoretical Framework and Empirical Evidence 502.5 Jordi TENA-SANCHEZ, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain Field Evidence of Social Influence in the Expression of Political Preferences. the Case of Secessionist Flags in Barcelona

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30 JS-61 Justice and Inequality in Education Committees: RC42 Social Psychology (Host); RC04 Sociology of Education See Joint Session Details for JS-61.

250

RC42 Wednesday 13 July

501.3 Ondrej BUCHEL, University of Trento, Italy Meaningful Participation As an Additional Motivation to System Justify

09:00-10:30 500

Social Psychology

Program–Session Details

www.isa-sociology.org

RC44 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

Labor Movements

Monday 11 July

504.6 Ray MARKEY, Macquarie University, Australia; Joseph MCIVOR, Macquarie University, Australia and Chris F. WRIGHT, University of Sydney, Australia The Role of Employee Participation in Carbon Emission Reduction in the Workplace: The Case of Australia

09:00-10:30 503

Using Global Comparisons to Understand 21st Century Labor Movements Among Informal Workers.

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Chris TILLY, University of California Los Angeles, USA Chair: Rina AGARWALA, Johns Hopkins University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 503.1 Adrienne EATON, Rutgers University, USA; Susan SCHURMAN, Rutgers University, USA and Martha CHEN, WIEGO) Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing, USA Informal Workers Organizing and Negotiating: Lessons from Nine Case Studies Around the World 503.2 Claire HOBDEN, International Labour Organization, Switzerland and Helen SCHWENKEN, University of Osnabruck, Germany Domestic Workers’ Organizing Strategies and Models: An International Comparison 503.3 Melanie SAMSON, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa and Sonia DIAS, WIEGO, Brazil Don’t Waste the Space – How Theorizing Relations Between Space, Waste and Organization Contributes to Comparative Analysis of Informal Worker Organizing

10:45-12:15 504

504.5 Hwa-Jen LIU, Department of Sociology, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Strategizing an Environmental Turn for Organized Labor

Labour, Nature and Corporate Strategy: Resolving Core Contradictions.

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Nora RATHZEL, Umea University, Sweden; David PEETZ, Griffith University, Australia and David UZZELL, University of Surrey, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 504.1 Nora RATHZEL, Umeå University, Department of Sociology, Sweden; Ragnar LUNDSTROM, Umea University, Department of Sociology, Sweden and David UZZELL, University of Surrey, United Kingdom Disconnected Spaces: Introducing Environmental Perspectives into the Trade Union Agenda Top-Down and Bottom-up 504.2 Dimitris STEVIS, Colorado State University, USA Labor and Green Transitions: Lessons from the USA 504.3 Emanuele LEONARDI, Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, Portugal and Stefania BARCA, Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, Portugal Working-CLASS Ecology Environmental Issues and Labour Resistance at the Ilva Steel Plant in Taranto, Apulia (Italy)

504.7 Hendrik THEINE, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Institute for Ecological Economics, Austria; Michael SODER, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Institute for Ecological Economics, Austria and Sigrid STAGL, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Institute for Ecological Economics, Austria Trade Unions and Environmental Policies: Friends or Foes? the Case of the Austrian Energy Sector 504.8 Kathrin NIEDERMOSER, University of Vienna, Austria Trade Unions and Environmentalism – the Case of Austria

14:15-15:45 505

European Labour and the Struggle Against Austerity

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Andreas BIELER, Nottingham University, United Kingdom; Richard HYMAN, London School of Economics, United Kingdom and Philippe POCHET, European Trade Union Institute, Belgium Chair: Richard HYMAN, LSE, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 505.1 Julia HOFMANN, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria Cross-Border Trade Union Action in Europe in Times of the Euro-Crisis: The Case of the European Days of Action 505.2 Andreas BIELER, School of Politics and IR, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom and Jamie JORDAN, School of Politics and IR, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Mobilising Against Austerity: Greek and Portuguese Labour in the Resistance Against Water Privatisation. 505.3 Christoph HERMANN, University of California, Berkeley, USA European Trade Unions and the Defense of Public Services 505.4 Caitlin FOX-HODESS, UC Berkeley, USA Dockworkers Against Austerity: Multiscalar Political Alignment and Campaign Success in Transnational Union Activism 505.5 Lidia FERNANDES, Faculty of Economics – University of Coimbra – Portugal. Researcher at DINÂMIA’CET – IUL, Centre for Socioeconomic Change and Territorial Studies, Portugal and Hugo DIAS, Institute of Economics - State University of Campinas, Brazil The General Strike of November 2012 and Anti-Austerity Protests – Evidence from the Portuguese Case DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 505.6 Hermes COSTA, University of Coimbra, Faculty of Economics, Center for Social Studies, Portugal; Elísio ESTANQUE, University of Coimbra, Portugal and Hugo DIAS, CESIT, Unicamp, Brazil Can Austerity Also Aggregate? Discourses and Responses of Trade Unions and Socio-Occupational Actors

www.isa-sociology.org

251

Labor Movements

Program Coordinator: Andreas BIELER, Nottingham University, United Kingdom

504.4 David PEETZ, Griffith University, Australia; Ray MARKEY, Macquarie University, Australia; Georgina MURRAY, Griffith University, Australia and Suzanne YOUNG, La Trobe University, Australia Motivating and Mobilising Stakeholder Reshaping of Corporate Climate Behaviour

RC44

RC44

No. 505

RC44

No. 506

Program–Session Details

505.7 John GEARY, University College Dublin, Ireland Economic Crisis, Austerity and Trade Unions’ Response: The Irish Case in Comparative Perspective

Labor Movements

16:00-17:30 506

RC44 Tuesday 12 July

507.5 Katia PILATI, University of Trento, Italy and Sabrina PERRA, University of Cagliari, Italy Is Neo-Liberalism the Best Strategy to Manage CapitalLabor Conflict? the Italian and Chinese Cases DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Economic Crisis and New Forms of Worker Organizing

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Kim VOSS, University of California, Berkeley, USA; Bryan EVANS, Ryerson University, Canada and Maurizio ATZENI, Centre for Labour Relations, National Research Council of Argentina (CEIL/CONICET), Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 506.1 Aziz CHOUDRY, McGill University, Canada; Mostafa HENAWAY, Immigrant Workers Centre, Canada and Manuel SALAMANCA, McGill University, Canada A Permanent State of Crisis? Lessons from Organizing Migrant and Immigrant Workers in Quebec 506.2 Melanie Simms SIMMS, University of Leicester, United Kingdom; Bianca BECCALLI, University of Milan, Italy; Enrico PUGLIESE, CNR, Italy; Ingrid ARTUS, FAU, Germany and Guglielmo MEARDI, University of Warwick, United Kingdom Representation of the Losers of the Crisis: A Comparison of Systems and Strategies of Representation of Vulnerable Workers 506.3 Aykut KILIC, Bogazici University, Turkey Squeezed Between Commodification and Formalization(s): An Ethnographic Case Study of Precarious Work

507.6 Jessica VILIRAN, Polytechnic University of the Philippines, Philippines and Jane SIWA, Center for Trade Union and Human Rights Manila, Philippines Taming Class Conflict? Industrial Peace Policy and Workers’ Strike in the Philippines from 2001 to Present

10:45-12:15 508

Authors Meet Critics

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Alexander GALLAS, University of Kassel, Germany and Rina AGARWALA, Johns Hopkins University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 508.1 Sarah SWIDER, Wayne State University, USA Building China: Informal Work and the New Precariat 508.2 Eli FRIEDMAN, Cornell University, USA Insurgency Trap: Labor Politics in Postsocialist China 508.3 Moritz EGE, University of Göttingen, Germany “a Prole with Class”: Fashion, Pop Culture and Social Inequalities Among Young Men in Berlin

14:15-15:45

506.4 Nathalie JAQUES, University of Auckland, New Zealand The Demand for Equality in the Living Wage: Exceeding Calculation and Cooptation.

509

506.5 Richard HYMAN, LSE, United Kingdom Trade Unions and ‘new’ Social Movements: Can They Work Together?

Session Organizer: Bridget KENNY, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa

RC44 Roundtables Session

Location: Hörsaal 48 (Main Building)

ROUNDTABLES:

Tuesday 12 July

Economic Crisis and New Forms of Worker Organizing

09:00-10:30

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

507

Chair: Kim VOSS, University of California, Berkeley, USA

Movements on the Job: Theorizing Strikes and Workplace Protest in Comparative Context

Location: Hörsaal 16 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Chris RHOMBERG, Fordham University, USA Chair: Chris RHOMBERG, Fordham University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 507.1 Larry ISAAC, Vanderbilt University, USA Class Formation, the Strike, and the Public Sphere in the First Gilded Age 507.2 Yujeong YANG, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA and Wei CHEN, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong Different Demands, Varying Responses: Local Government Responses to Strikes in China 507.3 Mark ANNER, Penn State University, USA Worker Resistance in Global Supply Chains, Wildcat Strikes, Transnational Campaigns, and International Accords 507.4 Immanuel NESS, City University of New York, Brooklyn College, USA Workers’ Militancy in the South African Mining Sector, 2009-Present

252

509.24 A ngelo MORO, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Italy Communism Is Dead, Long Live the Labor Movement? 509.20 Burcu SAKA, METU, Turkey Contested Notion of Sisterhood As a Class Politics 509.8 Cesar ROSADO, IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law, USA Providing for a Moral Economy: Labor Unions and Worker Centers in Turbulent Times 509.5 Adam MROZOWICKI, University of Wroclaw, Poland; Branko BEMBIC, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia; Kairit KALL, University of Jyväskylä, Finland; Malgorzata MACIEJEWSKA, University of Wroclaw, Poland and Miroslav STANOJEVIC, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia Renewal in a Crisis? Union Responses to Precarious Work in the Retail and Metal Sectors of Estonia, Poland and Slovenia 509.14 Shinji KOJIMA, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University, Japan Social Movement Unionism in Contemporary Japan: Community Unions’ Response to Economic Crisis 509.19 Laurie MICHAELS, The Ohio State University, USA Unrepresented: Gender Negotiations and the Movement to Organize Migrant Farm Workers in the United States

www.isa-sociology.org

RC44 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

509.26 Rossana CILLO, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Italy The Struggles of Immigrant Workers in the Logistics Sector in Italy

Organizer: Philippe POCHET, European Trade Union Institute, Belgium Chair: Philippe POCHET, European Trade Union Institute, Belgium ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 509.3 ISIL ERDINC, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, France European and International Labour Movements: Two Sides of the Same Coin.Labour Mobility and Migration in a Context of Austerity in Europe 509.16 Sabina STAN, Dublin City University, Ireland and Roland ERNE, University College Dublin, Ireland Is Migration from Central and Eastern Europe an Opportunity for Trade Unions to Demand Higher Wages? Evidence from the Romanian Health Sector 509.21 Davide PERO, Nottingham University Business School, United Kingdom New Migrants Organizing and Civil Society: Insights from Low-Paid Latin American Workers’ Initiatives in London 509.7 Ole Johnny OLSEN, Department of Sociology, University of Bergen, Norway and Isak LEKVE, Department of Sociology, University of Bergen, Norway Organizing Workers in a Changing Labour Market: The Norwegian Experience 509.15 Devi SACCHETTO, University of Padua, Italy and Claudio MORRISON, University of Middlesex, United Kingdom Transnationalism, Mobility and Migration in the Sociology of Work: A Missed Encounter

509.13 Andrew LAWRENCE, Vienna School of International Studies, Austria Producing and Consuming ‘Green Transitions’: Social Movement Challenges and Strategies 509.18 Lotta TAKALA-GREENISH, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa and Nicolas PONS-VIGNON, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Searching for the Missing Link in Economic Development: Productive Relations Under Stress in South Africa 509.9 Bridget KENNY, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa Servicing the City: Service Work and Urban Space As Opportunity for Labour Organizing 509.22 T hembi LUCKETT, University of Witswatersrand, South Africa What Possibilities for Hope at the Points of Energy Production and Consumption?

Transformation of Chinese Labour Organizer: Chun-Yi LEE, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Chair: Chun-Yi LEE, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 509.6 Patricia Fuk-Ying TSE, University of Warwick, United Kingdom Agreeing on the Wage: The Contestation and Negotiation of Wage Levels in Chinese Factories 509.11 Chunyun LI, London School of Economics, United Kingdom Becoming Labor Movement NGOs in China

International Trade Unionism: Ten Years after the Founding of the ITUC

509.4 Sarah SWIDER, Wayne State University, USA Gendering China’s Construction Industry

Organizer: Rebecca GUMBRELL-MCCORMICK, Birkbeck, United Kingdom Chair: Rebecca GUMBRELL-MCCORMICK, Birkbeck, United Kingdom

509.17 Daniel FUCHS, SOAS, University of London, United Kingdom Migration and Labour Politics in the Context of Industrial Relocation to Western China: The Regulation of Migrant Labour in Chengdu and Chongqing

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

509.1 Dimitris STEVIS, Colorado State University, USA Competing Transnationalisms: Form and Purpose in Global Labour Politics 509.12 Ariella ARAUJO, Institute of Philosophy and Human Sciences - UNICAMP, Brazil and Ariella ARAUJO, Institute of Philosophy and Human Sciences - UNICAMP, Brazil International Union Networks As a Strategy of Resistance to the Power of MNCs 509.10 Michael ZWEIG, Center for Study of Working Class Life, USA U.S. Labor Against the War, Iraqi Labor, and “inside/ Outside” with the Ituc

509.25 Stefan SCHMALZ, Friedrich Schiller-University, Germany and Brandon SOMMER, University of Guelph, Canada Precariousness in the Chinese High-Growth Society: The Case of Migrant Workers in the Pearl River Delta 509.23 Yan HUANG, Hunan Normal University, China and Chun-Yi LEE, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Who to Decide ‘Good Job’ or ‘Bad Job’? a Bargaining Game of Production: Case Study from Pearl River Delta

16:00-17:30 JS-46 Careworkers Organizing Challenges, Strategies and Successes. Part I

The Politics of Production and Consumption Organizers: Bridget KENNY, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa and Rachel SHERMAN, New School for Social Research, USA

Committees: RC02 Economy and Society (Host); RC44 Labor Movements See Joint Session Details for JS-46.

Chair: Sean O RIAIN, Maynooth university, Ireland

www.isa-sociology.org

253

Labor Movements

European Labour and the Organisation of Migrant Workers

509.2 Rachel SHERMAN, New School for Social Research, USA Customers, Workers, and Leverage in Service Sector Organizing

RC44

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

No. 509

RC44

No. 510

Program–Session Details

Wednesday 13 July

Thursday 14 July

09:00-10:30

09:00-10:30

JS-49 Careworkers Organizing Challenges,

512

Committees: RC44 Labor Movements (Host); RC02 Economy and Society

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

Strategies and Successes. Part II

Labor Movements

RC44 Wednesday 13 July

See Joint Session Details for JS-49.

Session Organizers: Adam MROZOWICKI, University of Wroclaw, Poland and Mateusz KAROLAK, University of Wroclaw, Poland

10:45-12:15

Chair: Adam MROZOWICKI, University of Wroclaw, Poland

JS-52 Migrant Labor and Development in

Comparative Perspective: Lessons from the Chinese Case

Committees: RC44 Labor Movements (Host); RC02 Economy and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-52.

Transformations in Labor Politics in the Global South

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Eli FRIEDMAN, Cornell University, USA Chair: Irene PANG, Brown University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 510.1 Peter EVANS, University of California, Berkeley, Dept of Sociology, USA National Political Trajectories and the Changing Power of Labor in the Global South 510.2 Elisabeth FINK, Frankfurt University, Germany Conflict and Cooperation: The Relation of NGOs and Trade Unions in Bangladesh’s Rmg Sector 510.3 Leonardo MELLO E SILVA, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil Global Union Networks: The Brazilian Recent Experience 510.4 Caitlin FOX-HODESS, UC Berkeley, USA Imperialism, Anti-Imperialism and Regional Economic Integration: An Analysis of Strategic Orientations to Transnational Dockworker Coordination in Latin America DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 510.5 Tom BARNES, Australian Catholic University, Australia Industry and Informality: Assessing Work and Labour Movement Strategies in India’s Auto Industry 510.6 Manjusha NAIR, National University of Singapore, Singapore and Eli FRIEDMAN, Cornell University, USA Neither Reform Nor Regime Change: Labor Politics in China and India’s Automobile Industry

16:00-17:30 511

RC44 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building)

254

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 512.1 Aurora TRIF, Dublin City University Business School, DCU, Ireland; Marta KAHANCOVA, Central European Labour Studies Institute, Slovakia and Aristea KOUKIADAKI, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Trade Unions and Precarious Employment in Eastern Europe 512.2 Jochen THOLEN, Institute Labour and Economy University of Bremen, Germany Trade Unions in Central East and South East Europe – Modernization or Sink into Oblivion?

14:15-15:45 510

Economic Crises, Labour Movements and Resistance in Central and Eastern Europe

512.3 Gregory SCHWARTZ, University of Bristol, United Kingdom Labour and Authoritarian Neoliberalism in Russia: Resistance without a Movement. Crisis without an End 512.4 Sonila DANAJ, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland and Erka CARO, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland Unions in Post-Communist Albania: Problems of Organization and Solidarity in the Times Crisis DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 512.5 Dragan BAGIC, University of Zagreb, Croatia and Kruno KARDOV, University of Zagreb, Croatia From War Front to Home Front: The Role of Company-Based War Veterans’ Organizations in Industrial Relations in Croatia 512.6 Karol MUSZYNSKI, Faculty of Law and Administration, University of Warsaw, Poland The Crisis of the Social Dialogue in Poland and Labor Unions’ “Constitutional” Response

10:45-12:15 513

Gender, Precarious Work, and Labor Organizing

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Ruth MILKMAN, CUNY Graduate Center, USA Chair: Bridget KENNY, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 513.1 Ruth MILKMAN, CUNY Graduate Center, USA “Low Wage Worker Organizing and Advocacy in the U.S.a.: Comparing Domestic Workers and Day Laborers” 513.2 Rina AGARWALA, Johns Hopkins University, USA The Impact of Gender on Informal Workers’ Organizing—the Case of India 513.3 Jennifer CHUN, University of Toronto, Canada Organizing Care and Construction Workers in South Korea: The Complex Entanglements of Gender, Ethnicity, Migration and Nationalism

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RC44 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

514

514.3 Christine BISCHOFF, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; Paul STEWART, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa and Andries BEZUIDENHOUT, University of Pretoria, South Africa Health and Safety after Marikana: The Impact of Union Rivalry in South African Mines

Mining, Labour and the Contemporary Struggles for a Better World

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building)

16:00-17:30 JS-72 Silos or Synergies? Can Labor Build

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 514.1 John MASHAYAMOMBE, University of Pretoria, South Africa The Spatial Basis of Labour Agency: The Case of a Strike at a South African Open Cast Mine in 2012 514.2 Jasper FINKELDEY, University of Essex, United Kingdom Lessons from Marikana? South Africa’s Sub-Imperialism and the Rise of Blockadia

Effective Alliances with Other Global Social Movements

Committees: RC44 Labor Movements (Host); RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements See Joint Session Details for JS-72.

NOTES

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Labor Movements

Session Organizers: Ercument CELIK, University of Freiburg, Germany and Andries BEZUIDENHOUT, University of Pretoria, South Africa

RC44

14:15-15:45

No. 514

Rational Choice

RC45

No. 515

Program–Session Details

516.3 Robert NEUMANN, Technische Universitat Dresden, Germany Charitable Giving in the Field - Evidence from a QuasiExperiment at Bottle Refund Automats in Germany

RC45

Rational Choice Program Coordinator: Antonio M. CHIESI, University of Milano, Italy

Monday 11 July

517

Experimental Approaches to the Study of the Emergence of Social Norms

Session Organizers: Rense CORTEN, Utrecht University, Netherlands and Wojtek PRZEPIORKA, University of Utrecht, Netherlands

Micro Macro Link in Action and Relation Systems

Location: Hörsaal 27 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Kazuto MISUMI, Kyushu University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 515.1 Pamela EMANUELSON, North Dakota State University, USA and David WILLER, University of South Carolina, USA Applications of Group Processes Theory to Understand How Early Polities Solve Collective Action Problems 515.2 Yoshimichi SATO, Tohoku University, Japan Does Agent-Based Modeling Survive in Sociology? a Theoretical First Step Toward “Sociological” Micro-Macro Links 515.3 Hiroki TAKIKAWA, Tohoku University, Japan and Paolo PARIGI, Stanford University, USA Empirically Agent Based Modeling of Occupational Position Network in Japan 515.4 Carmelo LOMBARDO, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy; Enrico NERLI BALLATI, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy and Pasquale DI PADOVA, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy Modeling Homophily: A Computational Test of Merton and Lazarsfeld’s Thought Experiment and Its Extension. DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 515.5 Tien-Tun YANG, Department of Sociology, National Cheng-Chi University, Taiwan, Taiwan; Ray-May HSUNG, Department of Sociology, National Cheng-Chi University, Taiwan, Taiwan and Ke-Wei LU, Department of Sociology, National Cheng-Chi University, Taiwan, Taiwan Evolution of School Activities and Friendship Networks for College Students: Under Social Contexts of Different Gender Composition

10:45-12:15 516

14:15-15:45 Location: Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

09:00-10:30 515

RC45 Monday 11 July

Fairness Concerns and Social Preferences in Rational Choice Models

Location: Hörsaal 27 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Antonio M. JAIME-CASTILLO, Universidad de Málaga, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 516.1 Yasuto NAKANO, Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan Inequalities Based on Caste System and Relative Deprivations in Nepal 516.2 Mala SILITONGA, University of Groningen, Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Netherlands and Liesbet HEYSE, University of Groningen/ICS, Netherlands The Buffering Effects of Leaders and Peers Normative Signals on Civil Servants’ Inclination Towards Corruption

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 517.1 Andreas DIEKMANN, ETH Zurich, Switzerland and Wojtek PRZEPIORKA, Utrecht University, Netherlands “Take One for the Team!” Individual Heterogeneity and the Emergence of Latent Norms in a Volunteer’s Dilemma 517.2 Martina KROHER, Leibniz University Hanover, Germany Jaywalking: The Relative Weight of Normative and Punitive Cues 517.3 Janine WEETING, University of Groningen/ ICS, Netherlands; Rafael WITTEK, University of Groningen/ ICS, Netherlands; Russell SPEARS, University of Groningen, Netherlands and Andreas FLACHE, University of Groningen / ICS, Netherlands Identity Signaling in a Trust Game: Group Membership, Stereotypes, and Charitable Giving 517.4 Dieko BAKKER, University of Groningen / ICS, Netherlands; Jacob DIJKSTRA, University of Groningen / ICS, Netherlands and Andreas FLACHE, University of Groningen / ICS, Netherlands Compliant and Oppositional Control in Norm Enforcement Institutions

16:00-17:30 518

Rational Choice and Inequalities in the Life Course

Location: Hörsaal 27 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Masayuki KANAI, Senshu University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 518.1 Jun KOBAYASHI, Seikei University, Japan and Naho TINIMOTO, Kansai University, Japan Beauty and Inequality: Is It Rational to Invest in Beauty Capital in the Life Course? 518.2 Sabine EBENSPERGER, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany and Andreas DAMELANG, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany How Do Occupational Characteristics Contribute to the Explanation of Occupational Sex Segregation? Results from a Dynamic Fixed-Effects Panel Analysis for the German Labour Market 518.3 Pasquale DI PADOVA, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy The Explanation of Inequalities through Generative Models. a Contribution to the Understanding of Social Mobility from the Analytical Sociology’s Point of View 518.4 Benita COMBET, University of Bern, Switzerland and Joel BERGER, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Late Selection, More Equality of Opportunity? an Experimental Analysis 518.5 Kunihiro KIMURA, Tohoku University, Japan Signals, Indices, and Statistical Discrimination in Hiring

256

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RC45 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

520.5 Suzana IGNJATOVIC, Institute of Social Sciences, Serbia Boudon’s Theory of Cognitive Action - Between or Above Rational Choice Theory and Analytical Sociology?

09:00-10:30 519

Location: Hörsaal 27 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Hanno SCHOLTZ, University of Konstanz, Germany

14:15-15:45 521

Rational Action Theory and Applications

Location: Arcade Courtyard (Main Building) Session Organizer: Antonio M. CHIESI, University of Milano, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 519.1 Irit HARBOUN, Ben Gurion University, Israel The Cost of Inaction and the Collective Action of Disadvantaged Minority Groups 519.2 Yi-feng TAO, National Taiwan University, Taiwan State Violence, Participants’ Framing, and Citizen SelfMobilization: A Comparison of Taiwan’s Sunflower Movement and Hong Kong’s Umbrella Movement in 2014 519.3 Rene MILLAN, Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales, UNAM, Mexico and Rosario ESTEINOU, Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropologia Social, Mexico Social Capital and Rational Choice in a Non Political Association 519.4 Shinya OBAYASHI, University of Tokyo, Japan and Michihiro KANDORI, University of Tokyo, Japan An Alternative to Reputation Mechanism in Modern Society: Case Study and Game-Theoretic Analysis on Labor Unions 519.5 Margarita KALASHNIKOVA, St. Tikhon’s Orthodox Humanitarian University, Russia James March’s Technology of Foolishness (Moving toward a Playful Civilization?)

521.1 Agata KOMENDANT-BRODOWSKA, University of Warsaw, Poland and Anna BACZKO DOMBI, Institute of Sociology, University of Warsaw, Poland The Preschool Recruitment Process As a System of Allocation of Indivisible Goods – Example of Poland 521.2 Nelson PAULUS, Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Chile Microfundamentos Para Un Rastreo De Procesos Explicativo. Aportes Desde La Sociología Analítica. 521.3 Ondrej BUCHEL, University of Trento, Italy System Justification and Emergence of Social Norms 521.4 Mikolaj JASINSKI, Uniwersytet Warszawski, Poland and Marek BOZYKOWSKI, Uniwersytet Warszawski, Poland Tonnies’ Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft. Is There a Formula for That?

16:00-17:30 522

Rational Foundation of Social Capital and Trust

Location: Hörsaal 27 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Yoshimichi SATO, Tohoku University, Japan

10:45-12:15 520

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Analytical and Rational-Choice-Oriented Sociology: Friends or Foes?

Location: Hörsaal 27 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Gianluca MANZO, CNRS, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 520.1 Daniel LITTLE, University of Michigan-Dearborn, USA Speciation of Research Frameworks in Sociology: Rational Choice Theory, Analytical Sociology and Other ActorCentered Approaches 520.2 Karl-Dieter OPP, University of Leipzig and University of Washington, Germany What Is the Best Micro-Foundation for Mechanism-Based Explanations in Analytical and Rational Choice Sociology?

522.1 Kazuto MISUMI, Kyushu University, Japan Trust in Community and Free Rider 522.2 Antonio M. JAIME-CASTILLO, University of Malaga, Spain Social Trust and Demand for Redistribution. Is There a Crowding out Effect? 522.3 Hiroko OSAKI, Seikei University, Japan and Tatsuro SAKANO, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan Institutional Conditions for the Creation of Moralistic Trust 522.4 Masayuki KANAI, Senshu University, Japan Coexisting Mechanisms from Bonding/Bridging Social Capital to Subjective Well-Being

520.3 Andreas DIEKMANN, ETH Zurich, Switzerland The Explanatory Approach to Social Science. a Common Perspective 520.4 Petri YLIKOSKI, University of Helsinki, Finland and Peter HEDSTROM, Linköping University, Sweden Rational Choice Theory As Folk Psychology

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Rational Choice

Individual Interest and the Future “We” Want: Rational Choice Mechanisms of Modernity and Anti-Modernity

RC45

Tuesday 12 July

No. 522

RC45

No. 523

RC45 Wednesday 13 July

Wednesday 13 July

523.3 Hiroshi HAMADA, Tohoku University, Japan A Model of Zero Price Effect with Prospect Theory

09:00-10:30

523.4 Carola HOMMERICH, Hokkaido University, Japan and Jun KOBAYASHI, Seikei University, Japan Why Do Happiness and Satisfaction Not Coincide? a Rational Choice Approach to Social Psychology

523 Rational Choice

Program–Session Details

Rational Choice and Social Psychology: Theory and Applications

523.5 Alexandra GHEONDEA ELADI, Romanian Academy, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romania Rationality As Mental Representation: Decision-Making at the Cross-Roads

Location: Hörsaal 27 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jun KOBAYASHI, Seikei University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 523.1 Naoki SUDO, Department of Political Studies, Gakushuin University, Japan Does the Internet Make People Conservative? : Effects of the Internet on Citizens’ Political Attitudes and Their Rational Basement

10:45-12:15 524

RC45 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 27 (Main Building)

523.2 Atsushi ISHIDA, Osaka University of Economics, Japan A Bayesian Model of Image of Societal Distribution

NOTES

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www.isa-sociology.org

RC46 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

526.3 Tina UYS, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Protecting Whistleblowers: The Effectiveness of Legislation

Clinical Sociology

526.4 Charles PUTTERGILL, University of Pretoria, South Africa Ideology and Pseudo-Science: Drawing Lessons from a Critique of Sociology of Race during Apartheid for Current Practice-Based Science

14:15-15:45

Monday 11 July

527

09:00-10:30 Clinical Sociology and Social Change

Language: English, French

Clinical Sociology, Cultural Diversity and Immigration

Language: English, French Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Weizhen DONG, University of Waterloo, Canada

Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Massimo CORSALE, Universitat Suor Orsola Benincasa, Italy Chair: Massimo CORSALE, Universitat Suor Orsola Benincasa, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 525.1 Gwynyth OVERLAND, RVTS - Ragional trauma compeency centre Southern Norway, Norway The Radicalization Awareness Workshop – Providing Analyses and Interventions for Marginalised Lives and Communities?

Chair: Weizhen DONG, University of Waterloo, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 527.1 Wei XING, University of Winnipeg, Canada Reconsidering the Relationships Between Racial Minority Immigrants and Aboriginal Peoples in the New Millennium: Findings and Evidence from Classic Immigration Countries 527.2 Kelin LI, California State University-Dominguez Hills, USA and Ming WEN, University of Utah, USA Ethnic Density, Immigrant Enclaves, and Latino Health Risks: A Propensity Score Matching Approach

525.2 Harri SARPAVAARA, University of Tampere, Finland Substance Users’ Metaphorical Change Talk during Motivational Counseling Sessions in Finnish Probation Service

527.3 Saeid YARMOHAMMADI, University of Montreal, Canada Immigration and ways of intervening its related issues in Iran

525.3 Hans Petter SAND, University of Agder, Norway On Sustainable Development

527.4 Anthony KAZIBONI, Department of Sociology, University of Johannesburg, South Africa The Lindela Repatriation Centre from 1996-2014: A Theoretical Explication of Human Rights Violations

525.4 Ioanna-Stamatina PANAGIOTAKOPOULOU, B.A., M.A., PhD Psychologist Università degli Studi di Cassino e del Lazio Meridionale, Greece; Rosella TOMASSONI, Full Professor in General Psychology Università degli Studi di Cassino e del Lazio Meridionale, Italy and Antonio FUSCO, Full Professor in Psychology of Art Università degli Studi di Cassino e del Lazio Meridionale, Italy Leadership’s Emotional Identity in Organizations: A Case Study of Social-Clinical Psychological Expression

528

Clinical Sociology, Health and Social Policy

Language: English, French Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

10:45-12:15 526

16:00-17:30

Clinical Sociology and Community Intervention

Session Organizer: Mariam SEEDAT KHAN, University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa Chair: Vehbi BASER, Demirli Sitesi Nezir Aga Bloklari, Turkey AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Language: French, English Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Anthony KAZIBONI, University of Johannesburg, South Africa, South Africa Chair: Anthony KAZIBONI, University of Johannesburg, South Africa, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 526.1 Jan Marie FRITZ, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Cities for CEDAW: Notes on Effective Intervention

528.1 Michiru TAKEUCHI, Institute of Elderly Housing Sciences, Japan Collaboration Between Medical Staffs and Care Workers to Support Older Adults’ End-of-Life Care at Home: A Case Study of the Daily Interactions Between Them in ServiceAdded Housing Facilities in Japan 528.2 Kelin LI, California State University-Dominguez Hills, USA; Ming WEN, University of Utah, USA and Jessie FAN, University of Utah, USA Neighborhood Racial Diversity and Metabolic Syndrome: Findings from 2003-2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

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Clinical Sociology

Program Coordinator: Tina UYS, University of Johannesburg, South Africa and Mariam SEEDAT KHAN, University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa

RC46

526.2 Hans Petter SAND, University of Agder, Norway Democracy, Effectiveness and Identity

RC46

525

No. 528

Clinical Sociology

RC46

No. 529

Program–Session Details

528.3 Michiko KADOBAYASHI, Faculty of Integrated Arts and Social Sciences, Japan Women’s University, Japan; MIgiwa NAKADA, School of Health Sciences, Sapporo Medical University, Japan; Mikiyo SATO, Jichi Medical University,School of Nursing, Japan; Mari HONMA, Department of Rehabilitation, Sapporo Medical University, Japan; Takehiko ITO, Department of Psychology and Education, Wako University, Japan and Mizue SHIROMARU, School of Health Sciences, Sapporo Medical University, Japan Clinical Application of Caring for Cancer Survivors through Writing to Originate a Sociological Study 528.4 Olivier CHANTRAINE, Universite de Lille 3, France De L’ecriture Comme Souffrance Au Travail à Une Reformulation De La Performativité.

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 529

Individual Certification and Program Accreditation in Clinical Sociology.

Language: French, English

RC46 Tuesday 12 July

14:15-15:45 531

Collaboration and Support within Diverse Sociological Contexts

Language: French, English Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Gwynyth OVERLAND, RVTS - Ragional trauma compeency centre Southern Norway, Norway Chair: Charles PUTTERGILL, University of Pretoria, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 531.1 Mariam SEEDAT KHAN, University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa and Adedoyin DR ADEDOYIN ATEWOLOGUN, Queen Mary, University of London, United Kingdom Academia Unplugged: An Intersectional Analysis of the Comparative Career Experiences of Black Women Academics in South Africa and the United Kingdom. 531.2 Sinteche VAN DER MERWE, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Getting the Employer to Understand the Importance of Employees’ Work-Life Integration 531.3 David DU TOIT, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Cleaning up: The Growth of Outsourced Domestic Housecleaning Services in Johannesburg, South Africa

Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Jan Marie FRITZ, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, USA Chair: David DU TOIT, University of Johannesburg, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 529.1 Melodye LEHNERER, College of Southern Nevada, USA and Harry PERLSTADT, Michigan State University, USA Making Sociology Viable: Certifying Practitioners and Accrediting Programs 529.2 Michael FLEISCHER, Organizational Dynamics, USA and Norma WINSTON, University of Tampa, USA Getting Your Sociology or Interdisciplinary Program Accredited By Capacs (the Commission on the Accreditation of Programs in Applied and Clinical Sociology)

531.4 Kentaro ISHIJIMA, Research Fellow of Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Japan The Effectiveness of Hands-on Activities of AAC (Augmentative & Alternative Communication) Tools.

16:00-17:30 532

International Policymaking and Clinical Sociology

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

10:45-12:15

Session Organizer: Rosemary BARBERET, City University of New York, USA

530

Chair: Rosemary BARBERET, John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY), USA

Epistemology, Theories, Research Methods and/or Research Ethics in Clinical Sociology

Discussant: Sharon EVERHARDT, Troy University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Language: French, English Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Sinteche VAN DER MERWE, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Chair: Sinteche VAN DER MERWE, University of Johannesburg, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 530.1 Shujiro YAZAWA, Center of Glocal Studies, Seijo University, Japan The Epistemological and Ontological Foundation of Alvin Gouldner’s Applied Sociology 530.2 Vehbi BASER, Balikesir Univ. Turkey, Turkey and Mutlu Baran DEMIRPENCE, Balikesir Univ. -TURKEY, Turkey The Attitudes and Orientations Towards Sociological Practice in Sociology Faculty Members and Graduate Students in Turkey

532.1 Jan Marie FRITZ, University of Cincinnati, USA Assessing the National Action Plans Based on UN Security Council Resolution 1325 532.2 Cindy SMITH, United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute, Italy Policymakers and Academic Researchers: How Do They Communicate? 532.3 Daniela JAUK, University of Graz, Austria (How) Does Feminist Scholar-Activism at the United Nations Pay Off? 532.4 Marina KEVKHISHVILI, Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, Georgia Effective Advocacy in Georgia

530.3 Margarita KALASHNIKOVA, St. Tikhon’s Orthodox Humanitarian University, Russia and Igor MIKHEYEV, St. Tikhon’s Orthodox Humanitarian University, Russia Pitirim Sorokin’s Model of Altruistic Transformation of Society

260

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RC46 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

534.2 Mariam SEEDAT KHAN, University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa Learning to Learn in Large Classes

09:00-10:30 533

534.3 Beverley YAMAMOTO, Osaka University, Japan Promoting Health, Promoting School Success: An Exploration of Healthy Schools Policy in Four Cultural Settings in the EU and Canada

Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Sharon EVERHARDT, Troy University, USA Chair: Sharon EVERHARDT, Troy University, USA

14:15-15:45 535

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 533.1 Johanna ZULUETA, Faculty of International Liberal Arts, Soka University, Japan Cultural Diversity As “Global Commons”: A Look into the Case of Japan 533.2 Stephen KULIS, Southwest Interdisciplinary Research Center, Arizona State University, USA and Monica TSETHLIKAI, T. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, USA Indigenous Cultural Engagement As a Means of Strengthening Urban American Indian Families: Results of the Parenting in 2 Worlds Study 533.3 Maria Prisa DACERA, Ateneo de Manila, Philippines and Ma. Denise DACERA, Convergys Philippines, Philippines Adaptation to Flooding and Resilience Building in PasigMarikina Basin: Intersections of Social, Political-Economic and Place-Based Vulnerabilities

10:45-12:15 534

Service Learning Strategies: Connecting Students to Global Issues

Language: English, French Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Melodye LEHNERER, College of Southern Nevada, USA Chair: Melodye LEHNERER, College of Southern Nevada, USA Discussant: Massimo CORSALE, Universitat Suor Orsola Benincasa, Italy 534.1 Vangile D BINGMA, University of Pretoria, South Africa Co-Constituting the Process of Schooling: A Sociological Inquiry of Interrelationships Between Parents, Learners and a Township Secondary School in the Tshwane South District, South Africa.

Social Determinants of Health and Policy Implications in Transitional Societies

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Beverley YAMAMOTO, Osaka University, Japan Chair: Saeid YARMOHAMMADI, University of Montreal, Canada Discussant: Caroline AGBOOLA, University of Johannesburg, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 535.1 Weizhen DONG, University of Waterloo, Canada Social Determinants of Health in Rural Anhui 535.2 Maria ROURA, University of Barcelona. ISGLOBALCRESIB, Spain; Barbara NAVAZA, CRESIB, ISGLOBAL- University of Barcelona, Spain; Federico BISOFFI, CRESIB, ISGLOBALUniversity of Barcelona, Spain; Bruno ABARCA, University of Barcelona, Spain and Robert POOL, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands Provider-Initiated HIV Testing for Migrants in the Times of Austerity: A Qualitative Study with Health Care Workers and Foreign-Born Sexual Minorities in Spain 535.3 Flavio MARSIGLIA, Southwest Interdisciplinary Research Center, Arizona State University, USA Translating Effective Drug Use Prevention Approaches for Societies in Transition: Lessons from Latin America in Cultural Program Adaptation

16:00-17:30 536

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Clinical Sociology

Livelihood Vulnerability in Cities: Interrogating the Intersections of Culture, Disaster Risk and Power

RC46 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

www.isa-sociology.org

RC46

Wednesday 13 July

No. 536

261

Social Classes and Social Movements

RC47

No. 537

Program–Session Details

RC47 Sunday 10 July

Chair: Esin ILERI, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Turkey

RC47

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Social Classes and Social Movements Program Coordinator: Geoffrey PLEYERS, University of Louvain & College d’Etudes Mondiales, Belgium; Priska DAPHI, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany and Paolo GERBAUDO, King`s College London, United Kingdom

538.1 Christopher ROOTES, University of Kent, United Kingdom Confronting Climate Change: Environmental Movements, NGOs and Others in England. 538.2 Geoffrey PLEYERS, University of Louvain & College d’Etudes Mondiales, Belgium How Environmental Movements Shape the Global 538.3 Baran Alp UNCU, Marmara University, Turkey Broadening Local Mobilizations: Exploring the Possibilities of Linking “Northern Forest Defense” in Turkey to Climate Change

Sunday 10 July

538.4 Fabrice FLIPO, Telecom-EM, France What Is Political Ecology ? a Conceptuel Approach

09:00-10:30

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

JS-6

Opening Session with Saskia Sassen, Donatella Della Porta and Maha Abdelrahman

Committees: RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change (Host); RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements See Joint Session Details for JS-6.

10:45-12:15 537

Social Movements As Sites of Social Development

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: John KRINSKY, City College New York, USA Chair: Colin BARKER, Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom Discussant: John KRINSKY, City College New York, USA 537.1 Larry ISAAC, Vanderbilt University, USA; Anna JACOBS, Vanderbilt University, USA; Jaime KUCINSKAS, Hamilton College, USA and Allison MCGRATH, Vanderbilt University, USA Social Movement Schools: Movement Resource in Performative Challenges for Change 537.2 Arkaitz LETAMENDIA, University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Niue Linking Types of Protest Tactics and Structural Conflicts: Some Key Points from the Study of the Social Form of the Protest in the Basque Country 537.3 Francesco ANTONELLI, Università degli Studi “Roma Tre”, Italy New Molecular Intellectuals and the Making Sense of Action in Social Movements 537.4 Anna LAVIZZARI, University of Kent, United Kingdom Strategy, Performance, and Gender: An Interactionist Understanding of the Italian Lgbtq Movement and the Catholic Countermovement

12:30-14:00

14:15-15:45 539

Social Movements in Latin America: Contributing to a North-South Dialogue

Language: Spanish, English Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizers: Renata MOTTA, Free University Berlin, Germany and Pablo LAPEGNA, University of Georgia, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 539.1 Pabel LOPEZ FLORES, Postgrado en Ciencias del Desarrollo, CIDES-UMSA, Bolivia Movimientos Societales Indígenas y Resistencias Comunitarias En América Del Sur: Más Allá De Los Gobiernos “Progresistas”, Una Mirada Desde Una ‘Epistemología Del Sur’ 539.2 Alexis CORTES MORALES, Universidad Alberto Hurtado, Chile La Sociología De Alain Touraine y El Movimiento De Pobladores Chileno 539.3 Breno BRINGEL, Universidade Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Social Actors and Latin American Social Thought: Contributions for Decentring Social Movement Studies 539.4 Miguel BORJA ALARCON, Escuela Superior de Administracion Publica-ESAP, Colombia La Investigación Acción Participativa y La Construcción De Una Sociología Global 539.5 Antimo Luigi FARRO, Sapienza University Of Rome, Italy For an Analysis of the Global Reality

Social Movements, Sociology and Climate Change

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizers: Jackie SMITH, Pittsburg University, USA and Esin ILERI, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Turkey

262

538.6 Joost DE MOOR, University of Antwerp, Belgium Demanding Policy Change, Taking Direct Action, or Promoting Alternatives: Explaining Differential Participation in the International Climate Change Movement

Chair: Angela PAIVA, PUC-Rio, Brazil

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

538

538.5 Yosuke TATSUNO, Sophia University, Japan Transnationalizing Dynamics of Social Movements : Using the Integral Approach of Social Movement Theories

539.6 Simeon NEWMAN, Sociology, University of Michigan, USA and Laura ENRIQUEZ, Sociology, University of CaliforniaBerkeley, USA The State and the Agrarian Public Sphere in Venezuela

www.isa-sociology.org

RC47 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

540.9 Narda HENRIQUEZ, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Peru Derechos Humanos Como Mito Movilizador: Mujeres y Poblaciones Originarias En perú

09:00-10:30 540

Social Movements in the Global Age. Part I

Location: Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Priska DAPHI, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany ROUNDTABLES:

540.7 Anna KRAUSOVA, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Understanding Protest Outcomes: Indigenous Movements, Demand Making and the State in Latin America

What is left from 2011.

Environmentalist Movements:Local & digital activism Chair: Dorismilda FLORES, ITESO / UAA, Mexico ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 540.10 Michael BRIGUGLIO, University of Malta, Malta Digital Activism, Physical Activism: Malta’s Front Harsien Odz 540.5 Hande PAKER, Istanbul Policy Center, Sabancı University, Turkey Engaging Climate Change in Transnational Spheres: Cosmopolitan Concerns, Local Mobilization and Environmental Civil Society in Turkey 540.14 Anna WIEMANN, University of Hamburg, Germany Media Strategies of Movement Actors in Times of Increasing Mass Media (Self)-Control: The Case of the Japanese AntiNuclear Movement Since the 2011 Fukushima Disaster 540.4 Fanni BARSONY, Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary Urban Community Gardens in Hungary: Part of a Social and Environmental Movement?

Precarity & Social Movement Synergies in Southern Europe Organizer: Daniele DI NUNZIO, Fondazione Di Vittorio, Italy Chair: Mario DIANI, University of Trento, Italy

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 540.11 Viviana ASARA, Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria and Anna SUBIRATS, European University Institute, Italy From the Indignados Movement to “Barcelona En Comú”: Continuities, Identities and Challenges 540.15 Antonio ALVAREZ-BENAVIDES, Centre d’Analyse et d’Intervention Sociologique (CADIS-EHESS), France The 15M (indignados) Take Power: The Case of the City of Madrid. 540.3 Baran Alp UNCU, Marmara University, Turkey The Transformative Impact of the Gezi Protests on New Social Movements in Turkey 540.8 Hayriye OZEN, Atilim University, Turkey Was It a Hopeless Battle? Consequences of the Gezi Park Protests in Turkey

What is left from 2011. Part II

10:45-12:15 541

Social Movements in the Global Age. Part II

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Paolo GERBAUDO, King`s College London, United Kingdom

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 540.12 Elísio ESTANQUE, University of Coimbra, Portugal Precarious Work and “Middle Class” Struggles 540.2 Daniele DI NUNZIO, Fondazione Di Vittorio, Italy Precarious Workers’ Collective Actions in Italy: Between Silos and Synergies in the Fragmentation of the Working and Social Life 540.6 Steffen LIEBIG, Friedrich Schiller-University Jena, Institute of Sociology, Germany and Stefan SCHMALZ, Friedrich Schiller-University, Germany The Fragmentation of Social Conflicts in Western Europe. a Typology of Non-Institutionalized Labor Protests

Social Movements in Latin America Chair: Sergio TAMAYO, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 540.1 Fernando NOBRE CAVALCANTE, Faculdade 7 de Setembro, Brazil and Dilson ALEXANDRE, Faculdade 7 de Setembro, Brazil “This Is My Dream, That’s Why I Fight”. Love, Law and Solidarity: Stories of a Brazilian Young Activist Pro-MST

ROUNDTABLES:

Digital Activism Chair: Emiliano TRERE, Universidad de Queretaro, Mexico ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 541.7 Maria BAKARDJIEVA, University of Calgary, Canada and Delia DUMITRICA, Erasmus University, Netherlands Activation Trajectories: Tracing the Role of Social Media in Civic Mobilizations in Bulgaria and Canada 541.3 Alberto COSSU, University of Milan, Italy and Maria Francesca MURRU, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore Milano, Italy Beyond Network Structuralism: Weaving Webs of Publis in ART-Activism. 541.1 Christina JERNE, Aarhus University, Denmark Mafia Apps: Assembling Alternative Geographies of Protest 541.8 Rosa Esther ROSANO RODRIGUEZ, CIMEOS - Universite de Bourgogne, France The Role of Independent and Alternative Media As Base of a Social Movement and International Solidarity: The Ayotzinapa Affair in Mexico and Europe.

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Social Classes and Social Movements

Language: Spanish, French, English

540.13 Roberto CARRILLO SAENZ, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium Individual Determinants That Trigger Protest Participation: The Case of Mexico City

RC47

Monday 11 July

No. 541

RC47

No. 542

Program–Session Details

541.6 Christina NEUMAYER, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Luca ROSSI, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark and Bjorn KARLSSON, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark When Police Hijacked #Blockupy Frankfurt: A Critical Analysis of Activists’ Social Media Tactics

Social Classes and Social Movements

Chair: Yavuz YILDIRIM, Nigde University, Turkey ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 541.5 Claudia SCHUETZ, University of Innsbruck, Department for Sociology, Austria Capuling during and after Gezi - the Formation of a New Identity of a Young Liberalized Generation in Turkey. 541.2 Demet LUKUSLU, Yeditepe University, Turkey Not the Future,Not the Past Only the Present… the Case Study of Young Activists in Turkey 541.4 Sofia LAINE, Finnish Youth Research Network, Finland “We Still Have Walls Where to Paint”. from Two Young Actors’ Initiative to a Global Graffiti Movement. Case Study of “Zwewla” (“Miserables”)

14:15-15:45 What’s Left of 2011? Continuities and Outcomes of the 2011 Protests

543.1 Serhat KARAKAYALI, Berlin Institute for Migration Research, Humboldt University, Germany Volunteering for Refugees - Sources for Transnational Solidarity

543.3 Helen SCHWENKEN, University of Osnabruck, Germany; Maren KIRCHHOFF, University of Osnabrück, Germany and Verena STERN, University of Vienna, Austria Same Same but Different? Challenging Dublin-Deportations in Austria and Germany 543.4 Johanna PROBST, SFM Universite de Neuchatel, Switzerland and Dina BADER, Université de Lausanne, Switzerland Saving Deportees: Dynamics of Mobilizations Against Deportation in Switzerland DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 543.5 Elias STEINHILPER, Scuola Normale Superiore, Italy Mobilizing within Networks of Solidarity: Resource Mobilization and Embeddedness of Refugee Activists in Local Solidarity Networks in Berlin, Germany

JS-35 Social Movements and the Future They Want

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Lorenzo ZAMPONI, European University Institute, Italy and Priska DAPHI, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany Chair: Priska DAPHI, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 542.1 Haris MALAMIDIS, Scuola Normale Superiore, Italy Treatment for Democracy? the Case of Social Clinics in Greece 542.2 Paolo GERBAUDO, King’s College London, United Kingdom The Indignant Citizen: From the Politics of Autonomy to the Politics of Radical Citizenship 542.3 Anastasia KAVADA, University of Westminster, United Kingdom From Occupy Wall Street to Occupy Sandy: Socio-Technical Infrastructures As Social Movement Outcomes 542.4 Henry RAMMELT, Sciences Po Paris/ Sciences Po Lyon (Triangle), France The Lasting Influences of Social Mobilization. the Effects of the 2011/ 2012 Romanian Anti-Austerity Protests on Subsequent Movements.

16:00-17:30 543

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

543.2 Nina MERHAUT, Universität Wien, Austria and Didier RUEDIN, University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland Anti-Deportation Protest in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland

Young Activists and the Future they want

542

RC47 Tuesday 12 July

Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements See Joint Session Details for JS-35.

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 JS-39 The Sociology of Social Movements As a General Sociology. Around and with Alain Touraine

Committees: RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements (Host); RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change See Joint Session Details for JS-39.

10:45-12:15 544

Environmental Movements in the Age of Climate Change

Location: Elise Richter Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Christopher ROOTES, University of Kent, United Kingdom Chair: Christopher ROOTES, University of Kent, United Kingdom

Moving Refugees? Mobilisation and Outcomes of Refugee Movements, Solidarity Groups, and Anti-Asylum Activities

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Ilker ATAC, University of Osnabrück, Germany and Sieglinde ROSENBERGER, University of Vienna, Austria

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 544.1 Neil CARTER, University of York, United Kingdom and Mike CHILDS, Friends of the Earth, United Kingdom The Big Ask: An Exercise in Effective Policy Entrepreneurship 544.2 Nathalie BERNY, Sciences Po Bordeaux, France Times of Change, Times for Change: The Environmental NGOs in the ‘brussels Bubble’ 544.3 Cecelia WALSH-RUSSO, Hardwick College, USA and Mary WALSH, St. John Fisher College, USA It’s All Local? Climate Change Adaptation Policies, Climate Action Groups and U.S. Local Governments

264

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RC47 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45 JS-44 Democracy in the Squares: Global

Resistence Movements and Women

Committees: RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements (Host); RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change See Joint Session Details for JS-44.

546.1 Lisa WALDNER, University of St. Thomas, USA and Betty DOBRATZ, Iowa State University, USA Rapport, Respect, and Dissonance: Studying the White POWER Movement in the United States 546.2 Wolfram SCHAFFAR, University of Vienna, Austria and Naruemon THABCHUMPON, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand Social Media-Based Far Right Movements in Thailand 546.3 Derya GOCER AKDER, Middle East Technical University, Turkey and Kubra OAYUZ, Middle East Technical University, Turkey When All Roles Are Reversed: Studying Nationalist Youth in Gezi Resistance 546.4 Yoojin KOO, The University of Tokyo, Japan The Complex Political Context of Conservative Mobilization in Japan: Utilizing the Event Data from Periodicals

16:00-17:30

10:45-12:15

545

547

From Indymedia to #Occupywallstreet and Anti-Austerity Protests in Europe: Three Generations of Digital Activism Logics

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Tod WOLFSON, Rutgers University, USA; Emiliano TRERE, Autonomous University of Queretaro, Mexico; Peter FUNKE, University of South Florida, USA and Paolo GERBAUDO, King`s College London, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 545.1 Breno BRINGEL, Universidade Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Livia ALCANTARA, State University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Social Movements, Digital Activism and Patterns of Global Contestation 545.2 Peter FUNKE, University of South Florida, USA and Tod WOLFSON, Todd Wolfson Rutgers University, USA The Rhizomatic Epoch of Contention: From the Zapatistas to the European Anti-Austerity Protests 545.3 Emiliano TRERE, Lakehead University, Canada; Sandra JEPPESEN, Lakehead University, Canada and Alice MATTONI, European University Institute, Italy Anti-Austerity Social Movement Repertoires of Communication: A Diachronic Analysis of Protest Media Legacies in Southern Europe 545.4 Perrin OGUN EMRE, Kadir Has University, Turkey and Gulum SENER, Arel University, Turkey Digital Activism and Censorship in the Post-Gezi Era

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 547.1 Mario DIANI, University of Trento, Italy; Henrik ERNSTSON, African Center for Cities, UCT, South Africa and Lorien JASNY, University of Exeter, United Kingdom The Structure of Urban Struggles: Insights from South Africa and Britain 547.2 Anna DEUTSCHMANN, Universität Wien, Austria Mobilization – Organization – Instituionalization Students As Political Actors in Kenya 547.3 Nora MCKEON, Rome 3 University, Italy The Network of Peasant and Agricultural Producers’ Organizations of West Africa (ROPPA) and the Global Food Sovereignty Movement

14:15-15:45 JS-56 Young Activists, Subjectivity and “the Future They Want”

Committees: RC34 Sociology of Youth (Host); RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements See Joint Session Details for JS-56.

16:00-17:30 RC47 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

09:00-10:30 546

Session Organizer: Marcelle DAWSON, University of Otago, New Zealand

548

Wednesday 13 July

Popular Dissent in Sub-Saharan Africa

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

Thursday 14 July

Far Right Movements and Social Research

09:00-10:30

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Chikako MORI, Hitotsubashi University, Japan and Emanuele TOSCANO, University Guglielmo Marconi, Italy Chair: Emanuele TOSCANO, University Guglielmo Marconi, Italy

549

Cultural Signification: Making Sense of Action in Social Movements

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Daishiro NOMIYA, Chuo University, Japan Chair: Daishiro NOMIYA, Chuo University, Japan

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Social Classes and Social Movements

544.5 Joost DE MOOR, University of Antwerp, Belgium Demanding Policy Change, Taking Direct Action, or Promoting Alternatives: Explaining Differences and Overlaps in Strategic Preferences within the Climate Change Movement

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC47

544.4 Marc HUDSON, Sustainable Consumption Institute, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Learning from Failure: Local Climate Activism from Success to Stasis

No. 549

Social Classes and Social Movements

RC47

No. 550

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 549.1 Kin-man CHAN, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Co-Creating Movement Symbols: The Umbrella Movement of Hong Kong

551

Session Organizers: Simin FADAEE, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany and Breno BRINGEL, Universidade Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

549.3 Paola REBUGHINI, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy Emancipative Movements, Emancipative Agency: Framing New Conceptualizations

Chair: Eiji HAMANISHI, Notre Dame Seishin University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 551.1 Simin FADAEE, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany Contextualizing the Iranian Environmental Movement

549.4 Antimo Luigi FARRO, Sapienza University Of Rome, Italy The Subjectivation of Collective Movements

551.2 Antje DANIEL, University of Bayreuth, Germany Being in-Between – the Women’s Movements in Kenya

549.5 Maria NARANJO BOTERO, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Colombia Acciones Colectivas De LOS Destechados Colombianos Desde La Subjetividad Y La Raz”N

551.3 Esin ILERI, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Turkey From Inequalities to Liberties: The Rise of New Social Movements in Contemporary Turkey

10:45-12:15

551.4 Hayriye OZEN, Atilim University, Turkey and Sukru OZEN, Yildirim Beyazit University, Turkey Rights-Based or Anti-Systemic? Environmental Protest Movements in Turkey

Social Movements in the Arab World

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Maha ABDELRAHMAN, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom

551.5 Sebastian AGUIAR, Universidad de la República, Uruguay and Gabriel CHOUHY, University of Pittsburgh, USA Leftwing Politics, Social Movements and Marijuana Legalization in Uruguay: A Peripheral Democracy Challenges the Transnational Drug Policy Paradigm.

Chair: Maha ABDELRAHMAN, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Discussant: Maha ABDELRAHMAN, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 550.1 Nadim MIRSHAK, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Egyptian Civil Society and (Political) Education: Opportunities for Resilient Authoritarianism, or Prospects for a “Radical” Educational Movement? 550.2 Jeffrey GOODWIN, New York University, USA ISIL As a Transnational Social Movement

Genesis of the New Social Movements in the Global South

Location: Hörsaal 26 (Main Building)

549.2 Jin-Wook SHIN, Chung-Ang University, South Korea From Democracy to Welfare State: The Evolution of a Cultural Theme in Korean Social Movements

550

RC47 Thursday 14 July

16:00-17:30 JS-72 Silos or Synergies? Can Labor Build

Effective Alliances with Other Global Social Movements

Committees: RC44 Labor Movements (Host); RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements See Joint Session Details for JS-72.

550.3 Malak ROUCHDY, The American University in Cairo, Egypt Egyptian RURAL Protests Between the Urban Imaginary Construct and State Politics

NOTES

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RC48 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

Chair: Sara HELMAN, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 Opening Session with Saskia Sassen, Donatella Della Porta and Maha Abdelrahman

Committees: RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change (Host); RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements See Joint Session Details for JS-6.

10:45-12:15 The Transnationality of Transnational Movements

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Helena FLAM, University of Leipzig, Germany Chair: Micha FIEDLSCHUSTER, University of Leipzig, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 552.1 Priscila CARVALHO, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais/ Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil When Social Movements and States Ally: The Associations That Led to the Creation of Reaf/Mercosur 552.2 Yan LONG, Indiana University, USA Governing the Post-Communist Body: Transnational Pressure, State Apparatuses, and Local Social Movements 552.3 Radhika BORDE, Cultural Geography Group, Wageningen University, Netherlands Cosmopolitanism and the Niyamgiri Movement: The Role of an International Constituency of Support for a Social Movement in India 552.4 Mischa DEKKER, EHESS, France Feminism or Security? the Transnational Campaign Against Street Harassment 552.5 Stephanie LIMONCELLI, Loyola Marymount University, USA The Emergence and Development of Anti-Human Trafficking Advocacy Worldwide

12:30-14:00 JS-14 Women’s Activism in the Most Recent Cycle of Global Protests

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change See Joint Session Details for JS-14.

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Hank JOHNSTON, San Diego State University, USA

Sunday 10 July

552

Targets in the Field: Relational Perspectives on Social Movement Objects

553.1 Keisuke MORI, Ph.D Candidate Hitotsubashi University, Japan How to Clarify the Interactions Between Social Movement and Its Opponents: A Case Study of Anti-Base Construction Movement in US-Occupied Okinawa. 553.2 Hiromi MAKITA, The University of Tokyo, Japan Government As an Active Target: Multi-Agent Simulation of the Water War in Cochabamba, Bolivia 553.3 Nora ATEIA, SFB 923, Universität Tübingen, Germany; Courtney DORROLL, Wofford College, USA and Katharina WINKLER, Ludwig-Uhland-Institut, Universität Tübingen, Germany “She’s a Spy!” - Trust/Mistrust Relations in Social Movement Research

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 554

Methodological Challenges in Social Movements Research

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Liana Maria DAHER, University of Catania, Italy Chair: Liana Maria DAHER, University of Catania, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 554.1 Takeshi WADA, The University of Tokyo, Japan and Yoshiyuki AOKI, The University of Tokyo, Department of Area Studies (Asia), Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Japan Association Rule Analysis of the Repression-Dissent Dynamics 554.2 Charles KIRSCHBAUM, Insper, Brazil and Angela ALONSO, CEBRAP, Brazil Co-Constitution of Protest Repertoires and Performances through Protest Cycles 554.3 Katia VALENZUELA FUENTES, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Challenges of Militant Research in the Study of Autonomous Movements 554.4 Joshua BLAMIRE, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom Militant Ethnography with the Anti-Austerity Movement: Co-Producing Radical Discourses on the Crisis 554.5 Franka SCHAFER, Institut of Sociology FernUniversität Hagen, Germany Protest Between Discours and Practice - the Emergence of an Efficacious Formation of Practice of Protest in Germany in the Early 1960s until Today.

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Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

Program Coordinator: Tova BENSKI, College of Management Studies, Israel

553

RC48

14:15-15:45

RC48

JS-6

No. 554

Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

RC48

No. 555

Program–Session Details

10:45-12:15

10:45-12:15

555

558

Social Movements As Memory Communities: Collective Remembrance Actions in Contested Contexts

RC48 Tuesday 12 July

Confession, Testimony and Insurgency As Repertoires of Contention in Conflict Zones: The Middle East

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Camilo TAMAYO GOMEZ, The University of Huddersfield, United Kingdom

Session Organizer: Sara HELMAN, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

Chair: Anna DOMARADZKA, University of Warsaw, Poland

Chair: Tova BENSKI, College of Management Studies, Israel

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

555.1 Priska DAPHI, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany Remembering the ‘Long 1960s’: How Contemporary Left and Right-Wing Movements in Germany Relate to a Contentious Past

558.1 Sara HELMAN, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel Challenging the Israeli Occupation through Testimony and Confession: The Case of Anti-Denial Movements Machsom Watch and Breaking the Silence

555.2 Crystal EDDINS, Michigan State University, USA African Diaspora Memory Communities: Rituals, Rebels, and the Haitian Revolution

558.2 Edna LOMSKY-FEDER, Department of Sociology and Anthropology and School of Education, Israel and Orna SASSON-LEVY, Department of Sociology and Anthroplogy Bar Ilan University, Israel Dis/Acknowledging Military Violence: Women Soldiers Testify Against the Occupation

555.3 Demet LUKUSLU, Yeditepe University, Turkey Collective Memory As a “Weapon of the Weak”: The Constuction of the Collective Memory of the 68 Generation in Turkey

14:15-15:45 556

Mobilization in the Social Media Worlds

558.3 Hiroyuki SUZUKI, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Japan The Memorial Days and the Persistence of the Movement: A Study on the Palestinian Mass Mobilization from 1987 to 1993

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

14:15-15:45

Session Organizer: Tin-Yuet TING, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA

JS-44 Democracy in the Squares: Global

Chair: Timothy W. LUKE, Virginia Tech, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 556.1 Jared WRIGHT, Purdue University, USA E-Movements and E-Mobilizations: A Twitter Analysis of Two Campaigns of the Anonymous Hacktivist Movement 556.2 Kota MIURA, The University of Tokyo, Japan Do Hashtags Always Trigger Large-Scale Demonstrations? -a Case Study of the Chilean Student Movement from 2012 to 2014556.3 Negar VAEZZADEH, Ankara University, Turkey and Evrim YILMAZ, Bulent Ecevit University, Turkey Iranian Women’s Stealthy Freedom 556.4 Yuanyuan QU, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom Emerging in a Digital World:the Politicization of the Internet and the Disability Activism in China

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

559

RC48 Roundtable Session 1

Language: Spanish, French, English Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Tova BENSKI, College of Management Studies, Israel ROUNDTABLES:

Discourse and framing processes

559.1 Cheris Shun-Ch. CHAN, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Lasting Struggle: Ideology, Frame Transformation, and Collective Action of the Chinese Falun Gong Movement

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 JS-39 The Sociology of Social Movements As a General Sociology. Around and with Alain Touraine

Committees: RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements (Host); RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

268

16:00-17:30

559.13 Martin KOUBEK, Charles University, Czech Republic From Emancipation to Social Work? a Dialogue Between Frames and Discursive Field of Pro-Roma Activists in the Czech Republic after 1989

RC48 Business Meeting

See Joint Session Details for JS-39.

See Joint Session Details for JS-44.

ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

16:00-17:30 557

Resistence Movements and Women

Committees: RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements (Host); RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

559.11 Philipp ALTMANN, Universidad Central del Ecuador, Ecuador Localizing Rebellion – International Development Agencies and the Rising of the Indigenous Movement in Ecuador 559.7 Ruben DIEZ GARCIA, Carlos III University of Madrid, Spain The ‘indignados’ in Space & Time: Transnational Networks & Historical Roots

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RC48 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

Mobilization, Organizations and Political Parties ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

559.2 Robert MACDONALD, Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland Local Differences in a Global Movement: The Failure of Occupy Dame Street to Resonate with the Irish Community. 559.8 Marton GERO, ELTE, Hungary; Pal SUSANSZKY, MTAELTE Peripato Comparative Social Dynamics Research Group, Hungary; Akos KOPPER, ELTE, Hungary and Gergely TOTH, MTA-ELTE Peripato Comparative Social Dynamics Research Group, Hungary The Success of Sustainable Mobilization the Embeddedness of Movements Among Voluntary Organizations and Their Success in Mobilization

Repression and protest control ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 559.6 Ingolfur GISLASON, University of Iceland, Iceland Police, Protesters, Performance and Trust the Interplay during the “Pots and Pans Revolution” in Iceland 2008-2009 559.4 Andrea ROCA, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil Street and Fire: Protests, Insurgencies and Conflict Management in Santiago, Chile. 559.12 Gaja MAESTRI, Durham University, United Kingdom Unsuccessful Pro-Roma Political Mobilisation: A Relational Explanation of the Opposition to the Roma Segregation in Rome

Women’s movements and women in movements Chair: Sylvie BIJAOUI, The College of Management, Israel ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 559.9 Mayuko YAMAMOTO, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France “ the Place Where “ I ” Become a Subject ” : The Emergence of the Contestation Movement in Post-2011 Japan and the Subjectivisation By Japanese Women 559.5 Kuntal AGARWAL, Urban Health Resource Centre, India; Kabir AGARWAL, Dept. of Economics, University of Mumbai, India and Shabnam VERMA, Urban Health Resource Centre, Indore, India, India Empowered Slum Women’s-Groups Negotiate Collectively Towards Responsive Urban Governance, Improved Access to Entitlements 559.15 Zeynep UĞUR, EHESS, France La Subjectivité Des Femmes Qui Révèle La Sphère Privée: Une étude Sur La Manifestation #Sendeanlat 559.3 Daiane SCARABOTO, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile and Maria Carolina ZANETTE, Universidade de Ribeirão Preto, Brazil Shapewear or Nothing to Wear: Ambiguity of Targets and Allies in the Plus-Size Fashion Market Activism 559.14 Esin ILERI, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Turkey Standing Against Fathers, Husbands and the State: The Intertwined Repertoires of Women’s Movements in Turkey

09:00-10:30 560

RC48 Roundtable Session 2

Language: Spanish, French, English Location: Hörsaal BIG 2 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Tova BENSKI, College of Management Studies, Israel ROUNDTABLES:

Cultural analysis and cultural resistance Housing, squatting and land use ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 560.7 Tommaso FRANGIONI, Piccolo Opificio Sociologico, Italy Conflict, Negotiation and Housing Policy Arena: An Italian Case Study 560.1 Charmain LEVY, Université du Québec en Outaouais, Canada and Anne LATENDRESSE, Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada Engendering the Urban Social Movement and Public Housing Policy in Brazil 560.10 Monica VARGAS-AGUIRRE, Universidad de Chile, Chile Land Use and Legitimacy of State the Institutions 560.6 Gabriella PUNZIANO, GSSI - Gran Sasso Science Institute, Italy and Ciro Clemente DE FALCO, University of Naples Federico II, Italy Social Movements, Crisis and Squatting Experiences: The Case of Naples

Methodological Issues ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 560.8 Francesca MININNI, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy Emotions and Ethics through Vegan Movement 560.4 Nezihe Basak ERGIN, Giresun University, Department of Sociology, Turkey and Zeynep BAYKAL, Beykent University, Turkey How to Study Social Movements?:Attempts from Movements/Beyond the Academia 560.3 Dino NUMERATO, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic Unanticipated Outcomes of Social Movements: The Case of Football Fan Activism

Rights Movements ROUNDTABLE AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 560.5 Zornitsa CHAKMAKOVA, University of Plovdiv “Paisii Hilendarski”, Bulgaria, Bulgaria Mobilizing Representations: The Condition Sine Qua Non for a Social Movement 560.2 Heng-hao CHANG, National Taipei University, Taiwan Transnational Social Movement Network and the Implementation of Crpd and in Taiwan 560.9 Janna VOGL, Max Weber Center for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies, Erfurt, Germany Violence and “Injustices” Against Women: Interventions of a Village Level Women’s Meeting in Tamil Nadu, South India

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Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

559.10 Maria da Gloria GOHN, University of Campinas, Brazil ------ New Social Movements in Brazil: The Role of Politics, Mediators and the Mass Media in the Transformation of the Mobilizations and Protests in the Streets Today.

Wednesday 13 July

RC48

559.16 Ai SONG, Keio University, Japan The Maoming Anti-PX Protest of 2014: Mass Media Vs. Social Media?

No. 560

RC48

No. 561

Program–Session Details

10:45-12:15

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

JS-53 Emotions and Social Movements Committees: RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change (Host); RC36 Alienation Theory and Research

Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

See Joint Session Details for JS-53.

562.5 Carlos MARTINEZ, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico El Aleteo De Una Mariposa En La Política Mexicana. El Efecto No Intencional Del Movimiento LGBT En La Estructura De Los Partidos Políticos.

14:15-15:45

Thursday 14 July

561

09:00-10:30

Reimagining Human Rights in India

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Tatsuya YAMAMOTO, Shizuoka University, Japan Chair: Orna SASSON-LEVY, Department of Sociology and Anthroplogy Bar Ilan University, Israel AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 561.1 Maya SUZUKI, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Japan Law and Justice from the Bottom: The Public Interest Litigation Movement in Contemporary India 561.2 Dipti Ranjan SAHU, Lucknow University, India Struggle for Justice & Human Rights Framework: Cases of Successful Protests in Eastern India 561.3 Shinya ISHIZAKA, Ehime University, Japan ‘the Right to Know Is the Right to Live’: The Right to Information Movement in India 561.4 Tatsuya YAMAMOTO, Shizuoka University, Japan Pitfalls in Appropriating Human Rights Discourses?: A Case Study of Tibetan Refugees in India (and Nepal) 561.5 Kenta FUNAHASHI, Ryukoku University, Japan Rethinking the Reservation Policy in Contemporary India: A Local Point of View

16:00-17:30 562

RC48 Thursday 14 July

Beyond Stated Goals: Unanticipated and Unintended Outcomes of Social Movements.

563

The Occupy Protests: Visual Iconology and Image Events

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Miri GAL-EZER, Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee, Israel Chair: Hillel NOSSEK, The Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee, Israel AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 563.1 Sirin DILLI, Giresun Üniversitesi, Turkey and Rasim Ozgur DONMEZ, Abant Izzet Baysal University, Turkey Reconfiguring Protests in the Media Milieu: Iconic Productions from Gezi Park Movements 563.2 Lilia RAYCHEVA, The St. Kliment Ohridski Sofia University, Bulgaria; Nelly VELINOVA, The St. Kliment Ohridski Sofia University, Bulgaria and Mariyan TOMOV, The St. Kliment Ohridski Sofia University, Bulgaria The Media Image of the Social Protests in Bulgaria 563.3 Miri GAL-EZER, Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee, Israel Israeli “Social Justice” Protests Iconic Images 563.4 Lisa BOGERTS, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany Weapons of Countervisuality? Street Art As a Practice of Rule or Resistance

10:45-12:15 564

Mass Violence in the 20th/21th Century and Emotions

Language: English, Spanish

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

Session Organizers: Ilan LEW, University of Geneve, Switzerland and Dieter REICHER, University of Graz, Austria

Session Organizer: Ligia TAVERA FENOLLOSA, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Mexico Chair: Ligia TAVERA FENOLLOSA, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Mexico AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 562.1 Liana Maria DAHER, University of Catania, Italy Exploring Memories, Understanding Legacies. the Biographical Approach in the Study of Social Movements’ Unanticipated Consequences 562.2 Begonya ENGUIX, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain Business, Politics and Activism: LGTB Activism in Spain and Its ‘unintended’ Outcomes 562.3 Joaline PARDO NUNEZ, CIATEJ- México, Mexico The Unintended Outcome of Emotions within Social Movements: Division of the Movement for Food Sovereignty in Mexico. 562.4 Hye Won UM, University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA Movement Success and Its Unintended Consequences: Focusing on Japanese War Orphans’ Litigation

270

Chair: Ilan LEW, University of Geneve, Switzerland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 564.1 Izabela SAKSON-SZAFRANSKA, University of Warsaw, Poland Anatomy of Collective Violence - When “Never Again” Happens Again and Again. 564.2 Akira OHIRA, Waseda University, Japan The Change of the Habitus of the Japanese Since the End of the Second World War 564.3 Frithjof NUNGESSER, University of Graz, Austria The Elephant (Pig, Cow, Chicken, Sheep,…) in the Room. Mass Violence Against Animals As a Non-Topic in the Sociology of Violence 564.4 Sabine HARING, Department of Sociology, KarlFranzens-Universität Graz, Austria “Comradeship” in the Habsburg Army during World War One. the Sociology of Emotions Perspective

www.isa-sociology.org

RC48 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

565

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 565.1 Nara Roberta SILVA, State University of Campinas (Unicamp), Brazil The Oldness of the New and the Newness of the Old: Comparing the Occupy Wall Street Movement and the Global Justice Movement and Illustrating Their Connections

Homogeneous, Homologous, or Interconnected? What Constitutes Global Waves of Contention?

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building)

Chair: Nils C. KUMKAR, University of Leipzig, Germany

565.3 Martin PORTOS, European University Institute, Italy Taking to the Streets in the Context of Austerity: Comparing the Cycles of Protests in Spain and Portugal, 2008-2015 565.4 Chungse JUNG, State University of New York at Binghamton, USA 2011, the Continuation of 1989?: Measuring 2011 Protest Waves in the Global South on the World-Historical Perspective

NOTES

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271

Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

565.2 Colin BARKER, Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom and John KRINSKY, City College New York, USA Theorising ‘Movement Waves’ and the Making of Collective Subjects

Session Organizers: Nils C. KUMKAR, University of Leipzig, Germany and Micha FIEDLSCHUSTER, Universitat Leipzig, Germany

RC48

14:15-15:45

No. 565

Mental Health and Illness

RC49

No. 566

Program–Session Details

RC49 Sunday 10 July

16:00-17:30

RC49

567

Mental Health and Illness Program Coordinator: Takashi ASAKURA, Tokyo Gakugei University, Laboratory of Health and Social Behavior, Japan and Silvia KRUMM, Ulm University, Germany

‘Styles of Reasoning’: The Relationship Between Aetiology, Diagnosis and Drug Treatment in the Mental Health Field

Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Johanne COLLIN, University of Montreal, Canada Chair: Johanne COLLIN, University of Montreal, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Sunday 10 July

567.1 Philippe LE MOIGNE, INSERM - CERMES3 45 rue des Saints-Pères F75006 Paris, France I Feel Bad, What Else? Prescribing As a Non Linear Relation

14:15-15:45 JS-19 Drug Use and Local and Global Public

Policies of Health: New Tensions, Complementation or Changes for Not Change?

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology (Host); RC49 Mental Health and Illness and RC15 Sociology of Health

567.2 Hiroto SHIMIZU, Osaka University, Japan Potential and Limitations of Framing Analysis in Analyzing Individual-Level Framing of an Illness Category: A Case Study on Depression in Japan

Tuesday 12 July

See Joint Session Details for JS-19.

09:00-10:30

Monday 11 July

568

09:00-10:30

Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Pia RINGOE, Aalborg University, Department of Sociology and Social Work, Denmark, Denmark

JS-28 Biography and Mental Health Committees: RC38 Biography and Society (Host); RC49 Mental Health and Illness See Joint Session Details for JS-28.

14:15-15:45 566

The Sociology of Diagnostic Systems and Its Emerging Trends

Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Kjeld HOGSBRO, Aalborg University, Denmark AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 566.1 Bruce COHEN, University of Auckland, New Zealand Diagnosing Neoliberal Subjects: A Textual Analysis of the DSM 566.2 Sofia ABOIM, University of Lisbon, Portugal and Pedro VASCONCELOS, ISCTE-IUL University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal The Political Economy of Gender Politics in Trans-Related Healthcare: Between Medical Knowledge and the Global Market 566.3 Sirry ALANG, Lehigh University, USA and Donna MCALPINE, University of Minnesota, USA Contrasting Depression Among a Sample of African Americans with Major Depressive Disorder in the DSM

272

Theoretical concepts on the role of social relationships in mental health

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 568.1 Russell SCHUTT, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA A Transdisciplinary Framework for Understanding Human Sociality and the Biological and Social Sources of Mental Illness 568.2 James LAURENCE, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Place of Mind: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Studying the Contextual-Predictors and Valenced Social-Connectivity Pathways of Mental Health and Wellbeing Amongst Adolescents 568.3 Kjeld HOGSBRO, Aalborg University, Denmark; Pia RINGOE, Aalborg University, Department of Sociology and Social Work, Denmark and Soeren JUUL, Aalborg University, Department of Sociology and Social Work., Denmark An Extended Model of Vulnerability 568.4 Claudio MAINO, Universite de Paris 5 (Descartes), France Towards a History of Depression and the Neoliberal Man 568.5 Melvin JABAR, De La Salle University Manila, Philippines Sources and Consequences of Happiness:the Sociocultural Constructs of Happiness Among Indigenous Hanunuo Mangyan Women 568.6 Lena HUNEFELD, Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Germany Atypical Employment and Mental Health in Late-Modern Societies – a Review

www.isa-sociology.org

RC49 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

569

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Social relationships of people with mental disorders

Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 569.1 Brea L. PERRY, Indiana University, USA and Bernice PESCOSOLIDO, Indiana University, USA The Missing Element in Understanding Social Network Influences on Mental Health: Correlates and Consequences of Health Regulation Ties 569.2 Ulla HELLSTRÖM MUHLI, Uppsala University, Sweden; Ann BLOMGREN MANNERHEIM, Karolinska Institution,Division of Nursing,Department of Neurobiology,Care Science and Society (NVS)., Sweden and Eleni SIOUTA, Division of Nursing, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society (NVS), Karolinska Institutet, Sweden., Sweden Parents’ Experiences of Caring Responsibility for Their Adult Child with Schizophrenia (ACWS) 569.3 Wen-Jui HAN, New York Univesity, USA and Judith SIEGEL, New York University, USA Parenting and Child Well-Being in Chinese Families with Multigenerational Trauma Exposure 569.4 Maja STIAWA, Department of Psychiatry II, LudwigHeilmeyer-Str. 2, 89312 Günzburg, Germany, Germany and Reinhold KILIAN, University of Ulm, Germany Social Networks of Children of Mentally Ill Parents 569.5 Yoshifumi MIZUKAWA, Hokusei Gakuen University, Japan; Shigeru URANO, Mie Prefectural College of Nursing, Japan and Kazuo NAKAMURA, Aomori University, Japan Tojisha/Peer Membership Categories and Sequential Order in Tojisha Kenkyu Sessions for People with Mental Illness

14:15-15:45 570

Social Relationships and Mental Health and Illness

Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Reinhold KILIAN, University of Ulm, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 570.1 Lijun SONG, Vanderbilt University, USA Network Members’ Occupational Status, Tie Strength, and Depression in Two Societies 570.2 Francisca DUSSAILLANT, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile and Eugenio GUZMAN, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Social Context 570.3 Johanna MUCKENHUBER, University of Graz, Austria and Karina FERNANDEZ, University of Graz, Austria Association Between Social Capital and Depression 570.4 Dorottya HOOR, Central European University, Hungary Social Networks and the Well-Being of Low and High Status Migrants 570.5 Heather EDELBLUTE, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA Social Relationships, Gender, and Mental Health: A Perspective from a Migrant-Sending Community in Mexico

570.7 Magdalena SZAFLARSKI, University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA Do Social Ties Protect Immigrants from Depressive Disorders?

16:00-17:30 571

Social Inclusion of Mentally Ill Persons

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Jorge CHUAQUI, UNIVERSITY OF VALPARAÍSO, Chile AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 571.1 Jorge CHUAQUI, UNIVERSITY OF VALPARAISO, Chile The Meaning of Social Inclusion 571.2 Cristian MONTENEGRO, Department of Methodology, London School of Economics and Political Sciences, United Kingdom The Global Call for Users Involvement in Mental Health Policy and the Local (in) Visibility of Users Organisation: Results from a Social Systems Based, Qualitative Case Study from Chile. 571.3 Heike STECKLUM, University of Göttingen, Germany Social Inclusion of Mentally Ill Persons from the Former German Democratic Republic (GDR) By Means of Civic Engagement 571.4 Melvin JABAR, De La Salle University Manila, Philippines Neuroadaptability of Persons with Exceptionality in the Workplace 571.5 Oscar JIMENEZ-SOLOMON, New York State Psychiatric Institute - Columbia University, USA; Pablo MENDEZ-BUSTOS, New York State Psychiatric Institute; Catholic University of Maule, Chile and Margaret SWARBRICK, Rutgers University; Collaborative Support Programs of New Jersey Wellness Institute, USA Addressing the Poverty and Social Exclusion of People with Serious Mental Illness in the United States DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 571.6 Alexandre BARIL, Institute of Feminist and Gender Studies, University of Ottawa, Canada What Does a “Better World” Mean for Suicidal People? Social Movements’ Response to Suicide

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 572

Critical Theories of Mental Health

Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Bruce COHEN, University of Auckland, New Zealand

www.isa-sociology.org

273

Mental Health and Illness

Session Organizer: Maja STIAWA, Department of Psychiatry II, Ludwig-Heilmeyer-Str. 2, 89312 Günzburg, Germany, Germany

570.6 Reinhold KILIAN, University of Ulm, Germany; AnnChristien PICCA, Ulm University, Department of Psychiatry II, Germany; Annabel MULLER-STIERLIN, Ulm University, Department of Psychiatry II, Germany and Carolin VON GOTTBERG, Ulm University, Department of Psychiatry II, Germany Social Capital As a Moderator Variable Between Neighborhood Characteristics, Perceived Environmental Safety and Mental Health

RC49

10:45-12:15

No. 572

Mental Health and Illness

RC49

No. 573

Program–Session Details

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

572.1 Dirk RICHTER, Bern University Psychiatric Services, Switzerland and Jeremy DIXON, Dept Social & Policy Sciences, University of Bath, United Kingdom The Social Construction of Mental Disorders: Three Inevitable Consequences 572.2 Silvia KRUMM, Ulm University, Germany The Impact of Critical Men’s Studies on the Concept of Depression 572.3 Lynn TANG, School of Arts and Humanities, Tung Wah College, Hong Kong Ethnic Minorities, Capabilities Approach and Recovery: The Experience of Using Mental Health Services for Chinese People in the UK 572.4 Milou VAN DER HOEK, University of Lisbon, Portugal Trans Health and Transitioning in Western Europe

10:45-12:15 573

Mental Health and Risk

Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Jeremy DIXON, Dept Social & Policy Sciences, University of Bath, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 573.1 Thiago Marques LEAO, School of Public Health of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil; Sayuri GOTO, Julio de Mesquista Filho State University of São Paulo, Brazil; Ricardo de Lima JURCA, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil and Maria Izabel Sanches COSTA, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil Mental Suffering and Risk Society in Brazil 573.2 Anne-Chie WANG, National Taiwan university, Taiwan Risks in Vulnerable Ages: Identifying Metal Health Problems of at-Risk Student through the School Guidance System 573.3 Dirk RICHTER, Bern University Psychiatric Services, Switzerland Ultimate Risk and Final Paternalism: The Medicalization of Suicidal Acts and Wishes of People with Mental Disorders 573.4 Jeremy DIXON, Dept Social & Policy Sciences, University of Bath, United Kingdom The Views of Adults with Dementia Towards Managing Future Health Care Risks.

574.1 Lindsey RICHARDSON, Department of Sociology, University of British Columbia, Canada; Evan WOOD, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Canada; Robert HOGG, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/ AIDS, Canada; Silvia GUILLEMI, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Canada; Julio MONTANER, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Canada; Thomas KERR, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Canada and M-J MILLOY, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Canada Positive Social and Socio-Economic Transitions Associated with Antiretroviral Therapy Exposure and Adherence Among HIV-Positive People Who Use Illicit Drugs in Vancouver, Canada 574.2 Bronwen LICHTENSTEIN, University of Alabama, USA HIV Stigma, Sexual Disclosure, and the Law 574.3 Thabo . FAKO, University of Botswana, Botswana and James LINN, Optimal Solutions in Healthcare and International Development, USA Preventing the Rapid Spread of HIV Among Young Women in Sub Saharan Africa 574.4 Michele KADRI, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation--Leonidas e Maria Deane Research Center, Brazil The Transformation of an HIV/Aids Social Movement in Northern Brazil: A Case Study of the State of Amazonas 574.5 Breno FONTES, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, Brazil and Luciane JARDIM, UNISINOS, Brazil AIDS, Stigma and Vulnerability: The Role of the NGOs in Providing Support 574.6 Bilyana MARTINOVSKI, Stockholm University, Sweden Enhancing the Ethical Turn in Prevention and Healthcare Services for Mental Healthcare and HIV-Positive Patients DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 574.7 Damaris RIBEIRO, Faculdade de Direito do Sul de Minas, Brazil; Rafael Lazzarotto SIMIONI, Abrasd, Brazil and Danielle Domingues de CARVALHO, FDSM Faculdade de Direito do Sul de Minas, Brazil Law, Pragmatism and Legal Autonomy: The Problems of HIV/AIDS Public Policies in Brazil 574.8 Florin LAZAR, University of Bucharest, Faculty of Sociology and Social Work, Romania and Adrian LUCA, University of Bucharest, Faculty of Psychology and Education, Romania HIV Stigma and Coping in Romania

573.5 Linda MOSSBERG, Department of Social Work, University of Gothenburg, Sweden Designations and Categorisation: Its Content and Consequences in the Swedish Mental Health Landscape.

16:00-17:30

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

575

573.6 Anne-Chie WANG, National Taiwan university, Taiwan Every Youth As Problematic: Identifying Mental Health Problems Among Juveniles through the School Guidance System

RC49 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Chair: Takashi ASAKURA, Tokyo Gakugei University, Laboratory of Health and Social Behavior, Japan

Thursday 14 July

14:15-15:45 574

RC49 Thursday 14 July

A World without Aids: eliminating the Pandemic through Improved Global Access to HIV/AIDS Prevention,Treatment,Care and Stigma Reduction Programs

10:45-12:15 JS-66 Youth Mental Health: Intersections and Directions

Language: English, French

Committees: RC49 Mental Health and Illness (Host); RC34 Sociology of Youth

Location: Hörsaal 6B P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

See Joint Session Details for JS-66.

Session Organizer: James LINN, Optimal Solutions in Healthcare and International Development, USA

274

www.isa-sociology.org

RC51 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

Sociocybernetics

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 Modern Sociological Systems Theory in Practice – Applications to Societal Problems

577.3 Isabel KUSCHE, Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies, Denmark Gradual Differentiation and Justifiable Cognizance: Adjusting the Notion of Functional Differentiation 577.4 Till JANSEN, University of Witten/Herdecke, Germany Towards a De-Ontologized Notion of Society 577.5 Michael PAETAU, Center for Sociocybernetics Studies, Germany Money As a Medium/Form-Distinction: The Challenge of Blockchain-Economy to Luhmann’s Concept of Money As a Symbolically Generalized Communication Medium.

14:15-15:45 578

Sociocybernetics, Simulation and Anticipation: Paradigms and Challenges

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

Language: English, Spanish

Session Organizer: Karl-Heinz SIMON, University of Kassel, Germany

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

Chair: Karl-Heinz SIMON, University of Kassel, Germany

Session Organizer: Luciano GALLON, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Chair: Roberto MANCILLA, (RC51 Member), Mexico

576.1 Toru TAKAHASHI, Chuo University, Japan Systems Theory and Governing: Towards a Sociological Theory of Societal Efforts 576.2 Tom R. BURNS, Uppsala University, Sweden; Nora MACHADO DES JOHANSSON, ISCTE-IUL ISCTE - University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal; Dolores CALVO, Gothenburg University, Sweden; Ugo CORTE, Department of Sociology, University of Uppsala, Sweden; Alexandra WALKER, Australian National University, Australia; Ilan KELMAN, University College London, England and Monica FREITAS, Faculty of Social Science, Nova University of Lisbon, Portugal The Sociology of Complex Social Systems: Applications of Moderns Systems Theory to Practical Problems 576.3 Gabriel ECHEVERRIA CUBELLO, Università degli Studi di Trento, Italy Towards a Sistemic Theory of Irregular Migration 576.4 Michael PAETAU, Center for Sociocybernetics Studies, Germany Refugees Welcome? Mass Migration As a Highly Complex Steering Problem 576.5 Hsiao-Mei JUAN, National Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan Structural Coupling: Conflicts and Co-Evolution Between Religious Animal Release and Ecological Risk

578.1 Hector ZAMORANO GALLEANO, RC51, Argentina Sociocybernetics: Designing Mathematical Models and Its Simulation As a Decision Support System. 578.2 Gerson BEDOYA, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia and Luciano GALLON, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia Characterization of Development Models and Its Impact on Policy Implementation 578.3 Juan Carlos BARRON-PASTOR, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), Mexico Critical Sociocybernetics and Mediascapes in North America: Prospective Scenarios 578.4 Raija KOSKINEN, University of Helsinki, Finland The Work of Pickering and Luhmann Theoretically Viewed from within Current Social Work Practice 578.5 Saburo AKAHORI, Tokyo Woman’s Christian University, Japan Society As an Observing System: A Perspective By Incongruity?

16:00-17:30 579

10:45-12:15 577

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Critical Assessment of Systems Approach in Sociology: To Update the Theory of Society

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Saburo AKAHORI, Tokyo Woman’s Christian University, Japan Chair: Eva BUCHINGER, Austrian Institute of Technology AIT, Austria AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 577.1 Cornelia SCHADLER, University of Vienna, Austria and Jasmin SIRI, Ludwigs Maximilians University Munich, Germany Communication and Situated Intra-Action: Entangling Systems Theory and New Materialism

Sociocybernetic Understandings of the Human Condition

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Bernard SCOTT, Centre for Sociocybernetics Studies, United Kingdom Chair: Bernard SCOTT, Center for Sociocybernetic Studies, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 579.1 Bernard SCOTT, Center for Sociocybernetic Studies, Germany Sociocybernetic Reflections on the Human Condition 579.2 Helmut K. LOECKENHOFF, -, Germany On (Socio-) Semio- Cybernetics of Life

www.isa-sociology.org

275

Sociocybernetics

Program Coordinator: Chaime MARCUELLO-SERVOS, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain and Patricia ALMAGUERKALIXTO, Interdisciplinary Institute on Human Ecology and Sustainability (INTERHES), Mexico

RC51

577.2 Wolfgang HOFKIRCHNER, vienna university of technology, Austria Convergences of General System Theory, Critical Realism and Theory of Society

RC51

576

No. 579

Sociocybernetics

RC51

No. 580

Program–Session Details

579.3 Pablo NAVARRO, University of Valencia, Spain Social Subjects, Social Objects and Their Mutual Bootstrapping: A Constructivist View on the Morphogenesis of Human Societies

10:45-12:15

579.4 Jorge CARDIEL, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico The Technological and the Human in Contemporary Society: Artifacts, Devices and Representations

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

579.5 Jesper TÆKKE, Aarhus University, Denmark and Michael PAULSEN, Aalborg University, Denmark Between Competencies and Bildung in the Digital Medium Environment

Tuesday 12 July

Session Organizer: Juan David GOMEZ QUINTERO, University of Zaragoza. Psicology and Sociology., Spain Chair: Fernando GONZALEZ MIGUEL, THEMOLINO PROYECTOS, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 581.1 Wei-Hsin HSIAO, Universität Witten/Herdecke, Germany User, Community and Communication

581.3 Roberto MANCILLA, (RC51 Member), Mexico Complexity and the Viable System Model: A Proposal

Sociocybernetics and Complex Problems. Part I

Language: Spanish Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Patricia ALMAGUER-KALIXTO, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico Chair: Hector ZAMORANO GALLEANO, RC51, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 580.1 Abril GAMBOA ESTEVES, Benemerita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla, Mexico; Maria Alejandra PONCE MORALES, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Mexico; Norma Angelica MARTINEZ LOPEZ, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Mexico; Maria Del Carmen TENORIO CONTRERAS, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Mexico; Alejandro GEORGE CRUZ, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Mexico and Carmen Wendy CASANOVA REYES, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Mexico Investigación e Interdisciplina: Reto y Estrategia En Grupo 580.2 Jaime GONZALEZ CHAVEZ, Universidad De La Salle, Mexico and Efrain DELGADO RIVERA, Universidad De La Salle, Mexico El Trabajo Interdisciplinario Como Experiencia Formativa En Estudiantes De Posgrado: El Patrimonio Cultural Hña Hñu En El Estado De Guanajuato, México. 580.3 Juan David GOMEZ QUINTERO, University of Zaragoza. Psicology and Sociology., Spain and Jesus CARRERAS AGUERRI, University of Zaragoza, Spain La Enseñanza De La Comunicación En El Trabajo Social: Claves De Una Didáctica Interdisciplinar 580.4 Alan ALBERT, DCHDI -UADEC/UNAM, USA; Patricia ALMAGUER-KALIXTO, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico; Michiko AMEMIYA-RAMIREZ, DCHDI, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico; Juan Jaime ANAYA, DCHDI, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico; Luis Miguel AREVALO, DCHDI, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico; Fernando CARRILLO, DCHDI, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico; Carla Patricia GALAN-GUEVARA, Universidad Auntónoma de México, Mexico; Claudia LUNA, DCHDI, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico; Ana Yesica MARTINEZ, DCHDI, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico; Lilia TERAN, DCHDI, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico and Monica SUAREZ, DCHDI, UAdeC-UNAM, Colombia Investigación Interdisciplinaria En Conocimiento y Gestión Ambiental: Una Reflexión Desde La Sociocibernética Sobre Una Experiencia Formativa.. 580.5 Gloria LONDOÑO, Profesional Autonoma, Colombia Relatos Digitales Personales Como Estrategia De Investigación Interdisciplinaria De Sociedades En Conflicto

276

Sociocybernetics and Complex Problems. Part II

581.2 Andrew MITCHELL, Kumamoto University, Japan The Problem of Legitimacy in Japan’s Political System: A Luhmannian Perspective

09:00-10:30 580

581

RC51 Tuesday 12 July

581.4 Marzia ANTENORE, Communication and Social Research Department, Sapienza - University of Rome, Italy; Alessandro PANCONESI, Computer Science Department, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy; Giovanna LEONE, Communication and Social Research Department, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy and Erisa TEROLLI, Computer Science Department, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy The Computational Psychology of Digital Shop Assistants 581.5 Giovanni BOCCIA ARTIERI, University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy; Fabio GIGLIETTO, University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy and Laura GEMINI, University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy Citizenfour: Internet Publics and the Imaginary of Privacy. a Content Analysis of Twitter Commentaries Around the 2015 Oscar Winning Documentary

14:15-15:45 582

Data and Society

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Fabio GIGLIETTO, University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy Chair: Czeslaw MESJASZ, Cracow University of Economics, Poland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 582.1 Luca ROSSI, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Christina NEUMAYER, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark and Morten HJELHOLT, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark The Shadow of Big Data: Data-Citizenship and Exclusion 582.2 Daniel KERPEN, Institute of Sociology at RWTH Aachen University, Germany and Michael EGGERT, Institute of Sociology at RWTH Aachen University, Germany The Everyday Data Collectors: Privacy, Surveillance and Cloud-Based Smartphone Applications 582.3 Manuela FARINOSI, University of Udine, Italy and Sakari TAIPALE, University of Jyväskylä, Finland Exploring the Online Practices of Self-Disclosure, Privacy Concerns and Gender Differences in the Time of Facebook 582.4 Alexandre VELOSO, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain Public Policies on Big Data and Open Data: Ibge, a Sociocybernetical Approach 582.5 Bianca PRIETL, Department of Sociology, Germany Towards a Sociological Perspective on Data Society

www.isa-sociology.org

RC51 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

583

Sociocybernetics, Transitional Justice and Other Issues

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

Chair: Michael PAETAU, Centre of Sociocybernetics, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 583.1 Wendy LOPEZ JUAREZ, Centro de Estudios Interdisciplinarios en Religión y Cultura (CEIRC) Oaxaca., Mexico and Chaime MARCUELLO-SERVOS, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain Violence As System: A Case Study of Migrant Disappearances in Oaxaca 583.2 Jorge GARCÍA CASTRO, Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico Thinking a Different Way to Govern: The Challenge of Political Decisions in a Complex Society 583.3 Fernando GONZALEZ MIGUEL, THEMOLINO PROYECTOS, Spain Science, Complexity and Emotions: Proposals for a New Urban Sociology 583.4 Philipp ALTMANN, Universidad Central del Ecuador, Ecuador The Indigenous Movement in Ecuador As an Exercise of SelfInclusion – a Luhmannian View on Social Movements in the Global South

585

Science Its Power, Responsibility and the Limits of Human Knowing

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Arne KJELLMAN, Stockholm University, Sweden Chair: Chaime MARCUELLO-SERVOS, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 585.1 Arne KJELLMAN, Stockholm University, Computer and Systems Sciences, Sweden, Sweden The Limits of Knowing and Re-Emergence of Human Feeling in Science. 585.2 Gaston BECERRA, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina and Jose Antonio AMOZURRUTIA, Centro de Investigaciones Interdisciplinarias en Ciencias y Humanidades (CEIICH). UNAM, Mexico Rolando García’s Complex Systems Theory and Its Relevance to Sociocybernetics 585.3 Karl-Heinz SIMON, University of Kassel, Germany Gotthard Guenther’s Claim for a Cybernetics of Volition

Wednesday 13 July

585.4 Fermin ARELLANO MORLAS, RC51, Spain The Society of the Brain: An Introduction

09:00-10:30 584

10:45-12:15

La Investigación Interdisciplinaria desde la Sociocibernética y Sistemas Sociales Complejos

Language: English, Spanish

585.5 Hsiao-Mei JUAN, National Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan The Withdrawal and Comeback of Subject from Niklas Luhmann’s Perspectives

14:15-15:45

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Elisa Margarita MAASS, UNAM, Mexico Chair: Lilia TERAN, DCHDI, UAdeC-UNAM, Mexico

586

Social Forces behind Our Backs Searching for Points of Intervention

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 584.1 Jose Antonio AMOZURRUTIA, Centro de Investigaciones Interdisciplinarias en Ciencias y Humanidades (CEIICH). UNAM, Mexico and Leticia RODRIGUEZ AUDIRAC, Universidad Veracruzana, Mexico Educación y Complejidad: Hacia Una Articulación Interdisciplinaria 584.2 Abel RODRÍGUEZ MALDONADO, UAdeC, UNAM, Mexico Construcción Identitaria De La Vejez: El Reto De La Resignificación Desde La Infancia. 584.3 Blanca GONZÁLEZ MONROY, INSTITUTO TECNOLOGICO DE ATITALAQUIA, Mexico; Alejandra PEREZ, INSTITUTO TECNOLOGICO DE ATITALAQUIA, Mexico and Melina PAREDES ACOSTA, Instituto Tecnologico de Atitalalquia, Mexico Social Impact of the Misuse of the Free Time 584.4 Elisa Margarita MAASS, RC51 member, Mexico Vejez y Vivienda. Casa De Retiro Auto-Sustentable Proyecto De Investigación Interdisciplinaria Sobre Un Problema Complejo

Session Organizer: John RAVEN, Eye on Society, United Kingdom Chair: Bernd HORNUNG, University Hospital Giessen and Marburg, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 586.1 John RAVEN, Eye on Society, United Kingdom Harnessing Social Processes for the Common Good 586.2 Bernd HORNUNG, University Hospital Giessen and Marburg, Germany Human Resources, Management, and Leadership in Turbulent Times. Stephen Covey from a Sociocybernetic View: A Point of Intervention? 586.3 Francisco LEON, Universitat de Girona, Spain and Jordi TENA-SANCHEZ, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain Preference Falsification, Social Influence and Triggering Events of Abrupt Social Changes 586.4 David HERNANDEZ CASAS, UNAM, Mexico Epistemology for a Sociopoetics on Dwelling

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277

Sociocybernetics

Session Organizers: Michael PAETAU, Center for Sociocybernetics Studies, Germany and Pedro ESCRICHE, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain

584.5 Luciano GALLON, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia; Richard URIBE, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia; Juan F. MEJIA, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia; Hernando URIBE, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia and Jairo GUTIERREZ, Empresa de Transporte Masivo del Valle de Aburrá / Metro de Medellín, Colombia Cultura Metro Como Modo De Relación: Investigación Interdisciplinaria Del Liderazgo Humano

RC51

16:00-17:30

No. 586

RC51

No. 587

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30 587

588.4 Pablo RIVERA, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain Inclusion of Digital Technologies in the School of Catalonia, Spain. Consequences of the Compulsive Implementation of the 1x1 Project: “Escuela 2.0”

RC51 Business Meeting

Sociocybernetics

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

588.5 Machiko NAKANISHI, Chukyo University, Japan The Transformation of Reflexivity and Japanese Market

Thursday 14 July

10:45-12:15

09:00-10:30 588

RC51 Thursday 14 July

589

Inclusive Innovation for Inclusive Growth

Epistemic Uncertainty and Complexity Theories

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum)

Location: Hörsaal 15 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Eva BUCHINGER, Austrian Institute of Technology AIT, Austria Chair: Saburo AKAHORI, Tokyo Woman’s Christian University, Japan

Session Organizer: Andrea PITASI, World Complexity Science Academy, Italy Chair: Andrea PITASI, Gabriele D’Annunzio University, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 589.1 Andre FOLLONI, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná, Brazil Determinism and Unpredictability in Social Systems: Can Law Engender Development?

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 588.1 Felipe LARA-ROSANO, Centro de Ciencias de la Complejidad, UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL AUTONOMA DE MEXICO, Mexico Socioenvironmental Development As a Guided SelfOrganized PHASE Transition

589.2 Massimiliano RUZZEDDU, University Niccolo Cusano Rome, Italy The Notion of ‘Phase Transition’ in the Social Science

588.2 Eva BUCHINGER, Austrian Institute of Technology AIT, Austria Inclusive Innovation: A Systems Theoretic Perspective

589.3 Ivo Stefano GERMANO, University of Molise, Italy and Giorgio PORCELLI, University of Trieste, Italy Complexity and New Media Representations

588.3 Czeslaw MESJASZ, Cracow University of Economics, Poland Complexity of Social Systems in the Era of Information Overload

589.4 Andrea PITASI, Gabriele D’Annunzio University, Italy Visualizing Complex Global Change 589.5 Ton JORG, University of Utrecht, Netherlands Navigating the Sea of Epistemic Uncertainty in a World of Complexity

NOTES

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RC52 Sunday 10 July

Program–Session Details

Sociology of Professional Groups

Sunday 10 July 09:00-10:30 Professions in the Age of Austerity, Labour Market and Education

Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Helena SERRA, University of Lisbon, ISEGSOCIUS, Portugal and Tiago CORREIA, ISCTE-IUL Avenida das Forças Armadas 1649-026 Lisboa – VAT Nº PT 501510184, Portugal Chair: Jens-Christian SMEBY, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 590.1 Cinara ROSENFIELD, UFRGS, Brazil; Frederic REY, CNAM, France and Olivier GIRAUD, Lise-CNRS-Cnam, France Translators As Self-Entrepreneurs in Brazil and France: A Profession at Stake with New Public / Private Boundaries 590.2 Thijs BOL, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands; Ida DRANGE, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway and Haavar HELLAND, Centre for the study of professions, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway A Study of How Labour Market Institutions Affect withinand Between Occupation Wage Inequalities in Norway in the Period from 2003-2014. 590.3 Markus GOTTWALD, IAB, Germany and Frank SOWA, Institute for Employment Research (IAB), Germany Placement Professionals Between the Ethos of Consulting and Requirements of a Market-Oriented Measurement System 590.4 Natalia SHMATKO, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia and Yurij KATCHANOV, National Research University - Higher School of Economics, Russia Polarization of Labor Market: Careers and Mobility of PhD Holders 590.5 Myriam GAITSCH, Department of Political Science, University of Vienna, Austria Public Policy Reforms, Organisational Change, and Workplace Resistance: Resistant Practices of Public Employment Angents in Switzerland DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 590.6 Olga SIMONOVA, National Research University - Higher School of economics, Russia Social Work Specialists in Russia: Standardization of Feelings and Moral Mission of Social Assistance 590.7 Olesya YURCHENKO, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia and Valery MANSUROV, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Russian Engineers’ Social Standing in an Age of Austerity 590.8 Karl Ingar KITTELSEN ROBERG, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway Relevant Education

Professions and Professionals in Times of Change and Complexity. Part I

Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Tiago CORREIA, ISCTE-IUL Avenida das Forças Armadas 1649-026 Lisboa – VAT Nº PT 501510184, Portugal Chair: Tracey ADAMS, Sociology - University of Western Ontario, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 591.1 Helena SERRA, New University of Lisbon, Portugal NPM, Cooperation and Conflict: What’s New in MultiProfessional Teamwork in Health Care? 591.2 Alexandra VINSON, Northwestern University, USA Physician Teachers As the Link Between the Medical Profession and Its Members 591.3 Julian WOLF, Universitat Witten/Herdecke, Germany and Anne OSTERMANN, University Witten/Herdecke, Germany Climbing up the Ladder. the Changing Role of Nurse Managers within the German Hospital Management. 591.4 Tiago CORREIA, ISCTE-IUL Avenida das Forças Armadas 1649-026 Lisboa – VAT Nº PT 501510184, Portugal Refinements to the Study of the Day-to-Day Life in Organizations: Exploring a Neo-Institutionalist Approach to Doctors’ Behaviour in Hospital Organizations 591.5 Reka ANDERSSON, Linkoping University, Sweden “We Are All Digging Our Tunnels”: Health Professionals’ Strategies for Managing (Work-related Mental Ill Health in) the Swedish Welfare System

12:30-14:00 592

Challenging Times Across Southern Europe and Latin America: Policies, Publics and Professions

Location: Hörsaal 6A P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Helena SERRA, New University of Lisbon, Portugal AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 592.1 Susana PENALVA, CONICET– CEDeT/EPyG - UNSAM, Argentina Restructuring Public Sector and Social Intervention – the New Ways of Welfare Management Transforming Social Professions. Europe and Latin America in a Comparative Perspective 592.2 Javier HERMO, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina New Professions in a Global World: Knowledge Economy and Knowledge Workers 592.3 Tiago CORREIA, ISCTE-IUL Avenida das Forças Armadas 1649-026 Lisboa – VAT Nº PT 501510184, Portugal The Medical Profession Between New Limits and Values: Lessons from the Portuguese Case

14:15-15:45 JS-21 Professional Occupations and Organizations. Part I

Committees: RC17 Sociology of Organization (Host); RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups See Joint Session Details for JS-21.

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279

Sociology of Professional Groups

Program Coordinator: Helena SERRA, New University of Lisbon, Portugal and Tiago CORREIA, ISCTE-IUL Avenida das Forças Armadas 1649-026 Lisboa – VAT Nº PT 501510184, Portugal

591

RC52

10:45-12:15

RC52

590

No. 592

RC52

No. 593

Program–Session Details

Monday 11 July

593.7 Elena IVANOVA, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Engineering Activities in Russia: Historical and Methodological Approach

09:00-10:30 JS-26 The Future Heath Workforce We Need:

Professions, Policy and Planning. Part I

Sociology of Professional Groups

RC52 Monday 11 July

Committees: RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups (Host); RC15 Sociology of Health See Joint Session Details for JS-26.

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 594

10:45-12:15

Globalization, Social Transformation and Profession: Emerging Trends in Global Sociology

JS-31 The Future Heath Workforce We Need:

Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health (Host); RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups

Session Organizers: Virendra Pal SINGH, University of Allahabad, India and Parvez Ahmad ABBASI, VNSG University, Surat, India

Professions, Policy and Planning. Part II

See Joint Session Details for JS-31.

Chair: Virendra Pal SINGH, Centre for Globalization and Development Studies, IIDS, University of Allahabad=211002, India

14:15-15:45

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 594.1 Rajesh MISRA, University of Lucknow, India Privatization, ‘Knowledge Workers’ and Growing Inequalities in Globalizing India

JS-34 Professional Occupations and Organizations. Part II

Committees: RC17 Sociology of Organization (Host); RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups See Joint Session Details for JS-34.

16:00-17:30 593

Professions and Professionals in Times of Change and Complexity. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Tiago CORREIA, ISCTE-IUL Avenida das Forças Armadas 1649-026 Lisboa – VAT Nº PT 501510184, Portugal Chair: Mike DENT, Staffordshire University, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 593.1 Ellen ANNANDALE, University of York, United Kingdom; Sian BEYNON-JONES, University of York, United Kingdom; Christina BUSE, University of York, United Kingdom; Daryl MARTIN, University of York, United Kingdom and Sarah NETTLETON, University of York, United Kingdom Architects Designing for Care: Knowledge Brokers in Times of Change 593.2 Tatiana ZIMENKOVA, TU Dortmund University, Germany and Verena MOLITOR, Bielefeld University, Germany Sexual Identity As a Challenge for Professional Rationalities and Self-Understanding within the Profession. the Case of Lgbttiq Policing 593.3 Bertil ROLANDSSON, Gothenburg University, Department for Sociology and Work Science, Sweden Social Media and Professional Discretion in the Swedish Police 593.4 Sabina FREI, Free University of Bozen/Bolzano, Italy and Urban NOTHDURFTER, Free University of Bozen/Bolzano, Italy Public Service Professionals in Times of Change and Complexity: Learning from Social Work? 593.5 Masayo FUJIMOTO, Doshisha University, Japan Comparison of Characteristics of the Anomie State of the Professional Members at an Organization with the Changing Institution Policy DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 593.6 Phil HARINGTON, University of Auckland, New Zealand Constructs of Professionalism in Civic Practice: Asking People at the Front Line.

280

594.2 Pankaj Kumar SINGH, Maharana Pratap Govt. PG College, Bilsi, Badaun, India Social and Cultural Barriers in Transformation of the Legal Profession in a Less Developed Town of Central Uttar Pradesh 594.3 Leyla SAYFUTDINOVA, Middle East Technical University, Turkey Engineers in Post-Soviet Azerbaijan: From One Dependency to Another? 594.4 Hanna DEBSKA, Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland and Tomasz WARCZOK, Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland Professions in the (semi)Periphery. The Multipositioning Strategy of Lawyers in Poland. 594.5 Quraisha DAWOOD, University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa An Emerging Profession: The Development of Mechatronic Engineering in South Africa 594.6 Sheetal TAMAKUWALA, Department of Sociology, VNSG University. India, India Dynamics of the Emergence of EIA As a Professional Group in Era of Globalization : A Case Study from Gujarat DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 594.7 Arpita SABATH, UTKAL UNIVERSITY, BHUBANESWAR ,ODISHA,INDIA, India The Effects of Globalization on Employee’s Emotional Intelligence Job Satisfaction.( A Case Study) 594.8 Richa SINGH, Centre for Globalization and Development Studies, University of Allahabad, Allahabad, India Social Background, Gender Inequality and New Communication Technology in Legal Profession: A Study of Women Lawyers in Allahabad (India) 594.9 Shashi SAINI, Veer Narmad South Gujarat University, Surat-Gujarat, India Globalisation and Delineation of Women in Engineering Domains 594.10 Ramani HETAL, Sociology Department, Veer Narmad South Gujarat University ,Surat, Gujarat, India, India Social Background, Mobility and Use of ICT Among the Disabled Lawyers in Surat City

www.isa-sociology.org

RC52 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

Session Organizer: Florent CHAMPY, National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), Centre de recherche Technique, Organisations, Pouvoir (CERTOP - Toulouse), France

596.4 Kyle ALBERT, Cornell University, USA Explaining Occupation-Level Variance in Certification Regimes

595

Uncertainties, Reflexivity and Rigidities in Professional Work

Chair: Florent CHAMPY, National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Societes, Solidarites, Territoires (LISST - Toulouse), France, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 595.1 Inge Kryger PEDERSEN, Department of Sociology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark What Is ‘Good Doctoring’ – in the Perspective of Antibiotic Resistance As a Global Issue? 595.2 Patrick BROWN, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands and Nicola GALE, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom Theorising the Experiences of Professionals in Their Handling of Uncertainty through ‘Risk’: Towards a Sociology of Risk Work in Healthcare 595.3 Marlot KUIPER, Utrecht School of Governance, Netherlands Responsive Routines 595.4 Ines LANGEMEYER, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Mindfulness in Cooperation 595.5 Lars ALBERTH, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany How Professions Narrow Their Horizons: The Impact of the Professional Definition of Social Problems. DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 595.6 Peter SANDERSON, University of Huddersfield, United Kingdom Complexity, Uncertainty and Rigidity in the Transformation of Advice Work in the United Kingdom 595.7 Peter OEIJ, TNO, Netherlands Innovation Leadership in Innovation Projects: The Application of the Reflective Practitioner Model

14:15-15:45 596

New Professional Projects? on the Opportunities and Limits of a Professionalization of Occupational Fields Today.

Location: Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Christiane SCHNELL, Institute of Social Research at the Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 596.1 Luisa VELOSO, University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal; Carlos Manuel GONCALVES, Faculdade de Letras Universidade do Porto, Portugal and Noemia LOPES, Escola Superior de Saúde Egas Moniz, Portugal Professionalisation of Research: Organisational Hybridisation and Professional Trajectories and Identities 596.2 Lea FOVERSKOV, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark Professional Emergence Under Pressure: The Cyber Security Arena

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 596.5 Aukje LEEMEIJER, HAN University of Applied Sciences / Utrecht School of Governance, Netherlands Patient Centered Professionalism? Mental Health Care Workers’ Response to Patient Participation 596.6 Valery MANSUROV, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia and Olesya YURCHENKO, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Professionalisation of Russian Preschool Educators: Changes and Perspectives 596.7 Richard JOHANSSON, Uppsala University, Sweden and Ulla HELLSTRÖM MUHLI, Uppsala University, Sweden Developing Care Professionals: Possible Ramifications of the Professional Projects within Swedish Disability Care

16:00-17:30 597

Professionalism in Education and Work

Location: Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Jens-Christian SMEBY, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway Chair: Christiane SCHNELL, Institute of Social Research at the Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 597.1 Gitte Sommer HARRITS, Aarhus University, Department of Political Science, Denmark and Marie Ostergaard MOLLER, KORA, The Danish Institute for Local and Regional Government Research, Denmark Hybrid Professionalism and the Use of Knowledge, Intuitions and Personal Relations in Preventive Welfare Work 597.2 Patricia NEVILLE, University of Bristol, United Kingdom; Andrea WAYLEN, University of Bristol, United Kingdom and Lisa MCNALLY, University of Bristol, United Kingdom Fostering Professional Development Among UK Dental Undergraduates with a Dental Scrubs Ceremony: Findings of a Two Year Study 597.3 Jens-Christian SMEBY, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway Ambiguous Academisation of Vocational Education 597.4 Phil HARINGTON, University of Auckland, New Zealand Constructs of Professionalism in Civic Practice: Asking People at the Front Line. 597.5 Assaf GIVATI, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom; Chris MARKHAM, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom and Ken STREET, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom On the Road Again? Training Paramedics in Higher Education in the UK DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 597.6 Maria Pia CASTRO, University of Catania, Italy, Italy Social Workers, Higher Education and Managerial Practices in Welfare Organizations: An Italian Case

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281

Sociology of Professional Groups

Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

596.3 Wenche KJÆMPENES, UiT The Artic University of Tromso, Norway The Use of a Five-Actor Model Approach to the Study of Professions and Professionalization. Examples from a Comparative Study of the Fish Health Work Field in Norway and Scotland.

RC52

10:45-12:15

No. 597

Sociology of Professional Groups

RC52

No. 598

Program–Session Details

RC52 Wednesday 13 July

597.7 Irina POPOVA, Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Upbringing of Engineers: Resources and Limitations of “Intergenerational Career”

598.9 Tracey ADAMS, Sociology - University of Western Ontario, Canada Variations in Self-Regulation: Understanding the Present (and reflecting on the future) By Considering the Past.

597.8 Osmar Antonio BONZANINI, URI - Universidade Regional Integrada do Alto Uruguai e das Missoes, Brazil; Amelia Cristina F. da SILVA, ISCAP - Instituto Superior de Contabilidade e Administração do Porto, Portugal and Teresa Gabriela Marques LEITE, Universidade Lusófona do Porto, Portugal Critical Perspective on the Influence of Professional Organizations in the Construction of Curricula of Undergraduate Courses in Accounting

598.10 Nadine IJAZ, University of Toronto, Canada and Heather BOON, University of Toronto, Canada State Risk Discourse and the Regulatory Preservation of Traditional Medicine Knowledge: The Case of Acupuncture in Ontario, Canada

597.9 Mihail ANTON, National Defense University “Carol I”, Romania A Sociological Approach of the Educational Dimension of the National Security in Romania

Wednesday 13 July

598.11 France HOULE, University of Montreal, Canada Protecting the Right to Pursue a Livelihood for ForeignTrained Professionals: Toward Building an Enabling Regulatory System

10:45-12:15 599

Theorizing Professional Changes and Futures

Location: Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

09:00-10:30

Session Organizer: Julia EVETTS, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom

598

Chair: Julia EVETTS, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom

Changing Patterns of Professional Regulation

Location: Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Tracey ADAMS, Sociology - University of Western Ontario, Canada Chair: Kyle ALBERT, Cornell University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 598.2 Michael SAKS, University Campus Suffolk, United Kingdom Shifting Patterns of Professional Regulation: Medicine in Comparative International Perspective 598.3 Ellen KUHLMANN, Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany; Tuba AGARTAN, Providence College, USA and Mia VON KNORRING, Karolinska Institutet, MMC, Sweden Transforming the Bonds Between Governance and Professions: Health Reform in Germany, Sweden and Turkey 598.4 Jean-Luc BEDARD, TÉLUQ - Université du Québec, Canada Mutual Recognition Agreements for Foreign-Trained Professionals. Lessons and Challenges for Regulation from the France-Quebec Experience. 598.5 Fiona PACEY, The University of Sydney, Australia and Stephanie SHORT, The University of Sydney, Australia Expanded Scope and Accountability? National Regulatory Reform of Health Professionals in Australia 598.6 Arvind CHAUHAN, Department of Sociology, Barkatullah University, Bhopal, (M.P), 462026, India, India Significance of Complementary and Alternative Medicine Systems in India: Some Issues of Its Continuity and Re-Emergence DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 598.7 Debby BONNIN, University of Pretoria, South Africa and Shaun RUGGUNAN, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa Professional Bodies and the Regulation of Four Key Professions in Post-Apartheid South Africa 598.8 Corinne DELMAS, University of Lille, CERAPS (UMR CNRS 8026), France Changing Patterns of Professional Regulation : The Case of the Notaries in France. a Profession Between SelfRegulation, State-Regulation and Market Rules.

282

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 599.1 Christiane SCHNELL, Institute of Social Research at the Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany and Annalisa TONARELLI, Dipartimento di Scienze Politiche e Sociali Università di Firenze, Italy On (new) Moral Communities. Proximity and Normativity in Changing Professions 599.2 Ines LANGEMEYER, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Professionalism As Cooperative Competence 599.3 Lars Thorup LARSEN, Aarhus University, Denmark Revisiting the Concept of Professional Authority 599.4 Andreas KORNELAKIS, King’s College London, United Kingdom and Dimitra PETRAKAKI, University of Sussex, United Kingdom ‘We Can Only Request What’s in Our Protocol’: Technology and Autonomy in Healthcare Professionals’ Work DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 599.5 Monika LENGAUER, Technische Universitat Dortmund, Germany Values Attributed to Arab Professionalism in Arab Academic Journalism Education 599.6 Jens KRABEL, Coordination office “Men in Early Childhood and Care” c/o Catholic University of Applied Sciences, Germany and Maria Teresa MARTIN PALOMO, Carlos III University of Madrid, Spain Men in Early Childhood and Care – Can They Contribute to Professionalisation Processes in Early Childhood Education and Help to Rethink Theoretical Dimensions of Care Work? 599.7 Fran OSRECKI, University of Osnabrueck, Germany Play to the Rules: Managerialism, Neo-Liberalism and the Sociology of Professions 599.8 Luca VERZELLONI, Centro de Estudos Sociais (CES), Portugal Overcoming Old Divisions: Winds of Change in the Italian Legal Professions

www.isa-sociology.org

RC52 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

600

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Michael SAKS, University Campus Suffolk, United Kingdom Chair: Michael SAKS, University Campus Suffolk, UK, United Kingdom

600.7 Kristina BINNER, Johannes Kepler University, Austria and Fabienne DECIEUX, Johannes Kepler University, Austria Professions Under Pressure: Conflicting Demands in Academic Work and Child Care

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 600.1 Teresa CARVALHO, University of Aveiro and CIPES, Portugal Who Is in Charge? Internal Differences on Perceived Organisational Power of Portuguese Academics

600.8 Teresa MORLA, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain Creative Professionals. Innovation and Creativity in Architecture and Biotechnology

600.2 Mike DENT, Staffordshire University, United Kingdom Professional Power and the New Governance

16:00-17:30

600.3 Zoey SPENDLOVE, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Revalidation Repercussions: Challenging the Power of Enforceable Trust

601

RC52 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 17 (Juridicum)

600.4 Marianne VAN BOCHOVE, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands Positioning the Professional: New Roles of Paid and Unpaid Workers in Care and Social Services

Thursday 14 July

600.5 Fran OSRECKI, University of Osnabrueck, Germany The Transparent Professional: Unintended Consequences of Rule Following in Professional Practice

14:15-15:45 JS-68 Professional Work in a Globalized

World: Migration, Cross-Bordering and Globalization of Knowledge Workers / El Trabajo Profesional En Un Mundo Globalizado: Migración, Transnacionalización y Globalización De Los Trabajadores Del Conocimiento.

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work (Host); RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups See Joint Session Details for JS-68.

NOTES

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Sociology of Professional Groups

600.6 Florent CHAMPY, National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Societes, Solidarites, Territoires (LISST - Toulouse), France, France and Marc-Olivier DEPLAUDE, CRESSPA - Université Paris 8, France The Vulnerability of Prudential Professions. How the Concept of Practical Wisdom Explains Increasing Pressure and Allows Revisiting the Practical Question of Professional Control

Controlling Professional Power: Is the Pendulum Swinging Too Far?

RC52

14:15-15:45

No. 601

Sociology of Childhood

RC53

No. 602

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

RC53

603

Sociology of Childhood Program Coordinator: Claudio BARALDI, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy

Monday 11 July

Challenges to the Sociology of Childhood - Marginal and Interdisciplinary Knowledge on Childhood

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Lars ALBERTH, University of Wuppertal, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 JS-27 Language in Children’s Socialization Committees: RC53 Sociology of Childhood (Host); RC25 Language and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-27.

10:45-12:15 602

RC53 Monday 11 July

Interdisciplinary Childhood Studies

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Maria Leticia NASCIMENTO, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil Chair: Maria Leticia NASCIMENTO, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 602.1 Maria Raquel MACRI, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina History of the Interdisciplinary Post-Graduate Specialization Course on Children and Youth Social Issues in Buenos Aires University Argentina 602.2 Jo MORAN-ELLIS, University of Sussex, United Kingdom Building an Inter-Disciplinary Perspective on Children’s Agency: More Insight or More Noise? 602.3 Silvia ESPINAL MEZA, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru, Peru Las Libertades Se Expanden Desde La Niñez: Una Lectura Sinérgica Del Enfoque De Derechos, La Sociología De La Infancia y El Enfoque De Las Capacidades Para La Participación y Agencia En La Infancia. 602.4 Heinz SUENKER, Wuppertal University/Faculty of Human and Social Sciences, Germany Childhood Studies and Sociology of Education DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 602.5 Jianghong LI, WZB Berlin Social Science Center, Germany; Plamen AKALIYSKI, University of Norway, Norway and Lyndall STRAZDINS, Australian National University, Australia Influence of Mothers’ Work Hours on Child Overweight and Obesity: Evidence from the Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort Study

603.1 Tiago LAPA, ISCTE-IUL Avenida das Forças Armadas, Lisboa – Portugal, VAT Nº PT 501510184, Portugal Childhood in the Network Society: Bridging Communication and Childhood Studies 603.2 Sabina SCHUTTER, German Youth Institute, Germany and Anna BUSCHMEYER, German Youth Institute, Germany Re-Doing Generation By Un-Doing Gender: On the Absence of Gender Studies in Childhood Studies 603.3 Désirée WATERSTRADT, University of Education Karlsruhe, Germany Childhood and Parenthood: Conceptualizing As Social Construction or Social Process? 603.4 Claudio BARALDI, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy and Vittorio IERVESE, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy Narratives of Memories As a Way of Changing Children’s Future 603.5 Monique VOLTARELLI, University of São Paulo, Brazil Childhood Studies in South America: Research and Production in Childhood Sociology Perspective

16:00-17:30 604

Sociological Aspects of Children’s Play Activity

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Maria SIBIREVA, St. Petersburg State University, Russia Chair: Maria SIBIREVA, N/A, Russia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 604.1 Bengi SULLU, University College London - Graduate, United Kingdom Geographies of Children’s Play in the Context of Neoliberal Restructuring in Istanbul 604.2 Eriko MOTOMORI, Meiji Gakuin University, Japan How Do Adults Realize Children’s Freedom in Modern Settings?: A Case Study of the Japanese Adventure Playground Movement 604.3 Arno BALTIN, Tallinn University, Estonia and Maaris RAUDSEPP, Tallinn University, Estonia Play with Weapons from the Perspective of 7-10 Year Boys. 604.4 Antonina NOSKOVA, Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO University), Russia and Elena KUZMINA, Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO University), Russia Children Play Activity in Russia: Coexistence of the New and Traditional Types of Playing 604.5 Sébastien FRANÇOIS, EXPERICE (Paris 13 University), France (Re)Constructing Children’s Play Cultures: An Exploration into the Work of Children App Designers

284

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RC53 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

607.2 Median MUTIARA, Nagoya University, Japan Children’s Dynamic Roles in Migration: From Social to Cultural Actors for Diplomacy

10:45-12:15 605

607.3 Utsa MUKHERJEE, Royal Holloway, University of London, United Kingdom Locating the Transnational and Studying the Diaspora: A Study of British Indian Children

The Futures They Want: Bringing Children into Global Sociology.

Session Organizer: Claudio BARALDI, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy Chair: Maria SIBIREVA, N/A, Russia

10:45-12:15

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 605.1 Ulrike ZARTLER, University of Vienna, Austria Once I Have a Family … Children’s Constructions of Their Own Future Families in the Light of Their Present Family Forms 605.2 Herbert RODRIGUES, Centre for the Study of Violence University of Sao Paulo (NEV-USP), Brazil; Renan Theodoro de OLIVEIRA, Centre for the Study of Violence - University of Sao Paulo (NEV-USP), Brazil; Caren RUOTTI, Centre for the Study of Violence - University of Sao Paulo (NEV-USP), Brazil and Debora Piccirillo Barbosa da VEIGA, Centre for the Study of Violence University of Sao Paulo (NEV-USP), Brazil Legal Socialization Process of Children and Early Adolescents in Sao Paulo, Brazil 605.3 Lucia RABELLO DE CASTRO, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Children As Public Subjects: Can Educational Transmission be More Than Leading Children into the Future We Want? 605.4 Tobia FATTORE, Department of Sociology, Macquarie University, Australia and Susann FEGTER, Institute for General and Historical Educational Sciences, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany Children’s Understandings of Well-Being As Expressions of the Moral Dimensions of Class Relations: A Comparative Study of Children in Frankfurt and Sydney 605.5 Monica DOMINGUEZ-SERRANO, Universidad Pablo Olavide, Spain and Lucia DEL MORAL, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Spain Hacia Un Sistema De Indicadores De Bienestar En La Infancia: Una Propuesta Desde Los Enfoques De La Sostenibilidad De La Vida y Las Capacidades

608

Transnational migration, families and children: A theoretical and methodological approach. Part II

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Ethel KOSMINSKY, Independent Sociologist. Retired Sao Paulo State University/Queens College, USA and Fernanda MULLER, University of Brasilia, Brazil Chair: Ethel KOSMINSKY, Independent Sociologist. Retired Sao Paulo State University/Queens College, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 608.1 Nazli KIBRIA, Boston University, USA Caring for the Special Child and Transnational Parenting 608.2 Viorela DUCU, Babes Bolyai University, Centre for Population Studies, Romania Children of Romanian Transnational Families Confronting „Difference” 608.3 Zeynep KILIC, Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey and Melda AKBAŞ, Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey Formal Mechanisms of Justice-Seeking in the Eyes of Children 608.4 Qiaobing WU, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong and Victor CEBOTARI, Maastricht University, Maastricht Graduate School of Governance, Netherlands Family Structure, Parent-Child Interaction, and the Subjective Well-Being of Children with Different Migration Experiences: A Comparative Study in Ghana and China

14:15-15:45

14:15-15:45 606

607.4 Ethel KOSMINSKY, Independent Sociologist. Retired Sao Paulo State University/Queens College, USA Children and Families of Transnational Migrants

609

RC53 Business Meeting

Intersectionality, Discrimination and Children

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Wednesday 13 July

Session Organizers: Bula BHADRA, University of Calcutta, India and Doris BUEHLER-NIEDERBERGER, University of Wuppertal, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 607

Transnational Migration, Families, and Children: A Theoretical and Methodological Approach. Part I

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Ethel KOSMINSKY, N/A, USA and Fernanda MULLER, Universidade de Brasília, Brazil Chair: Lucia RABELLO DE CASTRO, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 607.1 Mariam MEYNERT, Lund University, Sweden Children without Childhood

609.1 Tobia FATTORE, Department of Sociology, Macquarie University, Australia Children’s Conceptions of Otherness: Constructions of the ‘moral Self’ and Implications for Experiences of Migration’ 609.2 Saheli CHOWDHURY, UNIVERSITY OF CALCUTTA, India Children’s Marginalization in Sports in India: A TALE of Multidimensional Experience 609.3 Anne WIHSTUTZ, Protestamt University of Applied Sciences, Berlin (EHB), Germany Childhood in Hostile Grounds:Intersectional Perspectives on the Lives of Very Young Refugee Children in Mass Accommodation in Germany. Preliminary Findings.

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285

Sociology of Childhood

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

RC53

Tuesday 12 July

No. 609

Sociology of Childhood

RC53

No. 610

Program–Session Details

609.4 Christine HUNNER-KREISEL, University of Vechta, Germany and Jana WETZEL, University of Vechta, Germany Muslim Children’s and Youth’ Well-Being and Its Intersections with Different Societal Contexts

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 610.1 Jamile GUIMARAES, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil; Cristiane CABRAL, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil and Neia SCHOR, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil “Girls Today Are More Evolved”: Sexual Agency in the Ressignification of Gender Discourses

609.5 Deepika SINGH, DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF CALCUTTA, India Intersectionality, Digital Disparity and Children in Urban Wired Habitat of Kolkata

610.2 Nancy LOMBARD, Glasgow Caledonian University, United Kingdom Children, Young People and Violence Against Women: Using Temporal Frameworks to Destabilise Gender and Heterosexuality

609.6 Piyali SUR, Jadavpur University (Department of Sociology), India Children, Gender, Class and Fashion in Kolkata: An Intersectional Analysis of Discrimination

610.3 Ina HUNGER, University of Goettingen, Institute of Sport Sciences, Germany and Anna RANSIEK, University of Goettingen, Institute of Sport Sciences, Germany Ethnographical Approaches on Familial Body-Related Practices As Well As Normative Discourses of Parents with the Focus on Gender

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 609.7 Chandni BASU, Albert-Ludwigs University of Freiburg, Germany Deviance in Childhood: Inbetween Structure and Agency

610.4 Maria Isabel TOLEDO-JOFRE, Universidad Diego Portales, Chile; Gabriel GUAJARDO, Universidad Diego Portales, Chile and Christian MIRANDA, Universidad de Chile, Chile Una Escuela Sin Violencia: Zes Posible?

16:00-17:30 610

RC53 Wednesday 13 July

Gender and violence in sociology of childhood

Location: Übungsraum 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Maria Leticia NASCIMENTO, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil Chair: Maria Leticia NASCIMENTO, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil

610.5 Aude KERIVEL, INSIDE, Luxembourg Recueillir L’expérience D’enfants: De La Théorisation Enracinée à L’innovation Méthodologique. Violence, Harcèlement Et Empathie Du Point De Vue D’élèves De 9 à 12 Ans DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 610.6 Jamile GUIMARAES, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil; Cristiane CABRAL, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil and Neia SCHOR, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil Relational Aggression As a Form of Sociability Among Girls

NOTES

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RC54 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

The Body in the Social Sciences

613.2 Eva SLESINGEROVA, Masaryk University, Czech Republic Sci-Art/Bio Art – Molecules, Bodies and Life

Monday 11 July

16:00-17:30

09:00-10:30 Embodiment and Social Synchronism in the Storytelling Era. Opening Session

614

Assisted Bodies on the Move: The Social Meaning of Mobility Augmentations

Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

Session Organizer: Bianca Maria PIRANI, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

Session Organizer: Liz DEPOY, University of Maine, USA

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Chair: Liz DEPOY, University of Maine, USA

611.1 Kornelia HAHN, University of Salzburg, Austria Quality Time and Enchanted Places. the Commodification of Sensory Experiences

614.1 Hanna GOBEL, Universitat Hamburg, Germany From ‚Prosthesis’ to ‚Post-Thesis’. Technological Cultures of Assistance in the Paralympics

611.2 Veronika SIEGLIN, Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Mexico Hypertension As a Bodily Narrative of Traumatic Interaction in Academic Work Environment. a Case Study of a Young Female Professor in a Mexican State University

614.2 Sandra WALLENIUS-KORKALO, University of Lapland, Finland Power of the Body in Representations of Laestadianism

611.3 Craig COOK, Universitas Pelita Harapan, Indonesia The Quantified-Self Movement and Basketball: From Cagers to Cyborgs 611.4 Gabriel JDERU, Department of Sociology, University of Bucharest, Romania and Ramona MARINACHE, Department of Sociology, University of Bucharest, Romania Kinematics of Moto—Mobility: Women, Motorcycles and Social Acceleration

614.3 Geusiane TOCANTINS, UnB - Universidade de Brasilia, Brazil and Ingrid Dittrich WIGGERS, Universidade de Brasília (UnB), Brazil Tic y Educación Del Cuerpo En La Escuela: Maestros y Sus Concepciones

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30

10:45-12:15

615

612

Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

Emergence of Society Described from the Standpoint of Corporealism

The Body in Society: Embodied Action and Embodied Theory

Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

Session Organizer: Jacqueline LOW, University New Brunswick, Canada

Session Organizer: Itsuhiro HAZAMA, Nagasaki University, Japan

Chair: Jacqueline LOW, University New Brunswick, Canada

Chair: Itsuhiro HAZAMA, Nagasaki University, Japan

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

615.1 Daniel WINCHESTER, Purdue University, USA A Pedagogy in the Passions: Fasting, Metaphor, and the Effects of Embodiment on Discursive Consciousness and Abstract Knowledge Acquisition

612.1 Elgen SAUERBORN, FU Berlin, Germany Body Knowledge and the Shaping of Emotions 612.2 Bianca Maria PIRANI, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy Reclaming the Ssocial throughout Embodied Practices 612.3 Mariam WAHEED, Faculty of Economics and Political Science, Cairo University, Egypt Alienation Materialized: Citizen’s Body in the Arab World

14:15-15:45 613

Embodiment and the Relation TimeSpace in the Late Capitalism

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

615.2 Juliet WATSON, RMIT University, Australia Homeless Bodies: The Gendered Embodiment of Survival 615.3 Jasmin KASHANIPOUR, University of Vienna, Austria The Performing Body: An Ethnographic Field Study with Life Drawing Models 615.4 Mallory FALLIN, Northwestern University, USA “Fat for an Asian”: The Embodiment of Stereotypes in an Online Asian American Community 615.5 Andri CHRISTOFOROU, European University Cyprus, Cyprus Researching the Female Reproductive Body: Theoretical Approaches

Session Organizer: Dulce FILGUEIRA DE ALMEIDA, University of Brasilia, Brazil Chair: Dulce FILGUEIRA DE ALMEIDA, University of Brasilia, Brazil

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287

The Body in the Social Sciences

Program Coordinator: Bianca Maria PIRANI, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

613.1 Aldecilene BARRETO, University of Brasilia, Brazil; Juliana FREIRE, University of Brasilia, Brazil and Ingrid Dittrich WIGGERS, Universidade de Brasilia (UnB), Brazil Qualitative Methodology on Research about Childhoodin the Field of Brazilian Physical Education (2010-2014): Research in the School Spaces and Times from the Perspective of Social Sciences

RC54

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

RC54

611

No. 615

RC54

No. 616

Program–Session Details

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

615.6 Andrea LAMARRE, University of Guelph, Canada Embodying Otherwise: Theorizing Embodiment in Eating Disorder Scholarship

The Body in the Social Sciences

10:45-12:15 616

617.1 Gustavo ELPES, University of Coimbra (Centre for Social Studies/CES), Portugal Trans Bodies on the Route: Transgender and the Claim for Identities in Iran 617.2 Kornelia HAHN, University of Salzburg, Austria Consuming and Expressing the “Sound of Music” Culture Among Tourists in Salzburg: A Link Between Immediate and Non Immediate Body Experiences

Embodiment, and Technology – Contemporary Challenges

617.3 Alexander ANTONY, University of Vienna, Austria Making the Body Present. Breathwork As Holistic Practice

Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum) AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 616.1 Eric HSU, University of South Australia, Australia The Sleeping Body and the Concept of Agency 616.2 Monica MESQUITA, Institute of Education _ Lisbon Univesity, Portugal; Filipa RAMALHETE, Autonomous University of Lisbon / CEACT, Portugal; Ana Paula CAETANO, Institute of Education _ Lisbon University, Portugal and Karen FRANCOIS, Free University Brussels (VUB) / Center for Logic and Philosophy of Science, Belgium Sociology of Space and Urban Boundaries. Embodiment through Communitarian Education. 616.3 Alessio DI MARCO, Piccolo Opificio Sociologico, Italy and Mario VENTURELLA, Piccolo Opificio Sociologico, Italy Space, Time and Faces behind the Bars.

Wednesday 13 July

617.4 Eileen M. OTIS, University of Oregon, USA China’s Beauty Proletariat: The Body Politics of Hegemony in a Walmart, China

16:00-17:30 618

RC54 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

Thursday 14 July 10:45-12:15 619

Author Meets Their Critics

Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum)

09:00-10:30 617

RC54 Wednesday 13 July

Session Organizer: Liz DEPOY, University of Maine, USA Chair: Monica MESQUITA, Mare Centre, Portugal

Embodiment and Tourism.

Location: Hörsaal 22 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Craig COOK, Universitas Pelita Harapan, Indonesia Chair: Craig COOK, Universitas Pelita Harapan, Indonesia

Discussants: Craig COOK, Universitas Pelita Harapan, Indonesia; Karen FRANCOIS, Free University Brussels (VUB) / Center for Logic and Philosophy of Science, Belgium; Itsuhiro HAZAMA, Nagasaki University, Japan; Stephen GILSON, University of Maine, USA and Thomas Spence SMITH, University of Rochester, USA

16:00-17:30 JS-73 Rhythms and Rituals Committees: RC22 Sociology of Religion (Host); RC54 The Body in the Social Sciences See Joint Session Details for JS-73.

288

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RC55 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details

Social Indicators

Monday 11 July

622

Quality of Life, Inequality and Vulnerability. Lessons of the Crisis

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

09:00-10:30

Session Organizer: Iuliana PRECUPETU, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romania

State of Happiness Policy and Public Safety

Chair: Iuliana PRECUPETU, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romania AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Ruut VEENHOVEN, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands; Robert BIJL, Netherlands Inst Social Research, Netherlands and Heinz-Herbert NOLL, Social Indicators Research Centre, GESIS Mannheim, Germany Chair: Robert BIJL, Netherlands Inst Social Research, Netherlands AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 620.1 Sergiu BALTATESCU, University of Oradea, Romania Livability and Children’s Happiness: Challenges for Public Policies 620.2 Hiroo HARADA, Senshu University, Japan Happiness in Japan: From the Viewpoint of Age, Sex and Relative Wealthiness 620.3 Peter ROBERT, Institute for Political Science, Centre for Social Sciences, HAS, Budapest, Hungary The Impact of Public Safety on Subjective Wellbeing in Comparative Perspective 620.4 Lucie VIDOVICOVA, Masaryk Uni, Czech Republic Control Beliefs and Religion: How Strong Are They in Environmental Stress Management? the Case of Atheistic Society

622.1 Ana Maria PREOTEASA, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romania; Rebekka SIEBER, University of Neuchâtel, University of Fribourg, Switzerland; Monica BUDOWSKI, University of Fribourg, Switzerland and Christian SUTER, University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland Perception of Precarious Work By Households Living in Precarious Prosperity. Evidence from Qualitative Research in Urban Romania and Switzerland 622.2 Jeroen BOELHOUWER, The Netherlands Institute for Social Research, Netherlands Disparities in the Netherlands – Are They Growing? 622.3 Bernhard RIEDERER, Vienna Institute of Demography, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria and Lena SEEWANN, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria The Decline of the Migrant Middle-Class in the City: A Comparison of Vienna Five Years before and after the Crisis Year 2008 622.4 Laura A. TUFA, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romanian Academy, Romania and George I. ZAMFIR, Department of Sociology, University Babes-Bolyai, Romania Housing Strategies in Multigenerational Rural Households Living in Precarious Prosperity in Romania

16:00-17:30

10:45-12:15 621

14:15-15:45

Well-Being and the Conception and Measurement of Poverty

623

New Challenges in Measuring Quality of Life Domains and Indicators

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

Session Organizer: Mariano ROJAS, FLACSO-México & UPAEP, Mexico

Session Organizer: Iuliana PRECUPETU, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romania

Chair: Robert BIJL, Netherlands Inst Social Research, Netherlands

Chair: Christian SUTER, University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

621.1 Jonas BESTE, Institute of Employment Research, Germany and Mark TRAPPMANN, Institute of Employment Research, Germany Explaining Differences Between Income Poverty and Deprivation 621.2 Ionela VLASE, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, Romania and Ana Maria PREOTEASA, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romania Quality of Life As Outcome of Interlocking Family and Work Trajectories. an Overview of Romanian Households in Precarious Prosperity 621.3 Tugce BEYCAN, University of Neuchatel, Switzerland The Multidimensional Nature of Poverty in Developing Countries: A Comparative Study of Mexico, South Africa, and Turkey

623.1 Wolfgang ASCHAUER, University of Salzburg, Austria Societal Wellbeing in Europe before and after the Economic Crisis. Monitoring Societal Change with a New Multidimensional Measurement. 623.2 Jose A. RODRIGUEZ, University of Barcelona, Spain; Renato MARIN, University of Barcelona, Spain; Josep Lluis C. BOSCH, University of Barcelona, Spain and Mireia YTER, University of Barcelona, Spain The Role of Love and Social Interaction in the Global Differences Between Happiness and Satisfaction 623.3 Rene MILLAN, Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales, UNAM, Mexico Domains of Quality of Life and Subjective Wellbeing in Mexico

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289

Social Indicators

Program Coordinator: Christian SUTER, University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland

RC55

621.4 Israel BANEGAS, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico and Luis Fabian BONILLA YARZABAL, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Percepción De La Pobreza: Una Mirada a Su Concepción y Atribuciones Causales En México

RC55

620

No. 623

Social Indicators

RC55

No. 624

Program–Session Details

623.4 Dolgion ALDAR, Independent Research Institute of Mongolia, Mongolia and Bold TSEVEGDORJ, Independent Research Institute of Mongolia, Mongolia Defining Social Cohesion Research Design and Indicators 623.5 Georgiana TOTH, INCD URBAN-INCERC, Romania; Alina Huzui STOICULESCU, INCD URBAN-INCERC, Romania; Alexandru-Ioan TOTH, Asociatia Sociometrics - Grupul de Analiza Sociala si Economica, Romania and Robert STOICULESCU, Centre of Landscape-Territory-Information Systems CeLTIS, ICUB Research Centre, University of Bucharest, Romania Migration, Livelihoods and Nature Conservation Policies in the Villages of South Transylvania

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 624

Constructing and Synthesising Indicators in the Era of Big Data. Part I

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Filomena MAGGINO, University of Florence, Italy

RC55 Tuesday 12 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 625.1 Leonie STECKERMEIER, Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Germany and Jan DELHEY, Otto-von-GuerickeUniversity Magdeburg, Germany The Good Life, Affluence and Self-Reported Happiness: Introducing the Good Life Index and Debunking Two Popular Myths 625.2 Eduardo BERICAT, University of Seville, Spain Beyond Satisfaction and Happiness Scales: The Socioemotional Well-Being Index (SEWBI) 625.3 Martijn HENDRIKS, EHERO (Erasmus University Rotterdam), Netherlands Towards an Optimal Measure for Subjective Well-Being: Experimental Evidence for Anchoring Effects. 625.4 Eduardo GONZALEZ FIDALGO, University of Oviedo, Spain; Ana CARCABA, University of Oviedo, Spain and Juan VENTURA, University of Oviedo, Spain Changes in Qol in Spanish Municipalities (2001-2011)

14:15-15:45 626

Wellbeing Research and Indicators in Global and Comparative Perspective

Chair: Filomena MAGGINO, University of Florence, Italy

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizer: Ming-Chang TSAI, Research Center for Humanities and Social Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taiwan

624.1 Katia IGLESIAS, University of Neuchatel, Switzerland and Tugce BEYCAN, University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland Synthetic Measures of Multidimensional Well-Being: How to Aggregate? 624.2 Rosanna CATALDO, Department of Economics and Statistics, University of Naples FEDERICO II, Italy; Maria Gabriella GRASSIA, Department of Social Science, University of Naples FEDERICO II, Italy; Carlo Natale LAURO, Department of Economics and Statistics, University of Naples FEDERICO II, Italy and Marina MARINO, Department of Social Science, University of Naples FEDERICO II, Italy Partial Least Squares Path Modelling Approach for Social Composite Indicators Using Different Sources of Data 624.3 Katie SEELY-GANT, Energetics Technology Center, USA and Connie L MCNEELY, George Mason University, USA The Indicators of Dissension: Using Big Data to Assess Armed Conflicts and Political Instability 624.4 Luis AYUSO-SANCHEZ, University of Malaga, Spain and Verónica DE MIGUEL-LUKEN, University of Malaga, Spain Composite Indicators for the Family Change: ‘familism’ Versus ‘individualism’ in the International Context 624.5 Mercedes CAMARERO, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Spain Construction and Results of a Weighted Incidence Index (WIIPA) to Measure Frequency and Severity of Personal Accidents: Europe 2009

10:45-12:15 625

Constructing and Synthesising Indicators in the Era of Big Data. Part II

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Filomena MAGGINO, University of Florence, Italy Chair: Paolo CORVO, University of Gastronomic Sciences, Italy

290

Chair: Ming-Chang TSAI, Research Center for Humanities and Social Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taiwan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 626.1 Ruut VEENHOVEN, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands The Livability of Modernity 626.2 Pamela ABBOTT, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom; Roger SAPSFORD, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom and Claire WALLACE, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom The Decent Society in International Comparison. Indicators of Social Quality World Wide 626.3 Maria Jose GUERRERO, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Spain and Maria Jose DORADO RUBIN, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Spain Different Proposals for Measuring the Quality and Welfare of Older People in Europe through Composite Indexes 626.4 Oliver NAHKUR, University of Tartu, Estonia and Dagmar KUTSAR, University of Tartu, Estonia International Comparative Usability of the National Index of Interpersonal Destructiveness: A Validity Analysis 626.5 Tamas HAJDU, Institute of Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, CERS, Hungary Weather and Subjective Well-Being 626.6 Maria Dolores MARTIN-LAGOS LOPEZ, University of Granada, Spain ‘towards the Development of a Composite Index for Consumerism’

16:00-17:30 627

RC55 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

www.isa-sociology.org

RC55 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

Thursday 14 July

09:00-10:30

09:00-10:30

628

630

Measurement of Social Isolation

Imputation and Social Indicators: The Use of Factor Analysis for Imputing Missing Data

Session Organizer: Joonmo SON, National University of Singapore, Singapore

Language: English, Spanish

Chair: Joonmo SON, National University of Singapore, Singapore

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizers: Sandra FACHELLI, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain and Pedro LOPEZ-ROLDAN, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain

628.1 Jan ECKHARD, Heidelberg University, Germany Comparing Measurements of Social Isolation Using Population Surveys from Germany

630.1 Eduardo DONZA, UBA-UCA, Argentina Imputación De La No Respuesta En Las Variables De Ingreso. Encuesta Permanente De Hogares. Gran Buenos Aires, Argentina / 1990-2010.

628.2 Vicente ESPINOZA, USACH, Chile The Core of Personal Networks. an International Perspective on Social Isolation 628.3 Gerhard PAULINGER, University of Vienna, Austria Social Support As Social Capital. Social Isolation As Lack of Support. a Generator Instrument for Measuring Social Capital.

10:45-12:15 629

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Changes in Levels of Wellbeing during Education to Work Transitions

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Jennifer CHESTERS, University of Canberra, Australia Chair: Jennifer CHESTERS, University of Canberra, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 629.1 Michael SMITH, McGill University, Canada The Turbulence of School to Work Transitions and the Earnings Outcomes of Young Canadians 629.2 Alison CHILDS, University of Canberra, Australia Young Australian’s Education and Employment Transitions: Comparing Young Immigrants’ Wellbeing to Their Native Australian Peers. 629.3 Hans DIETRICH, Institute for Employment Research, Germany Mental Health and Unemployment in the Youth Age and Labor Market Outcomes 629.4 Ming-Chang TSAI, Research Center for Humanities and Social Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taiwan The Lingering Influence of Family Relations on Subjective Well-Being of Young People in Taiwan: Evidence from a Panel Data

630.2 Guillermo MANZANO, DIRECCIÓN GENERAL DE ESTADISTICA Y CENSOS DE LA CIUDAD DE BUENOS AIRES DE ARGENTINA, Argentina Imputaci”N De Datos De Ingresos EN Encuestas a Hogares. La Experiencia De La Encuesta Anual De Hogares (EAH) De La Dirección General De Estadistica Y Censos De La Ciudad De Buenos Aires De Argentina 630.3 José RODRÍGUEZ DE LA FUENTE, Instituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani - UBA, Argentina and María Clara FERNÁNDEZ MELIÁN, Instituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani - UBA, Argentina Aproximaciones a La Imputación De Ingresos Desde Los Estudios De análisis De Clase. Una Propuesta a Partir Del Uso De Técnicas De análisis Factorial.

14:15-15:45 JS-69 Migration and Well-Being. Part I Committees: RC55 Social Indicators (Host); RC31 Sociology of Migration See Joint Session Details for JS-69.

16:00-17:30 JS-74 Migration and Well-Being. Part II Committees: RC31 Sociology of Migration (Host); RC55 Social Indicators See Joint Session Details for JS-74.

16:00-17:30 JS-60 Migration and Well-Being. Part III Committees: RC31 Sociology of Migration (Host); RC55 Social Indicators See Joint Session Details for JS-60.

www.isa-sociology.org

291

Social Indicators

Location: Hörsaal 12 (Juridicum)

RC55

Wednesday 13 July

No. 630

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WG01 Sociology of Local-Global Relations

Working Groups WG01

Sociology of Local-Global Relations Program Coordinator: Nataliya VELIKAYA, Russian State University for the Humanities, Russia

Sunday 10 July

Session Organizer: Georgios TSOBANOGLOU, Agean Universitiy, Greece

14:15-15:45

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-20

What Do Global Interventions Look like at Ground Level? the Everyday Implementation of International Environmental Schemes

Committees: RC24 Environment and Society (Host); WG01 Sociology of Local-Global Relations

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 Religious Tolerance As a Precondition of a Good Local - Global Relations

Location: Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building) Session Organizer: Miroljub JEVTIC, Centre for study relgigious and religion tolerance, Serbia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 631.1 Larissa VDOVICHENKO, Russian State University for Humanities, Russia Linkages Between Political Orientations and Religious Tolerance in Russia

10:45-12:15 632

Citizens Participation in the Social Economy of the Polis. Establishing Conditions for Participation for Inclusive Recovery.

Location: Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

632.2 Arianna MONTANARI, University Sapienza of Rome, Italy New Forms of Solidarism and Communalism 632.3 Nataliya VELIKAYA, Russian State University for the Humanities, Russia Transformation of LG in Russia and Participation of Citizens in Solving Local Problems in the Context of Standards of European Council.

See Joint Session Details for JS-20.

631

632.1 Tatiana SIDORINA, Higher School of Economics National Research University (Russia, Moscow), Russia Globalization Jeopardizes Basic Social Institutions: Labor and the State

14:15-15:45 633

Global Culture and Aesthetic Cosmopolitanism

Location: Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building) Session Organizer: Vincenzo CICCHELLI, Gemass (Paris 4/CNRS), France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 633.1 Sylvie OCTOBRE, Ministère de la culture et de la communication, France Aesthetic Cosmopolitanism: After the Omnivore Thesis, an Entry to the Cosmopolitan Theory. the Case of Young People in France 633.2 Viviane RIEGEL, ESPM-SP, Brazil; Wilson BEKESAS, ESPM-SP, Brazil and Renato MADER, ESPM-SP, Brazil Aesthetic Cosmopolitanism and Media Consumption: Hybrid Possibilities within Young Peoplexs Everyday Lives in São Paulo, Brasil 633.3 Yi-Ping SHIH, Fu Jen Catholic University, Taiwan Raising an International Child: Parenting of Global Cultural Capital in Taiwan

www.isa-sociology.org

293

No. 634

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30 634

635.3 Tina LAURONEN, University of Helsinki, Finland; Riie HEIKKILA, University of Helsinki, Finland and Semi PURHONEN, University of Tampere, Finland Cultural Globalization on the Printed Page: Stability and Change in the Proportion of Foreign Cultural Items in Five European Newspapers, 1960–2010

WG01 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

WG01

Chair: Nataliya VELIKAYA, Russian State University for the Humanities, Russia

Tuesday 12 July

10:45-12:15

09:00-10:30 Sociology of Local-Global Relations

635.4 Solve SANDAKER, County Governor of Oslo and Akershus, Norway Scarcity of Means; About the Social, Cultural and Political Embeddedness of Local Politics Solutions Management. Description and Interpretation of the Attempts of Solving Priority Problems in a Norwegian Municipality.

Co-Chair: Krzysztof OSTROWSKI, Pultussk Academy for the humanities, Poland

635

WG01 Tuesday 12 July

Public Impressions and Expectations for the Future of the Local Communities

636

Social Processes at Sub Regional Levels: Prospects and Problems of Integration

Location: Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal IOeG (Main Building)

Session Organizer: Larissa VDOVICHENKO, Russian State University for Humanities, Russia

Session Organizer: Nataliya VELIKAYA, Russian State University for the Humanities, Russia

Co-Chair: Isaev KUSEIN, Kyrgyz-Turkish University Manas, Kyrgyzstan

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 636.1 Laura LEONARDI, University of Florence, Italy and Gemma SCALISE, University of Florence, Italy Cosmopolitanism, European Identities and Solidarity

Discussant: Isaev KUSEIN, Kyrgyz-Turkish University Manas, Kyrgyzstan

636.2 Lorena AROCHA, Canterbury Christ Church University, United Kingdom Anti-Trafficking Partnerships - Meanings, Practices and Challenges

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 635.1 Ritva SALMINIITTY, University of Turku, Finland The Future of Local Democracy: Has the Call for Citizen Participation Reached the City Councilors? the Case Study of Turku in Finland.

636.3 Serik SEIDUMANOV, Kazakhstany Association of Sociology, Kazakhstan; Aigul ZABIROVA, Eurasian National University, Kazakhstan and Zarema SHAUKENOVA, Institute of Philosophy and Polit. Sciences, Kazakhstan Kazakhstan: Between Silk Road Economic Belt and Eurasian Economic Union

635.2 Tae-Sik KIM, Masaryk University, Czech Republic Consuming Commodified Cultural Hybridity: A Study of Korean Media Consumption By Vietnamese in the Czech Republic

NOTES

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www.isa-sociology.org

WG02 Monday 11 July

Program–Session Details AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

WG02

638.1 Ozgecan KESICI, University College Dublin, Ireland Alash Orda – the (Un)Finished Kazakh Nation?

Historical and Comparative Sociology

Sunday 10 July

14:15-15:45 639

Modernity: One and Many, Enduring and Changing

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

09:00-10:30

Session Organizers: Jiri SUBRT, Charles University, Czech Republic; Nicolas MASLOWSKI, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic and Johann P. ARNASON, La Trobe University, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 639.1 Chih-Chieh TANG, Academia Sinica, Taiwan Taiwan As Laboratory of Modernity: A Preliminary View from the Perspective of Multiple Modernities 639.2 Mikhail MASLOVSKIY, Sociological Institute of Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Russian Modernization: Successive Failed Modernities?

See Joint Session Details for JS-3.

10:45-12:15 Looking at Past and Present Inequalities for a Less Unequal Future

Committees: RC07 Futures Research (Host); WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-8.

639.3 Po-Fang TSAI, Taipei Medical University, Taiwan Citizenship, Professionalism and Modernity: Revisiting the Conceptions of Citizen Between West European and Modern China from the Perspective of Functional Differentiation 639.4 Ralph FEVRE, Cardiff University, United Kingdom Sentimental Individualism and Anti-Slavery in the US and UK

Monday 11 July

639.5 Matthew LANGE, McGill University, Canada Colonial Modernities: Timing, Motive, and Otherness

09:00-10:30

639.6 Nicolas MASLOWSKI, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic The Role of Politics in Multiple-Modernizations Process

637

Socio-Ecological Violences, Resistances, and Struggles: Historical-Comparative Analyses

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Jose Esteban CASTRO, Newcastle University, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 637.1 Arnab ROY CHOWDHURY, Indian Institute of Management Calcutta (IIMC), India ‘Stranded in the Sea’: The ‘boat People’ of South and South East Asia 637.2 Evelyn MEJIA CARRASCO, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Formas y Repertorios De La Violencia En La Microrregión Lagunar Del Istmo De Tehuantepec

10:45-12:15 638

16:00-17:30 640

Language: English, Spanish

Between Nation and Empire. Liminal Modernities and Collective Imaginaries of Security and Insecurity

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Lucian DUMITRESCU, The Institute for Political Sciences and International Relations, The Romanian Academy, Romania

Sociocultural Evolution in the Long Run

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Andrey KOROTAYEV, russian academy of sciences, Russia and Hiroko INOUE, university of california-riverside, USA Chair: Christopher CHASE-DUNN, University of CaliforniaRiverside, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 640.1 Anton GRININ, Volgograd Social Research Center, Russia and Leonid GRININ, National Recearch University Higher School of Economics, Russia Cultural Evolution and Kondratieff Waves 640.2 Andrey KOROTAYEV, russian academy of sciences, Russia Evolution of Global Political Protest Patterns in the Long Run: Arab Spring As a Trigger of a Global Phase Transition? 640.3 Leonid GRININ, National Recearch University Higher School of Economics, Russia and Anton GRININ, Volgograd Social Research Center, Russia Cultural Evolution in the Long Run and Forthcoming Technological Revolution

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295

Historical and Comparative Sociology

Contextualizing Cases and Types through Qualitative Multi-Level-Analysis

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology and WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology

JS-8

638.2 Oya GOZEL DURMAZ, Kocaeli University, Turkey The Role of Demographic Transformation in the SocioEconomic Foundation of Turkey

WG02

Program Coordinator: Manuela BOATCA, University of Freiburg, Germany and Stephen MENNELL, University College Dublin, Ireland

JS-3

No. 640

No. 641

Program–Session Details

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Session Organizers: Florence DELMOTTE, Université Saint-Louis, Belgium; Florence DI BONAVENTURA, Université Saint-Louis - Bruxelles, Belgium and Christophe MAJASTRE, Université SaintLouis - Bruxelles, Belgium

640.4 Dieter REICHER, University of Graz, Austria Long-Term Civilizing Processes within Multi-StateCivilizations. a First Step Towards an Evolutionary Sociological Approach of International Relations.

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Historical and Comparative Sociology

WG02

640.5 Federico FANTECHI, University of Florence, Italy The Role of Objects and Technology in Stabilizing and Reproducing Early Hunters and Gatherers Societies. 640.6 Maki HIRAYAMA, Meiji University, Japan How the Sexual Revolution Hasn’t Occured in Japan 640.7 Andrey ANDREEV, Institute of sociology, Russia Images of Past and Present in Modern Russian Society 640.8 Heinz-Jürgen NIEDENZU, University of Innsbruck, Austria Sociocultural Evolution: The Case of Modernity. the Discourse on Modernity from the Perspective of a Theory of Long-Term Social Change 640.9 Petra SUCHOVSKA, Charles University, Czech Republic Global Affairs Embedded in Historical Sociology 640.10 Gal ZOHAR, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel Contested Identities at a Global Hub: The Western Identity and the Legitimate Spectrum of the OECD Activation Policy Repertoire

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 641

Rethinking the “Global” in Global and Transnational Approaches in Historical Sociology

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Keerati CHENPITAYATON, New School University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 641.1 Gurminder BHAMBRA, University of Warwick, United Kingdom What Is the Theoretical Purchase of ‘the Global’ in Global Sociology?

10:45-12:15 642

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

296

642.1 Manuela BOATCA, University of Freiburg, Germany and Nina BAUR, Technische Universitat Berlin, Germany Multiple Europes and the Negotiation of European Borders. a Post-Colonial Perspective on Negotiations of Power Between Nation States, Investors and Labor 642.2 Florence DI BONAVENTURA, Universite Saint-Louis Bruxelles, Belgium Historical Sociology of the Nation State: A Critique from the Italian Case

14:15-15:45 643

Twenty-Five Years after Fajnzylber’s “Empty Box”: A New Matrix in Latin America?

Language: English, Spanish Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Jose ITZIGSOHN, Brown University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 643.1 Carla CASTRO, Programa de Pós-graduação em Sociologia e Direito da Universidade Federal Fluminense (PPGSD/UFF), Brazil; Luiz PEIXOTO, Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora (Departamento de Filosofia), Brazil; Andressa Somogy de OLIVEIRA, Programa de Pós-graduação em Sociologia e Direito da Universidade Federal Fluminense (PPGSD/UFF), Brazil and Hudson Silva DOS SANTOS, Programa de Pós-graduação em Sociologia e Direito da Universidade Federal Fluminense (PPGSD/UFF), Brazil Derechos Sociales Ayer y Hoy: Breves Notas Sobre La Nueva Ofensiva Neoliberal En El Brasil Contemporáneo 643.2 Oscar MAC-CLURE, Universidad de Los Lagos, Chile Crisis of Legitimacy: Revisiting the Years before Pinochet’s Military Coup 643.3 Roberto P KORZENIEWICZ, University of Maryland, College Park, USA Historical Patterns of Inequality in Latin America

16:00-17:30 644

Critical and Normative Visions of Nation Building, Euroscepticism and Transnationalism

Language: English, French

WG02 Tuesday 12 July

Author Meets Their Critics: Manuela Boatca’s Global Inequalities Beyond Occidentalism

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Roberto P KORZENIEWICZ, University of Maryland, College Park, USA Panelist: Kathya ARAUJO, Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Chile

www.isa-sociology.org

WG02 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

Wednesday 13 July

646.2 Jose Mauricio DOMINGUES, IESP-UERJ, Brazil Realism and Trend-Concepts, the Political System and Modernity

09:00-10:30 645

In What Ways Can Comparative– Historical Sociology Help to Improve the Workings of the Modern World?

Session Organizer: Stephen MENNELL, University College Dublin, Ireland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 645.1 Stephen MENNELL, University College Dublin, Ireland Why Democracy Cannot be Dropped in Bombs from B52s at 30,000 Feet: The Social Bases of Democracy Revisited

645.3 Alex LAW, Abertay University, United Kingdom National Habitus and the State Formation Process in Scotland 645.4 Behrouz ALIKHANI, Reserch fellow at the Institute for Sociology, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, Germany, Germany Difficulties of the EU As a Common Object for Identification 645.5 Fernando AMPUDIA DE HARO, CIES-IUL, Portugal WHAT CAN WE Learn about Financial Crisis with Norbert Elias? 645.6 Mary HICKMAN, St Mary’s University, United Kingdom Capturing Mixture and Convergence in Comparative Analysis of the Irish Diaspora and Contemporary Urban Multicultures

646.4 Daniele CONVERSI, University of the Basque Country, Spain The Ideology of Modernity? the Study of Nationalism Between Historical Sociology and Political History

14:15-15:45 647

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Robert VAN KRIEKEN, University of Sydney, Australia

16:00-17:30 648

10:45-12:15

WG02 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

Thursday 14 July 09:00-10:30 JS-63

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 645.7 Nina BAUR, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany and Linda HERING, Technische Universitat Berlin, Germany Learning from the Past: Urban Ways to Reduce the Daily Complexity in Economic Practices

Author Meets Their Readers: Robert Van Krieken’s Celebrity Society

Contextualizing Inter- & Multinational Survey Research. Discussing Regional Perspectives on Effects & Outcomes of Global Trends / Linear & Non-Linear (Multi-Level-)Modelling with Aggregate or Regional Data for Policy Analysis & Evidence Based Councelling

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC20 Comparative Sociology and WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-63.

Modernity, Contingency and Development in Contemporary Sociology. Should We Carry on Theorizing?

10:45-12:15 JS-65

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Jose Mauricio DOMINGUES, IESP-UERJ, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 646.1 Kathya ARAUJO, Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Chile Forget Modernity? Social Theory Anew

The Complex Discursivity of Global Futures in the Making: Analyzing Transnational Orders of Discourse 1

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology (Host); RC14 Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture and WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-65.

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297

Historical and Comparative Sociology

645.2 Eric Royal LYBECK, University of Exeter, United Kingdom Comparative-Historical Sociology As Professional Practice

646.3 Wolfgang KNOEBL, Hamburg Institute for Social Research, Germany How (not) to Theorize Processes: Lessons from the Past

WG02

Location: Hörsaal 21 (Juridicum)

646

No. 648

No. 649

Program–Session Details

Rathgeber KNAN, Liberal Judaism, United Kingdom and Searle KOCHBERG, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom Reconstructing Rituals: Using Bricolage to (Re)Negotiate Faith Based Rituals with the Jewish Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Queer and Intersex Community

WG03

Visual Sociology

WG03

Visual Sociology Program Coordinator: Valentina ANZOISE, University of Venice, Italy; Elisabeth-Jane MILNE, Coventry University, United Kingdom and Dennis ZUEV, Lancaster University, United Kingdom

Sunday 10 July

Visual Biographies in Media Communication

Committees: RC38 Biography and Society (Host); WG03 Visual Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-4.

WG03 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Elsa OLIVEIRA, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa

Framing Discourses, Action and Collective Imaginaries about Environmental Issues

Discussant: Annalisa FRISINA, University of Padova, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Committees: WG03 Visual Sociology (Host); RC24 Environment and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-16.

14:15-15:45 Perspectives and Challenges of Working with Images and New Media

Committees: RC37 Sociology of Arts (Host); WG03 Visual Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-22.

09:00-10:30 Visual Narratives of Faith: Religion, Ritual and Identity

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Maureen MICHAEL, University of Stirling, United Kingdom Chair: Gabry VANDERVEEN, Erasmus University/ Recht op Beeld, Netherlands Discussant: Maureen MICHAEL, University of Stirling, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 650.1 Elisabeth-Jane MILNE, African Centre for Migration and Society, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa; Margaret GREENFIELDS, Bucks New University, United Kingdom; Shaan

298

651.1 Elena ROMASHKO, University of Gottingen, Belarus Visual Narratives of Chernobyl: Venerating, Mourning and Healing 651.2 Maureen MICHAEL, University of Stirling, United Kingdom Swapping Jerseys: Professional Education and Materialities of Faith 651.3 Adolph VAN DER WALT, University of Gottingen, Germany, South Africa The Spiritual Significance of Xhosa Tobacco Pipe Smoking 651.4 Andrew WILSON, University of Derby, United Kingdom Virtual Nations and Spiritual Nationalism: White Racist Symbolism in Trans-Territorial Digital Communities

Monday 11 July 650

Visual Narratives of Faith: Spirituality, Materiality and Identity

Language: English, French, Spanish

12:30-14:00

JS-22

650.5 Monika VARGA, Université de Luxembourg, Luxembourg Signes D’externalisation D’une Opération Mentale De Substitution Conceptuelle En Passant Du Catholicisme Au Protestantisme Pentecôtiste: Une Mentalité «Affichée»

651

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

JS-16

650.3 Sergio MORENO ROBLES, Autonoma University, Madrid, Spain Análisis de la Evolución de las Identidades Religiosas en la Fiesta de El Vítor (España) a lo Largo del Siglo XX a Través de las Imágenes de los Programas de Fiestas

10:45-12:15

10:45-12:15 649

650.2 Ana Luisa FAYET SALLAS, Universidade Federal do Paraná, Brazil Golgata Community in Curitiba/Brasil – Possible Transitions Among Underground Scene, Music and Religion

650.4 Seddigheh MIRZAMOSTAFA, University of Mazandaran, Iran Hajj and Distinction in Iran

09:00-10:30 JS-4

WG03 Sunday 10 July

651.5 Dominik ZELINSKY, Masaryk University, Czech Republic Where It All Happened: Authenticity and Commemorative Religious Ritual

14:15-15:45 652

Visual Sociology and Conflicts: From Social Responsibility to Agency.

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Emanuela C. DEL RE, Univ. Niccolò Cusano of Rome, Italy Chair: Gary BRATCHFORD, Flat 5/1 The Apple Building, United Kingdom Discussant: Emanuela C. DEL RE, UNiv. Unicusano Roma, Italy

www.isa-sociology.org

WG03 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 652.1 Claudia TAZREITER, University of New South Wales, Australia The Visualization of Death at the Border. the Utility and Affective Realm of Representations of Suffering and Death for Political Advocacy and As the Circuits of a ‘Crisis Politics’ in Refugee Migrations.

652.3 Claudia GORDILLO, Universidade Federal de Parana, Brazil and Ana Luisa FAYET SALLAS, Teacher, Brazil The Visual Rhetorics of Victims: Photography, News and the Politics DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

652.5 Julien BUCHER, TU Chemnitz, Germany and Anja WELLER, TU Chemnitz, Germany From the European Financial to the Humanitarian Refugee Crisis. Visualized Imagination of Crisis.

653.5 Viola Elisabeth RUHSE, Danube University Krems, Austria Duane Hanson’s Sculptures of American Everyday Life

10:45-12:15 654

Visual Culture and the (Re-)Creation of Everyday Life

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Anna SCHOBER, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany and Regev NATHANSOHN, University of Michigan, USA Chair: Mateusz HALAWA, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Discussant: Anna SCHOBER, Justus Liebig University, Germany

16:00-17:30 JS-37

653.4 Eva SCHWAB, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria and Liliana GALLEGO, Universidade Tuiuti do Paraná, Brazil Re-Creating a Different Everyday through the Upgrading of Informal Settlements?

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

The Visual Construction of Nature and Environment

Committees: WG03 Visual Sociology (Host); RC24 Environment and Society See Joint Session Details for JS-37.

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30

654.1 Ayelet KOHN, Department of Communication, David Yellin College of Education, Israel and Regev NATHANSOHN, University of Michigan, USA (Re-)Framing the “Downtown People” of Haifa 654.2 Sarah WILSON, University of Stirling, United Kingdom Exploring the Significance of Visual Culture in Young People’s Attempts to Accomplish Everyday Life in Disadvantaged Circumstances and the Complexities of Representing and Politicising Such Private Circumstances Visually

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

654.3 Martina FINEDER, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, Austria We Want Things Different – the Visual Culture of Growing Ecological Awareness and New Emancipatory Lifestyle Experiments in the 1970s

Session Organizers: Anna SCHOBER, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany and Regev NATHANSOHN, University of Michigan, USA

654.4 Andrea DOUCET, Brock University, Canada Family Photographs and Ontological Narrativity: A Relational, Performative, and Ecological Approach

Chair: Andrea DOUCET, Brock University, Canada Discussant: Regev NATHANSOHN, University of Michigan, USA

654.5 Heike KANTER, University of Potsdam, Germany Iconic Power. the Everyday Editing of Press Photographies.

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

653

Visualizing Spaces of the Everyday

653.1 Bernadette KNEIDINGER-MÜLLER, University of Bamberg, Germany Photo Sharing in the Digital Age. How Mobile and Online Media Are Used for Photo Creation and Sharing of Everyday Experiences. 653.2 Alessio BERTI, Piccolo Opificio Sociologico, Italy; Alessio DI MARCO, Piccolo Opificio Sociologico, Italy; Tommaso FRANGIONI, Piccolo Opificio Sociologico, Italy; Raffaella MAIULLO, Piccolo Opificio Sociologico, Italy and Niccolo SIRLETO, PoieinLab, Italy Public Restrooms As Conflict Arenas

654.6 Natalia MIKHAYLOVA, European University at Saint Petersburg, Russia Confectionery Trade Cards and Visual Culture of Russia at the Turn of XIX-XX Centuries.

14:15-15:45 JS-45

Imagining Futures through the Visual

Committees: WG03 Visual Sociology (Host); RC07 Futures Research See Joint Session Details for JS-45.

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299

Visual Sociology

652.4 Daniel GARRETT, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Not a Spy – Challenges and Observations for Visual Sociology during the Umbrella Revolution

653.3 Joy Qi Yi HO, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore The ‘Void’ Is Not Empty: Space, Culture and Materiality at Singapore’s Void Deck

WG03

652.2 Ruthie GINSBURG, Minerva Humanities Center, Tel Aviv University, Israel Being There: Capturing Event with the Camera

No. 654

WG03

No. 655

Program–Session Details

16:00-17:30

10:45-12:15

655

657

Empowering Methods? Critiquing Participatory Visual and Arts Based Methods with Migrant Sex Worker and Migrant Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans, Queer and Intersex (LGBTQI) Communities

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Elisabeth-Jane MILNE, Coventry University, United Kingdom Chair: Elisabeth-Jane MILNE, Coventry University, United Kingdom

Visual Sociology

Discussant: Joanna WHEELER, Sustainable Livelihoods Foundation, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 655.1 Yvette TAYLOR, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom Liminal Landscapes: Exhibiting Sexual-Religious (Dis) Identification 655.2 Jacqueline SHAW, Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom Negotiated Ethics in Reality: Exploring Participatory Video Research with Migrant Transgender Communities and Sex Workers in India 655.3 Elsa OLIVEIRA, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa Making Visible (re)Presentations: A Paper That Explores the Use of Participatory Arts-Based Methods (visual and narrative) with Lgbtiq Migrants and Refugees. 655.4 LeConte DILL, SUNY Downstate School of Public Health, USA; Jo VEAREY, University of the Witwatersrand, African Centre for Migration & Society, South Africa; Elsa OLIVEIRA, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa and Khosi XABA, University of the Witwatersrand, Centre for Health Policy, South Africa Exploring Poetry as Visual, Arts-Based, and Participatory Research Practice in the City of Gold: Experiences from Johannesburg, South Africa

Look What I Found out! Research on Teaching and Learning Using Visual Methods

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Gabry VANDERVEEN, Erasmus University/ Recht op Beeld, Netherlands Chair: Cristiano MUTTI, ImagoEditor, Italy Discussant: Gabry VANDERVEEN, Erasmus University/ Recht op Beeld, Netherlands AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 657.1 Edna BARROMI PERLMAN, Kibbutz College of Education, Technology and Arts, Israel Using Photographs of School Buildings in Visual Diaries As a Reflective Tool in Teacher Training 657.2 Simon THOMPSON, University of Sussex, United Kingdom and Tom HAWARD, University of Sussex, United Kingdom State of the Art - an Investigation into How Students in UK Secondary Schools Experience Visual Historical Evidence, and How They Might be Used More Effectively. 657.3 Joanna KEDRA, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland Learning to See: Three Approaches to Journalistic Photography Interpretation 657.4 Anja WELLER, TU Chemnitz, Germany and Julien BUCHER, TU Chemnitz, Germany Interactive Research in School – Visual Worlds of the Youth DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 657.5 Choon Lee CHAI, Red Deer College, Canada Visual Sociology and Experiential Learning 657.6 Isabel STEINHARDT, INCHER Kassel, Germany The Connection of the Habitus of Pictures and Habitus Awareness of Teachers

14:15-15:45

Wednesday 13 July

658

09:00-10:30 656

WG03 Wednesday 13 July

Critical Perspectives on Visual Methodologies

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

Critical Rethinking of Visual Methodologies

Session Organizer: Carolina CAMBRE, Concordia University, Canada

Language: English, French, Spanish

Discussant: Carolina CAMBRE, Concordia University, Canada

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizer: Carolina CAMBRE, Concordia University, Canada Discussant: Carolina CAMBRE, Concordia University, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 656.1 Svetlana BANKOVSKAYA, National Research UniversityHigher School of Economics, Russia and Alexander FILIPPOV, National Research University-Higher School of Economics, Russia Events, Actions and Narrative in Video Analysis 656.2 Ruth AYASS, University of Klagenfurt, Austria “Tsunami Girl”: The Genesis of an Iconographic Picture 656.3 Angela GIGLIOTTI, Centre for Arts and Learning, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom Fugitive Spaces

300

658.1 Eva FLICKER, University of Vienna, Austria Visual Discourse As Viscourse: Conventions, Critics, and Chances Challenging the Analysis of Media Visuals in Media Discourse Practises 658.2 Boris TRAUE, Leuphana University Lueneburg, Germany and Lisa PFAHL, Innsbruck, Austria Visibility and Voice 658.3 Luc PAUWELS, University of Antwerp, Belgium Advancing Alternative Views. Steps Towards More Expressive, Experimental and Experiential Forms of Visual Social Science. 658.4 Elaine AZEVEDO, Universidade Federal do Espirito Santo/ Federal University of Espirito Santo, Brazil Socially Engaged ART As a Methodological Strategy in Social Science

www.isa-sociology.org

WG03 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

Thursday 14 July

16:00-17:30 659

No. 660

Studying Public Events Visually: Capturing and Analyzing Visual Moments

09:00-10:30 660

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Dennis ZUEV, Lancaster University, United Kingdom

Discussant: Gulsum DEPELI, Hacettepe University, Turkey AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

659.2 Daniel GARRETT, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Art and Visual Resistance As Political Correctives in Hong Kong’s Umbrella Revolution 659.3 Christian VON WISSEL, Goldsmiths, Centre for Urban and Community Research, University of London, United Kingdom ‘Paper Work’ – Uncovering Corporal ‘Labour of Presence’ of Peri-Urban Settlers in Mexico City. 659.4 Cristiano MUTTI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy; Lorenzo NATALI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy and Andrea KUNKL, Exposed Project, Italy Images, Mind Maps and Itinerant Soliloquies: A Transdisciplinary Exploration of Social Perceptions about Expo Milano 2015 DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 659.5 Tahereh ABOOFAZELI, Society for defending street and working children, Iran “Jashn-e Tklif” As a Rite of Passage in Iran’s Educational System.

Session Organizer: Piotr SZTOMPKA, Jagiellonian University, Poland Chair: Piotr SZTOMPKA, Jagiellonian University, Poland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 660.1 Sergio ALVARADO VIVAS, Corporacion Universitaria Minuto de Dios, Colombia and Jose Ignacio CHAVES, Corporacion Universitaria Minuto de Dios, Colombia The “Pintadas” like a Way of Citizen Communication. the Case in Downtown Bogota (Colombia) 660.2 Malgorzata BOGUNIA-BOROWSKA, JAGIELLONIAN UNIVERSITY, Poland The Museum As a Space of Social Relations. the Museum of Oskar Schindler’s Enamel Factory in Krakow and the Museum of the History of Polish Jews Polin in Warsaw. 660.3 Ekaterina LYTKINA, National Research University Higher School of Economics Laboratory for Comparative Social Research, Russia Aesthetic Upgrading of Urban Environments: The Case of Urban Sculptures in the Post-Soviet Societies

16:00-17:30 JS-70

Exploring the Role of Seeing in Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations

Committees: RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations (Host); WG03 Visual Sociology See Joint Session Details for JS-70.

659.6 Rodrigo MORETTI-PIRES, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil; Marcia GRISOTTI, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil; Zeno Carlos TESSER JR, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil and Lirous K’yo Fonseca AVILA, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil Disputes Between the Rainbow of Social Movement and the Green “Pink Money”: Analysis of Political Disputes in the 9th LGBT Pride March in Florianópolis (Brazil) through Visual Sociology.

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301

Visual Sociology

659.1 Anda LAKE, Latvian Academy of Culture, Latvia and Liga GRINBERGA, Latvian Academy of Culture, Latvia Visual Data in the Research of Tradition: Using PhotoElicitation Method in the Study of the Intermediate Period of the Latvian Song and Dance Festivals

Location: Hörsaal 13 (Juridicum)

WG03

Chair: Katerina PSARIKIDOU, Lancaster University, United Kingdom

Art in the Cities: Visual Cross-Cultural Research on the Strategies of Aesthetic Upgrading of Urban Environment

No. 661

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

WG05

663

Famine and Society

WG05

Famine and Society Program Coordinator: Manoj TEOTIA, Centre for Research in Rural and Industrial Development, India

Monday 11 July

Globalization of Slums, Houselessness and Urban Poverty: Emerging Issues and Options

Location: Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building) Session Organizers: Manoj TEOTIA, Centre for Research in Rural and Industrial Development, India; Rajiv SHARMA, Human Settlement Management Institute, India and Sunil BANSAL, CRRID, Chandigarh, India, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 661

WG05 Monday 11 July

Role of the Informal Sector in Job Creation and Reduction in Inequality

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Harjit Singh ANAND, Working Group 05, India and Amrit SRINIVASAN, Sangeet Natak Akademie, Ministry of Culture, India, India

663.1 Deepikaa GUPTA, Panjab University, India and Swarnjit KAUR, Panjab University, India Inequity in Child Health: A Case Study of Slum in Chandigarh (Sector 25). 663.2 Stephan TREUKE, Universidade Federal Da Bahia, Brazil Analyzing Neighborhood Effects on the Economic Mobility of the Inhabitants of Three Favelas in Salvador (Brazil) from a Social Network Perspective: The Importance of Urban Politics in Promoting Social Inclusion and Erradicating Residential Segregation

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 661.1 Sucheta SINGH, Panjab University, India A Quest for Inclusion: Understanding the Marginalization of Dalit Quilt Women Workers (Case Study of Chandigarh) 661.2 Amrit SRINIVASAN, Sangeet Natak Akademie, Ministry of Culture, India, India The Woman’s Gharana: Social Capital Formation in the Indian Performing Arts 661.3 Neelima Rashmi LAKRA, TATA INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, MUMBAI, India Training Need Assessment, Social Entrepreneurship and Employment in Informal Sector: Line Drawn from Public Sector and Educational Institution in India

10:45-12:15 662

Economic Transformation and Urbanisation: The Future of Pluriactive Small Farmers and Rural Workers in South Asia?

Location: Seminarraum Geschichte 1 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Staffan LINDBERG, Lund University, Sweden and Surinder JODHKA, Centre for the Study of Social Systems, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 662.1 Krishna Gopal IYER, Panjab University, India Housing, Slums and Urban Poverty in North-Western India: Sustainability in Question? 662.2 Main UDDIN, Tallinn University, Estonia and Nasir UDDIN, Chittagong University, Bangladesh Beyond Push-Pull Dichotomy: Dynamics of Rural-Urban Migration in Bangladesh

16:00-17:30 664

Location: Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building) Session Organizers: Tiina-Riitta LAPPI, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland, Finland; Laura STARK, University of Jyväskylä, Finland and Sidylamine BAGAYOKO, University of Bamako, Mali AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 664.1 Harjit Singh ANAND, Glownet Knowledge Services, India Informal Sector As an Instrument of Job Creation 664.2 Mani MARINS, MARINA TEBET AZEVEDO DE MARINS AND JEREMIAS FERREIRA DE MARINS, Brazil Meanings of Being “Poor”: The Bolsa Família Case 664.3 Stephan TREUKE, Universidade Federal da Bahia, Brazil The Reproduction of Segregation Patterns in Salvador’s Railway Suburbs Via Public Slum Upgrade Programs: The Case of Novos Alagados (Brazil) 664.4 Jelena SALMI, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland “Thrown into the Jungle” – Experiences of Displacement and Disruption in Neoliberal India 664.5 Madeleine WAYACK PAMBE, Institut Supérieur des Sciences de la Population (ISSP) - Université de Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso and Nathalie SAWADOGO, Institut Supérieur des Sciences de la Population (ISSP) - Université de Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso Stratégies De Survie Des Ménages Pauvres à Ouagadougou: Importance Du Réseau Relationnel Et Du Genre

662.3 Sanjukkta BHADURI, SCHOOL OF PLANNING AND ARCHITECTURE, India Social IMPACT Assessment of Urban Transport Projects

302

Poverty and Vulnerabilities in Urban Spaces: Causes and Consequences

www.isa-sociology.org

WG05 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

Tuesday 12 July

Wednesday 13 July

09:00-10:30

09:00-10:30

JS-40

667

Committees: WG05 Famine and Society (Host); RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

Poverty and Inequality: Can Conditional Cash Transfers Programmes Alliviate Them?

Language: English, Spanish Location: Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building)

See Joint Session Details for JS-40.

Session Organizer: Veronica VILLARESPE, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico

14:15-15:45

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Human Dimension of Hydro Based Development: Socio-Psychological Perspective

Location: Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building) Session Organizers: Mohinder KUMAR SLARIYA, Government Post-Graduate College, India and Yash Pal SINGH, Department of Education, MJP Rohilkhand University, Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh, India

16:00-17:30 666

Encountering Marginalisation and Exclusion in Globalising Nations – Gender Issues and Concerns

Location: Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building) Session Organizer: Anita DASH, Ravenshaw University, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 666.1 Tal MELER, Zefat Academic College, Israel Intersections in Palestinian Educated Mother’s Lives in Israel 666.2 Asmita BHATTACHARYYA, Vidyasagar University, India Marginality Perception of Women Techies in Kolkata: A Bottom up Approach

667.1 Florentino B. RAMIREZ PABLO, Instituto de Investigaciones Economicas (IIEc) Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM), Mexico Reducción De La Pobreza En México: Programas Productivos y Microcrédito 667.2 Fisca AULIA, Ministry of National Development Planning, Indonesia and Riski PUTRA, Ministry of National Development Planning, Indonesia How Much Indonesian Conditional Cash Transfer Reduce Poverty Rate? 667.3 Veronica VILLARESPE, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico and Carlos QUINTANILLA, Facultad de Derecho, UNAM, Mexico Las Transferencias Monetarias Condicionadas: Alivian La Pobreza? 667.4 Hilda CABALLERO, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Legitimación De La Desigualdad y Naturalización De La Pobreza En Los Programas Sociales Neoliberales. De “Oportunidades” a “Prospera” En México: Conceptos, Asunciones y Efectos.

10:45-12:15 668

Towards Sustainable and Inclusive Futures: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World

Location: Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building) Session Organizers: Ranvinder Singh SANDHU, Punjabi University, Patiala, Punjab, India; Krishna Gopal IYER, Panjab University, Chandigarh, India and Manmohanjit S. HUNDAL, Dept School Education, Punjab, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 668.1 Marika GEREKE, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany How to Get Towards a Sustainable Future? Examining the Opportunities of Local Communities in Conflicts over AgroIndustrial Projects 668.2 Shazia PERVAIZ, Lahore College for Women University, Pakistan, Pakistan and Azhar HAMEED, 8 MET-2 LAREX COLONY MUGHAL PURA, LAHORE, PAKISTAN., Pakistan Public Participation in Environmental Impact Assessment Process: Case Study of the Signal Free Corridor and the Orange Line Metro Projects of Lahore, Punjab

14:15-15:45 669

WG05 Business Meeting

Location: Marietta Blau Saal (Main Building)

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303

Famine and Society

665

WG05

Climate Change, Famines and Conflicts in Globalised World: Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

No. 669

NOTES

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304

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Thematic Groups TG03

TG03

Human Rights and Global Justice

Monday 11 July

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

09:00-10:30 670

An Ecosystemic Approach to the Development and Evaluation of Public Policies, Research and Teaching Programmes

Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Andre PILON, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil and Mark FREZZO, University of Mississippi, USA Chair: Mark FREZZO, University of Mississippi, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 670.1 Natalia BRACARENSE, North Central College, USA and Paulo BRACARENSE, Universidade Federal do Parana, Brazil Economic Policy: Development Economics, Green Jobs, and Employment of Last Resort 670.2 Namita GUPTA, Panjab University, Chandigarh, India Right to Adequate, Accessible and Safe Drinking Water in India: A Study of District Moga (Punjab)

671.2 Adaku ACHILIKE, Niger Delta University, Nigeria, Nigeria The PLACE of High School Drop-out in the Dwindling State of Education and Economy of the Nigerian System 671.3 Minzee KIM, Ewha Womans University, South Korea Human Rights Education for Higher Education in Korea 671.4 Oluyemi FAYOMI, Covenant University, Ota, Nigeria and Daisy NWAOZUZU, University of Dundee, United Kingdom Toward Human Rights Education in Nigerian Primary and Secondary Schools. DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 671.5 Daisy NWAOZUZU, University of Dundee, United Kingdom Restricted Internet Access: Students Perspectives on the Right to Expression and Privacy in a Developed Nation.

16:00-17:30

10:45-12:15 671

671.1 Mieko YAMADA, Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne, USA Focus on Local Diversity and Learn about Global Community: Incorporating Diversity and Social Justice into Japan’s English Language Education

Integrating Human Rights Education in the Secondary Schools and Higher Institutions’ Curriculums in Africa and Asia

672

TG03 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 23 (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Daisy NWAOZUZU, University of Dundee, United Kingdom and Oluyemi FAYOMI, Covenant University, Nigeria

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305

Human Rights and Global Justice

Program Coordinator: Oluyemi FAYOMI, Covenant University, Ota, Nigeria, Cynthia Lisa JEANS, University of Iceland, Iceland and Edward SIEH, Lasell College, USA

No. 673

Program–Session Details

Tuesday 12 July

14:15-15:45 673

10:45-12:15 JS-41

TG03 Tuesday 12 July

Gendered Human Rights, Human Dignity, and Intersecting Inequalities

Committees: RC32 Women in Society (Host); TG03 Human Rights and Global Justice

The Contestation for Resource Capture and Struggle for Socio-Economic Justice and Development

Location: Hörsaal 34 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Joshua ALABI, ARRAY(0x11a503a8) AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

See Joint Session Details for JS-41.

673.1 Viktoriia ZHOVNOVATA, National Technical University of Ukraine “Kyiv Polytechnic Institute”, Ukraine Crimean Referendum on March 16, 2014 – Annexation or Striving for More Fair Living Conditions?

Human Rights and Global Justice

TG03

673.2 Leticia Anabel PAULOS, University of Ottawa, Canada Building trans-local spaces of political solidarity for environmental and social justice within/by the World March of Women Peru

NOTES

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TG04 Tuesday 12 July

Program–Session Details AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

TG04

676.1 Rinat LIFSHITZ, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel and Yaacov BACHNER, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel Measuring Risk Perception in Later Life: The Perceived Risk Scale

Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty Program Coordinator: John Martyn CHAMBERLAIN, University of Southampton, United Kingdom

676.2 Judith ECKERT, Institute of Sociology, University of Freiburg, Germany Social Constructionism in the Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty: From Theory to Methodology and Methods 676.3 Eimante ZOLUBIENE, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania The Uses of Discourse Analysis in the Study of Risk: The Case of Risk Communication in Online News Media

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30 674

Theorizing Risk and Uncertainty

Session Organizer: Sarah MOORE, University of Bath, United Kingdom Chair: Sarah MOORE, University of Bath, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: 676.5 Anna KIERSZTYN, ARRAY(0x1169ef14) Non-Standard Employment and Risk: How Can We Capture Job Precarity Using Survey Data?

16:00-17:30

674.2 Rony BLANK-GOMEL, McGill University, Canada and Nadav EVEN CHOREV, Ben Gurion University, Israel Sociological Reactions to Uncertainty: Comparing the Political Projects of Risk Society and Actor-Network Theory

677

674.3 Philip MELLOR, University of Leeds, United Kingdom and Chris SHILLING, University of Kent, United Kingdom Arbitrage, Uncertainty and the New Ethos of Capitalism 674.4 Natalia BESEDOVSKY, University of Bremen, Germany Risk As Practice: The Calculative Practices of Credit Rating Agencies and Their Underlying Conceptions of Risk

10:45-12:15 Comparative Perspectives on Risk

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Adam BURGESS, University of Kent, United Kingdom Chair: Adam BURGESS, University of Kent, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 675.1 Ruchi AGARWAL, University of Edinburgh Business School, United Kingdom Understanding Organisational Change in Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: A Comparative Case Study 675.2 Uttam SAIKIA, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India Social Insurance in India: Achievements and Hindrances 675.3 Aiste BALZEKIENE, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania and Jesper PERSSON, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden Environmental Compensation As a Strategy to Deal with Environmental Risks in Urban Development Projects: Interdisciplinary and Cross – Country Perspectives

14:15-15:45 676

Researching Risk. Methodologies and Methods

The Life Course and Risk

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 677.1 Gavin DAKER-WHITE, The University of Manchester, United Kingdom, Jose VALDERAS, University of Exeter, United Kingdom, Sara RYAN, University of Oxford, United Kingdom, Claire ANDERSON, The University of Nottingham, United Kingdom, Stephen CAMPBELL, The University of Manchester, United Kingdom and Peter BOWER, The University of Manchester, United Kingdom The Social Context of Patient Safety Risks for People Living with Multiple Health Conditions 677.2 Janina SOHN, Sociological Research Center (SOFI) at Goettingen University, Germany The Uncertainties of Life-Courses Across Borders: Adult Immigrants’ Going “Back to School” As Risk Management 677.3 Elena SAMARSKY, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Calculated Risk - Risk Management Strategies in Migration: The Case Study of Highly Skilled Germans Relocating to the UK.

Tuesday 12 July 09:00-10:30 678

Terrorism, Risk and Regulation

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Gabe MYTHEN, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 678.1 Colman KEENAN, King’s College London, United Kingdom The Governance of Extremist Risk in British Universities 678.2 Gabe MYTHEN, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom The Problem with Radicalisation: A Critique of the Logic of Drivers

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jens ZINN, University of Melbourne, Australia

www.isa-sociology.org

307

Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

674.1 Adam BURGESS, University of Kent, United Kingdom Towards a (Modern) Historical Risk Perspective

TG04

676.4 Jens ZINN, University of Melbourne, Australia Using Corpus Linguistics for Sociological Research: Discourse-Semantic Changes of “Risk” in the New York Times, 1987-2014

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

675

No. 678

No. 679

Program–Session Details

10:45-12:15 679

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Voluntary Risk Taking and Edgework

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Jens ZINN, University of Melbourne, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 679.1 Kristopher MURRAY, Concordia University, Canada Lifestyles of Risk and Infamy 679.2 Matthew BUNN, University of Newcastle, Australia The Edgeworker’s Habitus – Climbing, the Relationalism of Risk and the Echoes of Action

TG04

14:15-15:45

681.2 Miyoko ENOMOTO, Tokyo International University, Japan Being “Good” and “Smart” Consumers: Communication about Food Risks 681.3 Karly BURCH, University of Otago, New Zealand Fighting for Food Safety in Post-Fukushima Japan: How Consumers Are Challenging the Governance and Regulation of Radionuclides in the Food System

681.5 Jorid ANDERSSEN, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norway Risk and Change in Everyday Food Habits

Safe(r) Cities? Risk, Security and Resilience

Wednesday 13 July

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Gabe MYTHEN, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom

Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

681.1 Charlotte FABIANSSON, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia Food and Risk - a Sociological Risk Discourse Perspective

681.4 Tien-Yu FENG, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Factors Affecting Purchase Intention of Organic Food: The Importance of Trust and Risk Perception

679.3 Stephen LYNG, Carthage College, USA The New Subjectivities of Risk

680

Chair: Gabe MYTHEN, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 680.1 Riccardo VALENTE, University of Barcelona, Spain, Lucrezia CRESCENZI, University of Central Catalonia (UVicUCC), Spain and Marta LOPEZ COSTA, University of Barcelona, Spain Margin Project (Horizon 2020): Knowledge-Based Approaches to Reduce Urban Insecurity 680.2 Martin VOSS, Freie Universität Berlin, Disaster Research Unit, Germany, Kristina SEIDELSOHN, Freie Universitat Berlin, Disaster Research Unit, Germany and Daniela KRUGER, Freie Universitat Berlin, Germany On ‘Perception Patterns’: Framing Subjective and Objectified Risks in the Planning Process for (more) Resilient Cities 680.3 Ana DELICADO, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal, Ana NUNES DE ALMEIDA, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal, Jussara ROWLAND, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal and Susana FONSECA, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon, Portugal Incorporating Children’s Perspectives in the Management of Urban Risks

09:00-10:30 682

Emotions, Trust, Hope and Other Approaches to Coping with Vulnerability amidst Uncertainty

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Michael CALNAN, University of Kent, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 682.1 Rebekka SIEBER, University of Neuchâtel, University of Fribourg, Switzerland Dealing with Uncertainty in Precarious Prosperity: Adaption As a Strategy to Improve the Quality of Life 682.2 Mike DENT, Staffordshire University, United Kingdom and Emmanuele PAVOLINI, ARRAY(0x11ae7180) Risk, Trust and Uncertainty within Two Health Care Systems: Italy and England. 682.3 Joanna WHEELER, Sustainable Livelihoods Foundation, South Africa and Jacqueline SHAW, Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom The Uncertain Possibilities and Necessary Risks in Participatory Visual Communication: Towards an Emergent Ethics of Contestation in Global-Local Policy Spaces

680.4 Katy WRIGHT, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Public Engagement with Risk in the Era of Resilience: Insights from Empirical Research

10:45-12:15

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

683

680.5 Adam CHORYNSKI, Institute for Agricultural and Forest Environment, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Money Isn’t Everything. Adaptation of Municipalities to Extreme Rainfall.

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

Chair: Patrick BROWN, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

Food and the Risk Society

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Charlotte FABIANSSON, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia

308

Risk Work: Experiences and Challenges within Organisational, Professional and Policy Contexts

Session Organizer: Patrick BROWN, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

16:00-17:30 681

TG04 Wednesday 13 July

683.1 Sandy WORDEN, The University of Queensland, Australia Assessing the Social Risk of Coal Mining Projects

www.isa-sociology.org

TG04 Thursday 14 July

Program–Session Details

683.2 Valerie ARNHOLD, Centre de Sociologie des Organisations (Sciences Po Paris/CNRS), France Regulators at Risk ? the Experience of the Fukushima DaiIchi Nuclear Accident for French Nuclear Safety Regulators

Thursday 14 July

683.3 Anne VAN DER GRAAF, Sciences Po, France Negotiating Risk: The Relationship Between Financial Risk Management and Profit

685

683.4 Clara IVERSEN, Uppsala University, Sweden Raising Issues of Risk Behavior in Medical Treatment Consultations 683.5 Heiko KIRSCHNER, University of Vienna - Department of Sociology, Austria and Maria SCHLECHTER, University of Vienna - Department of Sociology, Austria Disconnect to Reconnect: The Construction of New Media Risks and Solutions As Paradoxical Feedback-Loops in Organizations.

684

09:00-10:30 Education, Policies, and the Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Session Organizer: William BRADLEY, Ryukoku University, Otsu, Shiga, Japan Chair: William BRADLEY, Ryukoku University, Otsu, Shiga, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 685.1 Janina SOHN, Sociological Research Center (SOFI) at Goettingen University, Germany Educational Participation of Adult Immigrants: Risk or Opportunity?

TG04

14:15-15:45

No. 687

10:45-12:15

Health, Illness, Medicine and Risk

686

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Alphia POSSAMAI-INESEDY, University of Western Sydney, Australia

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 684.1 Jacqueline REGIS, ARRAY(0x11ae7324) The Risk of Giving Birth in Brazil: The Struggle for Obstetric and Post-Partum Care without Violence 684.2 Diane TRUSSON, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Risk and Uncertainty in Breast Cancer Diagnosis: Exploring Women’s Experiences of DCIS 684.3 Alan PETERSEN, Monash University, Australia, Casimir MACGREGOR, Monash University, Australia and Christine PARKER, Monash University, Australia From Risk to Uncertainty in Emerging Treatment Markets: A Sociological Analysis

Session Organizer: John Martyn CHAMBERLAIN, University of Southampton, United Kingdom Chair: John Martyn CHAMBERLAIN, University of Southampton, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 686.1 Trevor HOPPE, University at Albany, SUNY, USA Making HIV a Crime: Punishing Disease in America 686.2 Angus MACCULLOCH, Lancaster University, United Kingdom Leniency in Antitrust: Risk, Reward, Deterrence & Justice

14:15-15:45 687

TG04 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

684.4 Kristin BARKER, University of New Mexico, USA, Ryeora CHOE, University of New Mexico, USA, Keith WILKINS, University of New Mexico, USA, Neil GREENE, University of New Mexico, USA and Alexis MACLENNAN, University of New Mexico, USA It’s a Small World after All: The Nature of Risk and Science 684.5 Alexandra HILLMAN, Wiserd, Cardiff University, United Kingdom and Jamie LEWIS, Cardiff University, United Kingdom Securing Futures in Cancer Research: Harnessing Risk and Negotiating Boundaries.

16:00-17:30 JS-58

Les Carrières Créatives: Modèles Contemporains D’organisation Du Travail / Creative Careers: Contemporary Models of Work Organization

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work (Host); TG04 Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty See Joint Session Details for JS-58.

www.isa-sociology.org

309

Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

Chair: Alphia POSSAMAI-INESEDY, University of Western Sydney, Australia

Crime, Deviance and Risk

Location: Hörsaal 46 (Main Building)

No. 688

Program–Session Details

14:15-15:45

TG06

690

Institutional Ethnography

Monday 11 July 09:00-10:30

TG06 Institutional Ethnography

Under New Public Management

Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Program Coordinator: Paul LUKEN, University of West Georgia, Carrollton, GA, USA

688

Institutional Ethnography in Education: Participating in the ‘struggle for a Better World’

Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Session Organizer: Paul LUKEN, University of West Georgia, Carrollton, GA, USA Chair: Paul LUKEN, University of West Georgia, USA Panelists: Marjorie DEVAULT, Syracuse University, USA, Liza MCCOY, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada, Marie CAMPBELL, University of Victoria, Canada, Michael CORMAN, Queen’s University of Belfast, Northern Ireland and Frank RIDZI, ARRAY(0x11a9b76c), USA

16:00-17:30 691

TG06 Business Meeting

Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Session Organizers: Debra TALBOT, University of Sydney, Australia and David PEACOCK, University of Alberta, Canada

Tuesday 12 July

Chair: Lois ANDRE-BECHELY, California State University, Los Angeles, USA

09:00-10:30

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

692

688.1 David PEACOCK, University of Queensland, Australia Widening Participation As Behaviour Management: An Ethnography of Student Equity Outreach in One Low SES School 688.2 Debra TALBOT, University of Sydney, Australia Spaces of Possibility for Transformative Teacher Learning 688.3 Nerida SPINA, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Ruling Relations in Hyperactive Times 688.4 Petra NEUHOLD, University of Vienna, Austria Multilingualism in the Monolingual School. An Institutional Ethnography of Viennese Secondary Schools from the Perspective of Teachers

10:45-12:15 689 “Worlds of Paper”: Bureaucracies and

Everyday Life within Public and Private Institutions - “Mundos De Papel”: Burocracias y Cotidianeidad En Instituciones Públicas y Privadas

Language: Spanish, English Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Laura FERREÑO, Universidad Nacional de Avellaneda, Argentina Chair: Laura FERREÑO, Universidad Nacional de Avellaneda, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Institutional Ethnographies of Coordination: Embodying the Actual in the Institutional

Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Alison GRIFFITH, York University, ON, Canada Chair: Hans-Peter DE RUITER, Minnesota State University, Mankato, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 692.1 Jessica CUNNINGHAM SEGOVIA, Arizona State University, USA Measuring Average: A Study of the Educational Barriers for Children with Moderate Disabilities within the US School System. 692.2 Wen-hui Anna TANG, National Sun Yat-sen University, TAIWAN, Taiwan Why Mothers Opt out? 692.3 Debra TALBOT, University of Sydney, Australia Teachers Resisting ‘Accountability’ Agendas: Tracing Stories of Transformative Learning 692.4 Li-Fang LIANG, Institute of Health and Welfare Policy, National Yang-Ming University, Taiwan No One Left behind? an Institutional Ethnography on Indigenous Women’s Experiences in Social Assistance

10:45-12:15 693

Visual and Other Practices of Governance and Expertise

Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

689.1 Claudio RAMOS ZINCKE, Universidad Alberto Hurtado, Chile The Co-Production of State and Poors Mediated By a Sociotechnical Device: A Socioeconomic Stratification Card 689.2 Laura MONTES DE OCA BARRERA, Institute of Social Research, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico State-Society Interplay: Institutional Ethnography in Governance Scenarios / Interacción Estado-Sociedad: Etnografía Institucional En Escenarios De Gobernanza

Session Organizers: Liza MCCOY, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada and Eric MYKHALOVSKIY, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada Chair: Liza MCCOY, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 693.1 Elizabeth BRULE, York University, Canada Policing Student Activism: An Institutional Ethnography of Administrative Techniques of Surveillance

689.3 Ann Christin NILSEN, University of Agder, Norway Travelling Texts. Justifying Early Intervention.

310

TG06 Monday 11 July

www.isa-sociology.org

TG06 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

693.2 Nina SUESSE, King’s College London, United Kingdom The Every-Day of German Family Policy Reform: New and Old Disparities in the Organisation of Childcare 693.3 Lisa WOOD, Lancaster University, United Kingdom “It’s Not the Way We Do Things Here”: The Meaning of Organisational Place When Work Goes on the Move 693.4 Miriam BOTTNER, Bergische Universität Wuppertal, Germany Placing One’s Self in an out-of-School Learning Facility – Videography at a Children’s University

Wednesday 13 July 09:00-10:30 696

New Directions in Institutional Ethnography Research

Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Suzanne VAUGHAN, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA Chair: Suzanne VAUGHAN, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA

14:15-15:45 694

No. 697

Institutional Ethnography: Global and Local Applications Across Educational Contexts

Session Organizer: Lois ANDRE-BECHELY, Cal State Univ Los Angeles, USA Chair: Lois ANDRE-BECHELY, California State University, Los Angeles, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

694.2 David PEACOCK, University of Alberta, Canada Producing and Raising ‘low Aspirations’: An Institutional Ethnography of a University Outreach Program with Elementary School Children 694.3 Ilka SOMMER, Humboldt-University of Berlin, Germany Quo Vadis Reflexivity? Negotiating the Key Value of Education and Science 694.4 Megan THROM, Wayne State University, USA Exploring the Teaching/Research Nexus Via Institutional Ethnography

696.2 Kjeld HOGSBRO, Aalborg University, Department of Sociology and Social Work, Denmark, Denmark The Dementia Problematic - an Institutional Ethnography of a Life-World and a Professional Service. 696.3 Siri AKSNES, Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway and Rune HALVORSEN, Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway Blind Spots in Employers’ Practices: How Institutional Ethnography May Help in the Rethinking of Labour Market Inclusion Policies for Persons with Disabilities 696.4 Mario SANTOS, University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal and Jette Aaroe CLAUSEN, Metropol University College of Copenhagen, Denmark In-Labour Ethnography - Challenges and Possibilities When Doing Ethnography in Our Own Work Place

10:45-12:15 697

Institutional Ethnographic Contributions to Justice and Change

16:00-17:30

Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

695

Session Organizer: Suzanne VAUGHAN, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA

The Social Organization of Knowledge

Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Chair: Eric MYKHALOVSKIY, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada

Session Organizer: Paul LUKEN, University of West Georgia, Carrollton, GA, USA

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Chair: Hans-Peter DE RUITER, Minnesota State University, Mankato, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 695.1 Pei-Ru LIAO, National Pingtung University of Science and Technology, Taiwan Institutionalization of Gender Equality in Contemporary Taiwan: A Preliminary Institutional Ethnographic Exploration

697.1 Suchandra GHOSH, IIT Kanpur, India Courts, Law and Judges: An Ethnography of Judicial Reasoning in Sharia and Civil Courts 697.2 Suzanne VAUGHAN, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA Making Institutional Change in Small Ways: Introducing Institutional Ethnography to First Generation University Students

695.2 Caroline MORRIS, University of Leicester, United Kingdom Risk-I: Exploring Risk-Identification to Prevent Cardiovascular Disease - an Institutional Ethnography

697.3 Frank WANG, Graduate Institute of Social Work, National Chengchi University, Taiwan Deconstructing Care from below: ‘Toona Tamu’ As Resistance to Pathological Subjectivity for Indigenous Elders in Taiwan

695.3 Marie CAMPBELL, University of Victoria, Canada and Elena KIM, American University of Central Asia, Kyrgyzstan Institutional Ethnography and the Practice of International Development: Exploring Ruling Relations

697.4 Lauren EASTWOOD, SUNY College at Plattsburgh, USA and Marjorie DEVAULT, Syracuse University, USA Laws, Regulations, and Standards: An Agenda for Researching the Mechanisms of Compliance

695.4 Tomasz WARCZOK, Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland Ideologies within the Ritual. Practical Classifications of Welfare Clients in Poland.

www.isa-sociology.org

311

Institutional Ethnography

694.1 James REID, University of Huddersfield, United Kingdom How Do Teachers Come to Care?

696.1 Michael CORMAN, Queen’s University of Belfast, Northern Ireland The Social Organization of Dispatch Operations – the “Brains” of Emergency Medical Services

TG06

Location: Hörsaal 6C P (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

No. 698

Program–Session Details AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

TG07

699.1 Jean DURUZ, University of South Australia, hawke research Institute, Australia Trucking in Tastes and Smells: Adelaide’s Street Food and the Politics of Urban “Vibrancy”

Senses and Society Program Coordinator: Kelvin LOW, National University of Singapore, Singapore

09:00-10:30

TG07

City Scents: Food, Sensory Knowledge and Transnationalism in the Urban Everyday. Part I

14:15-15:45 700

Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Jean DURUZ, University of South Australia, hawke research Institute, Australia and Camille BEGIN, Concordia University, Canada Chair: Jean DURUZ, University of South Australia, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Senses and Society

699.2 Kelvin LOW, National University of Singapore, Singapore Eating Politics: Gastro-Diplomacy and Sensory Encounters 699.3 Ana Maria HUAITA ALFARO, University College London, Peru Approaching City Life through the Experiences of Commingling at Urban Food Markets: A Study of Two Marketplaces of the City of Lima, Peru

Monday 11 July 698

698.1 Michael PARZER, University of Vienna, Austria, Franz ASTLEITHNER, University of Vienna, Austria and Irene RIEDER, University of Vienna, Austria Cosmopolitan Taste As Cultural Capital. Native Consumption in Immigrant Grocery Stores in Vienna 698.2 Benjamin COLES, University of Leicester, United Kingdom and Alison BARNES, School of Design, London College of Communication University of the Arts London, United Kingdom Dis/Placements and Dis/Ruptures in Cosmopolitan Conviviality: ‘Writing’ Multi-Cultural London

City Scents: Food, Sensory Knowledge and Transnationalism in the Urban Everyday. Part II

Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Jean DURUZ, University of South Australia, hawke research Institute, Australia and Camille BEGIN, Concordia University, Canada Chair: Benjamin COLES, University of Leicester, United Kingdom

312

Beyond the Material Turn? Sensory Interrogations in Religion and Spirituality

Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Noorman ABDULLAH, National University of Singapore, Singapore Chair: Alexandre MARCHANT, Université Paris X Nanterre, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 700.1 Daniel WINCHESTER, Purdue University, USA Matters of Faith: Material Objects As Plot Devices in the Formations of Religious Subjects 700.2 Noorman ABDULLAH, National University of Singapore, Singapore Harmony As “Repressive”: Sensory Politics, Religion and the Everyday

16:00-17:30

10:45-12:15 699

TG07 Monday 11 July

701

Psychonautism in Contemporary Arts and Societies: A Socio-History of a Sensory Experience

Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Alexandre MARCHANT, Université Paris X Nanterre, France Chair: Florence FIGOLS, Concordia University, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 701.1 Alexandre MARCHANT, Université Paris X Nanterre, France The “Mandala” Psychonautist Experience in Paris in the 1960s-1970s.

www.isa-sociology.org

TG07 Wednesday 13 July

Program–Session Details

No. 707

Tuesday 12 July

704.2 Daniel TORODE, University of South Australia, Australia Engine Noise and the Pleasurable Driving Experience

09:00-10:30

704.3 Sharyn DAVIES, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand The Pleasure of Protest: Piety, Performance and Pretty Policewomen in Indonesia

702

Exploring Sensescapes of Home: Smell, Touch and Taste

Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Petr GIBAS, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic, Blanka NYKLOVA, Institute of Sociology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic and Karolina PAUKNEROVA, Center for Theoretical Study, Charles University in Prague & Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic Chair: Noorman ABDULLAH, National University of Singapore, Singapore AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

702.2 Ivana HERMOVA, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic The Complexity of the Sensory Experience of Home on the Example of Window

10:45-12:15 703

Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Susanna TRNKA, University of Auckland, New Zealand and Sharyn DAVIES, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand Chair: Peter GRAHAME, Pennsylvania State University - Schuylkill, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 705.1 Enrico PETRILLI, University of Milano Biccoca, Italy A Carnal Sociology of Clubbing, an Ethnographic Study on Senses and Pleasures 705.2 Minerva ROJAS RUIZ, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico Walking through Cultural Heritage: The Pleasure of Cultural Tourism 705.3 Mashrur HOSSAIN, Jahangirnagar University, Bangladesh (At)Tempting Extreme: Approxi/Mating X-Topia

Wednesday 13 July

Artistic Practices and the Senses

Language: English, French, Spanish Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Florence FIGOLS, Concordia University, Canada Chair: Catherine EARL, Deakin University, Australia

09:00-10:30 706

Senses, Society, and Struggles for a Better World

Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 703.1 Miriam TAG, Bielefeld University, Germany Cross-Cultural and Cross-Sensual Writing Processes Exploring Relations Between Languages and the Senses 703.2 Grant CORBISHLEY, Wellington Institute of Technology, New Zealand Stewardship: An Ethico-Aesthetic Approach to Uncertain Futures in the Valley of the Wild 703.3 Florence FIGOLS, Concordia University, Canada Identities In-Between; Choreographing the Haptic

Session Organizers: Andrea GLAUSER, Universität Luzern, Switzerland and Michael JONAS, Institute for Advanced Studies, Vienna, Austria Chair: Sharyn DAVIES, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand AUTHORS AND PAPERS: 706.1 Srdan ATANASOVSKI, Institute of Musicology SASA, Serbia Sonic Ecologies of Political Protests 706.2 Lydia Nicole FANELLI, Concordia University, Canada A Becoming-Revolution: Understanding Indigenism through Contemporary Sociological Theory

14:15-15:45 704

Pleasing Possibilities: New Perspectives on Pleasure. Part II

Pleasing Possibilities: New Perspectives on Pleasure. Part I

Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Susanna TRNKA, University of Auckland, New Zealand and Sharyn DAVIES, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand

706.3 Maud ARNAL, EHESS, McGill - IRIS, CERMES3, SSOM, France L’essence Des Douleurs Des Femmes Lors De L’accouchement En Quête De Sens

10:45-12:15

Chair: Enrico PETRILLI, University of Milano Biccoca, Italy

707

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Location: Seminar 33 (Juridicum)

TG07 Business Meeting

704.1 Peter GRAHAME, Pennsylvania State University Schuylkill, USA Pleasures of Place: Aesthetics, Sociology, and Tourism

www.isa-sociology.org

313

Senses and Society

702.3 Petr GIBAS, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic Disassembling Home: Touch, Smell, and the Autoethnographic Exploration of Moving My Grandmother out

705

TG07

702.1 Catherine EARL, Deakin University, Australia Exploring Vietnamese Sensescapes of Home: Neolocality, Kinship, Cosmopolitanism

16:00-17:30

Engage with the Publications of the ISA at the ISA Forum 2016 The Journals of the ISA International Sociology, one of the first sociological journals to reflect the research interests and voice of the international community of sociologists. iss.sagepub.com Current Sociology, one of the oldest and most widely cited sociology journals in the world. csi.sagepub.com

SSIS BOOKS ARE €9.99 AT ISA*

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SAGE SOCIOLOGY BOOKS ARE €9.99 AT ISA*

SAGE Sociology Books SAGE Publishing’s Sociology Books include a mix of critical, student-focused textbooks, scholarly titles and reference works.

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Professional Development Monday 11 July

19:30 - 21:00 711 Publishing for Publics Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

708 ISA Print Publications

Session Organizer: John HOLMWOOD, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Vineeta SINHA, National University of Singapore, Singapore Panelists: Eloisa MARTIN, Universidade Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Marta SOLER GALLART, University of Barcelona, Spain and Mohammed BAMYEH, University of Pittsburgh, USA

Tuesday 12 July

Panelists: John HOLMWOOD, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom; Mohammed BAMYEH, University of Pittsburgh, USA and Michael BURAWOY, University of California, Berkeley, USA

Wednesday 13 July 19:30 - 21:00 712 International Academic Publication

12:30 - 14:00

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

709 ISA and Human Rights

Session Organizer: Eloisa MARTIN, Universidade Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Sari HANAFI, American University of Beirut, Lebanon Panelists: Margaret ABRAHAM, Hofstra University, USA; Lisa TARAKI, Birzeit University, Palestine and Mark FREZZO, University of Mississippi, USA

710 ISA Publications in Digital Worlds

Panelists: Rosemary BARBERET, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, USA; Kelvin LOW, National University of Singapore, Singapore and Eloisa MARTIN, Universidade Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Thursday 14 July 12:30 - 14:00

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Kelvin LOW, National University of Singapore, Singapore Panelists: Kelvin LOW, National University of Singapore, Singapore and Vineeta SINHA, National University of Singapore, Singapore

713 In Conversation with Senior Sociologists: Making Connections, Bridging Generations I

Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

714 In Conversation with Senior Sociologists: Making Connections, Bridging Generations II

Location: Seminarsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Vineeta SINHA, National University of Singapore, Singapore; Ayse SAKTANBER, Middle-East Technical University of Ankara, Turkey and Filomin GUTIERREZ, Department of Sociology University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines

www.isa-sociology.org

315

Prof

19:30 - 21:00

NOTES

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316

www.isa-sociology.org

Joint Session Details Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Joint Sunday 10 July

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

09:00 - 10:30 JS-1 Family-Friendly Policies and Gender (In) Equality in Paid and Unpaid Work

Committees: RC06 Family Research, RC32 Women in Society

JS-1.5 Gerlinde MAUERER, University of Vienna, Institute of Sociology; University of Applied Sciences Vienna, Austria Paternal Leave and Part-Timework: Challenges for Family Life, Future Perspectives

JS-2 Elites, the Poor and the Welfare State in Unequal Democracies

Committees: RC07 Futures Research, RC18 Political Sociology

Session Organizers: Pia SCHOBER, Department of Education Policy German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Germany and Lena HIPP, Social Science Research Center Berlin, Germany

Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Chair: Pia SCHOBER, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Germany

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-1.2 Heejung CHUNG, University of Kent, United Kingdom and Mariska VAN DER HORST, University of Kent, United Kingdom Flexible Working and Consequences for Working Patterns Post Childbirth for Mothers in the UK JS-1.3 Jianghong LI, WZB Berlin Social Science Center, Germany; Plamen AKALIYSKI, University of Norway, Norway and Lyndall STRAZDINS, Australian National University, Australia Father’s and Mother’s Work Hours and Children’s Social and Emotional Wellbeing JS-1.4 Martin BUJARD, Federal Institute for Population Research, Germany; Jasmin PASSET-WITTIG, Federal Institute for Population Research, Germany and Michael MUHLICHEN, Federal Institute for Population Research, Germany How the Paradigm Shift in Germany’s Family Policy Affects Mothers’ Labour Force Participation JS-1.6 Tine ROSTGAARD, Aalborg University, Denmark and Gudny EYDAL, Iceland University, Iceland Fatherhood in Five Nordic Countries: Policies and Practices

JS-2.1 Elisa REIS, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Change and Continuity in the Perceptions of Brazilian Elites about Poverty and Inequality JS-2.2 Graziella MORAES SILVA, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Elites, Poverty and Inequality in Brazil and South Africa JS-2.3 Karin FISCHER, Kepler University Linz, Austria and Pelfini PELFINI, Department of Sociology, Alberto Hurtado University, Santiago de Chile, Chile Business Elites and Citizen Demands – a Case Study from Chile JS-2.4 Silke OETSCH, Department of Sociology, Austria The Welfare State, Taxation and Tax Privileges DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-2.5 Lavinia BIFULCO, Department of Sociology, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy and Paola ARRIGONI, University of Torino, Italy Welfare Restructuring and Philanthropic Elites. the Case of Milano

www.isa-sociology.org

317

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizer: Felix LOPEZ, Institute of Applied Economic Research, Brazil

Joint

Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

No. JS-3

Joint Session Details

JS-3 Contextualizing Cases and

JS-5 Gender Stereotypes and STEM

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology, RC20 Comparative Sociology, WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology, RC04 Sociology of Education

Types through Qualitative Multi-Level-Analysis

Education: Global and Local Perspectives

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Arnd-Michael NOHL, Universität der Bundeswehr Hamburg, Germany and Anja WEISS, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-3.1 Steffen AMLING, Universität Hamburg, Germany; Zuhal KAVACIK, Universität Hamburg, Germany and Alexander GEIMER, Universität Hamburg, Germany Communicative Knowledge and Multi-Level-Analysis. Ideas on the Relation Between Discourses and (Social) Milieus Based on Empirical Data. JS-3.2 Marion INK, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France International Houses’ Humanist Policies Facing Everyday Life. Comparative Ethnographies of Three Student Houses in France, United States and Canada JS-3.3 Ana Carolina ALFINITO VIEIRA, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Germany and Sigrid QUACK, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany How to Study Intersecting Processes of Mobilization in Different Social Spheres? a Comparison of Process Tracing and Sequences Analysis

Joint

JS-3.4 Cornelia SCHADLER, University of Vienna, Austria Multi-Level Analysis with New Materialist Ethnographies JS-3.5 Silke LAUX, University of Hannover, Germany International Summer University Students Between Dwelling and Traveling - a Longitudinal Study on Processes of Learning and Transformation in Consideration of Different Dimensions of Mobility

JS-4 Visual Biographies in Media Communication

Location: Hörsaal 47 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Roswitha BRECKNER, University of Vienna, Austria and Ayelet KOHN, Hadassah Academic College, Israel Chair: Kathy DAVIS, VU University, Netherlands

Session Organizers: Lawrence SAHA, Australian National University, Australia and Joanna SIKORA, Australian National University, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-5.1 Susanne KINK, University of Graz, Austria “Biology Appeals to Women. Women Do Not like Math” – Stereotypes and Implicit Gendering of Scientific Cultures in Chemistry and Geology JS-5.2 Zerrin SALIKUTLUK, Mannheim Centre for European Social Research, Germany and Stefanie HEYNE, University of Bamberg, Germany Do Gender Norms Affect Performance in Math? the Impact of Adolescents’ and Their Peers’ Gender Norms on Math Grades in Four European Countries JS-5.3 Connie L MCNEELY, George Mason University, USA and Lisa FREHILL, National Science Foundation, USA Interrogating the Durability of Gender Stereotypes and Representation Among University Faculty in Cross-National Perspective JS-5.4 Catherine BERHEIDE, Skidmore College, USA The Effect of Gender Stereotyping on Undergraduate Student Ratings of Faculty Teaching Effectiveness

JS-6 Opening Session with Saskia Sassen, Donatella Della Porta and Maha Abdelrahman

Committees: RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change, RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements Session Organizers: Breno BRINGEL, State University of Rio de Janeiro (UERJ), Brazil and Benjamin TEJERINA, University of the Basque Country, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-6.1 Saskia SASSEN, Columbia University, USA Social Movements and Sociological Theory

10:45 - 12:15

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-4.1 Ayelet KOHN, Department of Communication, David Yellin College of Education, Israel Mehubarot: Visual Biographies in a Televised Docu-Realism JS-4.2 Lyudmila A. NURSE, Oxford XXI, United Kingdom Biographies on-Line: Interaction Between Biographical and Imaginary in Video Essays JS-4.3 Patricia PRIETO BLANCO, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland Maria’s Bag. Negotiating Identity and Belonging through Old and New Visual Media. JS-4.4 Margarita KÖHL, University of Vienna, Austria Articulating “Together-Ness” - Image Practices of Young People in Thailand, Austia and Vietnam JS-4.5 Roswitha BRECKNER, University of Vienna, Austria Visible Life Histories on Facebook? Biographical Implications of a New Form of Communication

318

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal 41 (Main Building)

Committees: RC38 Biography and Society, WG03 Visual Sociology

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Sunday 10 July

JS-7 Intersectionality and Intergenerational Family Relationships

Committees: RC32 Women in Society, RC06 Family Research Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Saori KAMANO, National Institute of Population and Social Security Research, Japan and Diana KHOR, Hosei University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-7.1 Aditi BASU, Maulana Azad College, India A Study on Transgender Persons and Their Family Reactions JS-7.2 Karsten HANK, University of Cologne, Germany and Anja STEINBACH, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany Young Adults’ Sexual Orientation and the Interrelatedness of Inter- and Intragenerational Family Relations JS-7.3 Diana KHOR, Hosei University, Japan and Saori KAMANO, National Institute of Population and Social Security Research, Japan Practices of Intimacy: Preliminary Results from Focus Group Interviews with Mothers and Daughters in Hong Kong and Japan

www.isa-sociology.org

Sunday 10 July

No. JS-10

Joint Session Details

JS-9.4 Jingjing ZHANG, Southeast University, China Deprivation of Resources: Aged Care in China’s Newly Urbanized Areas

JS-7.4 Reiko YAMATO, Faculty of Sociology, Kansai University, Japan Patrilineal, Bilateral, or Individualized?: Changing Intergenerational Relationships in Japan JS-7.5 Yuen Shan LAI, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Abortion Among Unmarried Female Migrant Workers in China: Modes of Parental Influence DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-7.6 Aylin AKPINAR, Marmara University, Department of Sociology, Turkey Intergenerational Conflicts and Daughters’ Resistance to Unwanted Marriages in Turkish Society

JS-9.5 Stefanie BUCKNER, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; Louise LAFORTUNE, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; Calum MATTOCKS, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; Daniel POPE, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom; Mukesh DHERANI, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom and Nigel BRUCE, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom Developing Age-Friendly Cities: A Tool to Guide Efforts to Promote Healthy Ageing in Urban Settings JS-9.6 Daisuke WATANABE, Seikei University, Japan Politics of Small Economic Incentives of Volunteers in Old Age: Using a Mixed Methods Approach

JS-8 Looking at Past and Present

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Committees: RC07 Futures Research, WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology

JS-9.7 Valentina HLEBEC, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Social Sciences, Slovenia Challenging Issues in Evaluation of Home Care Services

Inequalities for a Less Unequal Future

Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

JS-9.8 Gabriella NILSSON, Department of cultural sciences, Sweden and Janicke ANDERSSON, CASE, Sweden How Can We Understand Senior Camps in Relation to Social Policies and Images of Ageing?

Session Organizer: Elisa REIS, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-8.1 Dietmar WETZEL, University of Basel, Switzerland Urban Life forms in a Future Perspective – Citizens’ Participation and Inequalities in the Post-Political Age JS-8.2 Katharina HECHT, LSE, United Kingdom Economic Inequality and Government Redistribution: Perspectives from UK Economic Elites. JS-8.3 Julian CARDENAS, Freie Universitat Berlin, Germany Corporate Elite Networks and Social Inequalities Around the World

JS-8.4 Macarena ORCHARD, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom The Place of ‘Respect’ in the Sociological Understanding of Inequality: Some Reflections Based on the Chilean Case

JS-9.10 Mercedes FERNANDEZ-ALONSO, University of Malaga, Spain; Antonio M. JAIME-CASTILLO, University of Malaga, Spain and Marta ORTEGA, University of Malaga, Spain Welfare Policies and Solidarity Toward the Elderly

JS-10 Sociology of Innovation: The Social

and Cultural Structure of Innovative Societies

Joint

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

JS-9.9 Raynier HERNANDEZ ARENCIBIA, Alberto Hurtado University, Chile and Beatriz REVUELTA, Alberto Hurtado University, Chile Public Policies on the Provision of Care for the Elderly in Cuba: Readings and Questions in Times of Change

Committees: RC02 Economy and Society, RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

JS-9 Aging Society and New Welfare Policies Committees: RC11 Sociology of Aging, RC15 Sociology of Health Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Giuseppina CERSOSIMO, University of Salerno, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-9.1 Andrzej KLIMCZUK, Warsaw School of Economics, Poland Local Social Innovations in Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity: Policy Strategies in Cities of the European Union JS-9.2 Koichi HIRAOKA, Ochanomizu University, Japan Toward an Integrated System of Service Delivery: Policy Framework, Instruments, and Challenges of Japan’s Community Total Care System JS-9.3 Cristina GAGLIARDI, IRCCS-INRCA National Institute of Health & Science on Ageing, Italy; Sara SANTINI, IRCCS-INRCA National Institute of Health & Science on Ageing, Italy and Giovanni LAMURA, IRCCS-INRCA National Institute of Health & Science on Ageing, Italy Promotion of Active Ageing through Activities in Rural Settings: Innovative Initiatives of a Regional Programme.

Session Organizers: Manuel FERNANDEZ ESQUINAS, Agencia Estatal Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Spain and Madelon VAN OOSTROM, Tenerife Science & Technology Park, Spain AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-10.1 Jurgen POESCHE, none, Canada and Ilkka KAURANEN, Aalto University, Finland Legitimization As the Foundation of Innovative Societies JS-10.2 Zakia SETTI, Ecole Nationle Superieure de Management (ENSM), Algeria Innovation Embedded in Entrepreneurs’ Social Networks and Social Value “Trust”: A Multilevel Analysis for the MENA Countries JS-10.3 Manuel FERNANDEZ ESQUINAS, CSIC-Spanish Council for Scientific Research, Spain and Madelon VAN OOSTROM, Tenerife Science & Technology Park, Spain Mapping the Innovative Profile of a Society Using a General Population Survey JS-10.4 Diego SILVA, University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil and Andre FURTADO, University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil The Sociological Dimensions of Innovation Indicators JS-10.5 Borut RONCEVIC, School of Advanced Social Studies, Slovenia and Victor CEPOI, School of Advanced Social Studies, Slovenia Social Topography of Innovation Space: On the Role of Institutions, Networks and Cognitive Space

www.isa-sociology.org

319

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

JS-8.5 Katja RACKOW, University of Vechta, Germany Solidarity- Theoretical Concepts and Empirical Measurements

No. JS-11

Joint Session Details

JS-10.6 Frane ADAM, Institute for developmental and strategic analysis, Slovenia Innovation and Organisational Culture in Small and Medium-Sized High-Tech Companies JS-10.7 Lara MAESTRIPIERI, Universita’ degli Studi di Pavia, Italy; Toa GIROLETTI, Department of Economical and Social Sciences - Università Cattolica di Piacenza, Italy and Nadia VON JACOBI, Department of Political and Social Science - University of Pavia, Italy The Italian Social Innovation of Consumer Purchasing Groups: An Empirical Evaluation of Its Social Impact

JS-11 Comparison in Ethnographic Research Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology, RC20 Comparative Sociology Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Barbara STEFAN, Universität Wien, Austria; Deniz SEEBACHER, University of Vienna, Austria and Andreas STREINZER, University of Vienna, Austria Chair: Barbara HEER, University of Basel, Switzerland AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-11.1 Zeliha ETOZ, Ankara University, Faculty of Political Sciences, Turkey and Yagmur DONMEZ, Gaziosmanpaşa University, Turkey A Critique of Positionality in Critical Ethnography JS-11.2 Giovanni PICKER, European University Viadrina, Germany Embedding Ethnographic Comparison

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Joint

JS-11.3 Christian ROGLER, University of Vienna, Austria Potentials and Challenges of Comparison in Organisational Ethnography JS-11.4 Erika CELLINI, University of Florence, Italy, Italy and Barbara SARACINO, University of Florence, Italy TEAM Ethnography: A Comparison Between Perspectives of Different Researchers JS-11.5 Eva BAHL, Center of Methods in Social Sciences, University of Goettingen, Germany and Arne WORM, Center of Methods in Social Sciences, University of Goettingen, Germany Border Figurations – Comparing Different Groupings with Ethnographic and Biographical Research Methods

12:30 - 14:00

JS-12.4 Lisa EKSTAM, CASE, Sweden and Gabriella NILSSON, Department of cultural sciences, Sweden Theoretical and Methodological Challenges and Advantages When Combining Methods and Using Cross-Scientific Perspectives in the Study of Senior Camps. JS-12.5 Trude GJERNES, University of Nordland, Norway and Per MASEIDE, secon author, Norway Dementia and the Moral Order JS-12.6 Karen LOWTON, University of Sussex, United Kingdom Understanding Successful Ageing for the ‘new’ Ageing Populations: The Case of Cystic Fibrosis DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-12.7 Shu KINOSHITA, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Japan Deviances from “Normal Life”: When the Category “Dementia” Becomes Relevant in the Life of a Person JS-12.8 Shaozhe ZHANG, Department of Sociology, Wuhan University, China; Ting CHEN, School of Medicine and Health Management, Huazhong Universtiy of Science and Technology, China and Wei XIANG, Wuhan Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China “Pengci” and Population Aging: Promotion of Healthy Aging Based on Social Network Theory JS-12.9 Rita BIANCHERI, Pisa University, Italy and Silvia CERVIA, Pisa University, Italy Wellbeing in Old Age from a Gender Perspective JS-12.10 Janet FAST, University of Alberta, Canada; Kate O’LOUGHLIN, The University of Sydney, Australia and Judith PHILLIPS, Swansea University, United Kingdom Older Workers and Caregiving in a Global Context: Methodological Challenges and Opportunities in Comparative Analysis

JS-13 The Future of University Research and the National Innovation Systems

Committees: RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology, RC07 Futures Research Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Jaime JIMENEZ GUZMAN, IIMAS, UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL AUTÓNOMA DE MÉXICO, Mexico and Elisa REIS, Professor, Brazil AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-12 Aging, Health and Life Course:

Theoretical Issues and Methodological Problems. Joint Special Session of the Global Health Sociology Network: ISA RC15, ESA RN16 and ESHMS

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health, RC11 Sociology of Aging Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Guido GIARELLI, University, Italy and Giuseppina CERSOSIMO, University of Salerno, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-12.1 A.L. Sinikka DIXON, Burman University, Canada Age Life Cycle JS-12.2 Yaroslava EVSEEVA, Institute of Scientific Information on Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Successful Aging: History and State of the Art JS-12.3 Carolina A. GUIDOTTI GONZALEZ, Facultad de Psicologia, Universidad de la Republica, Uruguay Transition to Old Age and Population Heterogeneity: A Comparison Between Two Latin-American Countries

320

Sunday 10 July

JS-13.1 Akiiki BABYESIZA, University of Bayreuth, Germany Higher Education, Science and Innovation in Eastern Africa JS-13.2 Nadia ASHEULOVA, Institute for the History of Science and Technology, SPb Branch, Russian Academy of Scienc, Russia International Laboratory in Russia As a New Form of Reproducing Scientific Elite JS-13.3 Luis SANZ-MENENDEZ, CSIC- Institute of Public Goods and Policies, Spain and Laura CRUZ-CASTRO, CSIC Institute of Public Goods and Policies, Spain Is There Coherence Between University Missions and Promotion Criteria? the Role of the Preferences of Academics JS-13.4 Rollin KENT SERNA, BENEMERITA UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE PUEBLA, Mexico and Alma CARRASCO, BENEMERITA UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE OUEBLA, Mexico Training Young Scientists at a Mexican Public University: Overcoming Academic Segmentation and Creating New Forms of Knowledge JS-13.5 Grit PETSCHICK, Tu Berlin, Germany The Production of Knowledge in Excellent German Research Groups - an Ethnographic Case Study

www.isa-sociology.org

Sunday 10 July

No. JS-17

Joint Session Details

JS-13.6 Federico BIETTI, IDHES/ENS Cachan/Université ParisSaclay, France A Dynamical Model of Innovation? the Case of the Cooperation Between a Laboratory of Mechanics and Aeronautic Industry

JS-14 Women’s Activism in the Most Recent Cycle of Global Protests

Committees: RC32 Women in Society, RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Josephine BEOKU-BETTS, Florida Atlantic University, USA and Anna DOMARADZKA, University of Warsaw, Poland Chair: Bandana PURKAYASTHA, University of Connecticut, USA Authors and Papers: JS-14.1 Umut EREL, Open University, United Kingdom and Necla ACIK, Manchester University, UK, United Kingdom Multilayered Intersectional Citizenship: The Kurdish Women’s Movement in North Kurdistan/ Turkey JS-14.2 Ruth SIMSA, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria Does Protest Have a Sex? Women in the Spanish Protest Movement – a Case Study JS-14.3 Temitope ORIOLA, Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Canada “the Fight for the Soul of Nigeria”: Framing Strategies of the #Bringbackourgirls Movement JS-14.4 Hector CALLEROS-RODRIGUEZ, University of Warsaw - COLTLAX, Poland Womenxs Empowerment and Political Extremism

JS-14.6 Manjula MAURYA, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India Liberation Ideology of Phule,Periyar and Ambedkar:a Study of Dalit Feminist Understanding

JS-16 Framing Discourses, Action and Collective Imaginaries about Environmental Issues

Committees: WG03 Visual Sociology, RC24 Environment and Society Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Mark STODDART, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada Chair: Leonardas RINKEVICIUS, Lithuanian University of Health Sciencies, Lithuania Discussant: Valentina ANZOISE, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Italy, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-16.1 Renee MOERNAUT, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium; Luc PAUWELS, University of Antwerp, Belgium and Jelle MAST, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium (De)Constructing Euro-American Anthropocentrism in Mainstream and Alternative Media: A Case Study on Two Multimodal Climate Change Frames JS-16.2 Mieko YOSHIHAMA, University of Michigan, USA Images of the Invisible and Visions for the Future: Photovoice Following the Great East Japan Disasters JS-16.3 Yannick RUMPALA, Université de Nice, France Science Fiction As a Path to Explore the Future of the Anthropocene and Worlds in Preparation: Representations and Imaginaries of the Habitability of the Planet JS-16.4 Kristin MILLER, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA From the Dust of This World: The Dystopian Imaginary and the Anthropocene

14:15 - 15:45 JS-17 Racial, Ethnic and National

JS-15 The Complex Discursivity of Global

Futures in the Making: Analyzing Transnational Orders of Discourse 2

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology, RC20 Comparative Sociology Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Reiner KELLER, University of Augsburg, Germany, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-15.1 Miriam TAG, Bielefeld University, Germany The Constitution of ‘Early Childhood’ As a ‘Global Issue’ Universalising Processes in Verbal, Numerical and Visual Forms JS-15.2 Miqueli MICHETTI, Fundacao Getulio Vargas - Escola de Administracao de Empresas de Sao Paulo - FGV, Brazil Intersections Between National and Global, Public and Private Sites of Discursive Production: Private Non Profit Institutes of Culture and the Agenda of Diversity in Contemporary Brazil JS-15.3 Sasa BOSANCIC, University of Augsburg, Germany Subjectivation Analysis in Discourse Research – an Interpretative Approach

Committees: RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations, RC32 Women in Society Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Ann DENIS, Université d’Ottawa, Canada and Cynthia DEITCH, George Washington University, USA Chair: Ann DENIS, Université d’Ottawa, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-17.1 Monica BOYD, University of Toronto, Canada; Lisa KAIDA, McMaster University, Canada and Siyue TIAN, University of Toronto, Canada Engineering Work: The Intersection of Gender, Immigrant Status and Credentialism JS-17.2 Diane DESPRAT, IDHES, France Strategy and Resistance Against Marginalization in the Barber Profession : The Case of “Arabs” or “Blacks” Female Professional Hairstylists. JS-17.3 Cynthia DEITCH, George Washington University, USA and Rachel BRESLIN, George Washington University, USA Gender, Race, and Nationality Differences in Low Wage Workers’ Access to Sick Leave

www.isa-sociology.org

321

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Marginalization of Female Labor: Intersecting Inequalities at Work /La marginalisation raciale, ethnique et nationale de travailleures : des inégalités en intersection au travail

Joint

JS-14.5 Jacinthe MICHAUD, School of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies, York University, Canada Capturing Feminist Transgression through Cultural Production: A Comparative Analysis of Italian and Québécois Feminisms in the 1970s

JS-15.4 Iwona MLOZNIAK, Institute of Sociology, Poland National and International Discourses on Ageing

No. JS-18

Joint Session Details

JS-17.4 Julie HAM, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Rates, Roses and Donations: Naming Your Price in Sex Work JS-17.5 Ayushi AGRAWAL, Indira Gandhi National open University, India Rural Women: An Important Dynamic for Change. DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-17.6 Vassilissa CARANGIO, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia “Diverse” to Whom? the White Multicultural Impact on Immigrant Professional Women in Australia JS-17.7 Beverley BRATHWAITE, Univesity of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom British Born Female Caribbean Registered Nurses: Can Group Identity and Occupational Identity be Reconciled?

University, USA and Justin JAGER, T. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, USA Examining the Relationship Between Social Determinants of Health and Substance Use for Urban American Indian Adolescents in the United States JS-19.5 Flavio MARSIGLIA, Southwest Interdisciplinary Research Center, Arizona State University, USA; Anaid GONZALVEZ, Southwest Interdisciplinary Research Center, Arizona State University, USA; Carlos Andres Libisch RECALDE, Fundación Pablo de Tarso, Uruguay and Lucia Barros SULCA, Fundación Pablo de Tarso, Uruguay Marijuana Decriminalization in Uruguay: Challenges and Opportunities Related to Preventing Adolescent Drug Use

JS-20 What Do Global Interventions Look like at Ground Level? the Everyday Implementation of International Environmental Schemes

JS-18 Alternative Futures of the South Committees: RC07 Futures Research, RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

Committees: RC24 Environment and Society, WG01 Sociology of Local-Global Relations

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

Session Organizer: Florian STOLL, University of Bayreuth, Germany

Session Organizer: Deborah DELGADO PUGLEY, Universite Catholique de Louvain, Belgium

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-18.1 Alexandra HEIS, University of Vienna, Austria and Martin KITZLER, University of Vienna, Austria Radical Alternatives and Their Political Embedding

Joint

JS-18.2 Eva GERHARZ, Ruhr University Bochum, Faculty of Social Science, Germany Beyond Development: Future Visions and Aspirations to “Good Life” in Indigenous Bangladesh

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Sunday 10 July

JS-18.3 John DALE, George Mason University, USA and Sunil ISHAIRZAY, George Mason University, USA “from Smart Cities to Smart Villages: New Sustainable Futures for Disrupting Rural Migration in Myanmar and India”

JS-19 Drug Use and Local and Global Public

Policies of Health: New Tensions, Complementation or Changes for Not Change?

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology, RC49 Mental Health and Illness, RC15 Sociology of Health Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Victoria SANCHEZ ANTELO, Universidad Nacional de Tres de Febrero, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-19.1 Damon BARRETT, University of Stockholm, Sweden Bridging the Global and Personal: International Drug Control Law and Behavioural Compliance JS-19.2 Romain PAUMIER, Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Canada Integrated Programs Paradigm As a Response to Harm Reduction Shortcomings in Quebec. JS-19.3 Jorge UROZ, Comillas University, Spain and Carmen MENESES, Comillas University, Spain El Aprendizaje Del Consumo De Alcohol Entre Adolescentes: “Coge El Punto Pero No El Pedo” JS-19.4 Stephanie AYERS, Southwest Interdisciplinary Research Center, Arizona State University, USA; Stephen KULIS, Southwest Interdisciplinary Research Center, Arizona State

322

JS-20.1 Armando GARCIA CHIANG, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Unidad Iztapalapa, Mexico Social and Environmental Management of Mining Sector in Mexico. Zphilanthropy or Corporate Social Responsibility? JS-20.2 Zanetta JANSEN, University of South Africa, South Africa The Ska (“Square Kilometre Array”) Project: A South African - Australian Partnerships Project in Pursuing an International Interest to Advance Science and Development Globally. JS-20.3 Héctor CALLEROS-RODRÍGUEZ, University of Warsaw - COLTLAX, Poland and MLourdes GUEVARAROMERO, Benemerita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla, Mexico Protected Natural Areas in Indigenous Lands: The Lacandon Community of Mexico

JS-21 Professional Occupations and Organizations. Part I

Committees: RC17 Sociology of Organization, RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Lara MAESTRIPIERI, Universita’ degli Studi di Pavia, Italy; Daniel MUZIO, Newcastle University, United Kingdom and Mirko NOORDEGRAAF, Utrecht University, Utrecht School of Governance, Netherlands Chair: Lara MAESTRIPIERI, Università degli Studi di Pavia, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-21.1 Anne DOESSING, Aalborg University, Denmark and Viola BURAU, Aarhus University, Denmark Inter-Organizational Coordination As a Professional Project: Nursing, Field-Level Change and Informal Coordination Mechanisms JS-21.2 Roberta PERNA, University of Turin, Italy Health Workers’ Practices Among Diverging Institutional Logics in the Field Health and Migration. the Case of Piedmont.

www.isa-sociology.org

Monday 11 July

No. JS-24

Joint Session Details

JS-21.3 Julian WOLF, Universitat Witten/Herdecke, Germany and Kaspar MOLZBERGER, Universität Witten/Herdecke, Germany Emerging Identity- and Control-Based Arrangements Between Hospital Directors, Chief Physicians, Practitioners and Patients: The Case of the German Public Health Sector. JS-21.4 Maria Giovanna VICARELLI, Università Politecnica delle Marche, Italy and Elena SPINA, Università Politecnica delle Marche, Italy In Search of Hybrid Professionalism in Italy: A First Attempt JS-21.5 Florin LAZAR, University of Bucharest, Romania Social Workers in Romania. Results from the First Study of Registered Social Workers JS-21.6 Muriel SURDEZ, University of Fribourg, Switzerland How Do State Reforms Lead to Cooperation Between Different Professionals ? Statements about the Food Safety Sector in Switzerland DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-21.7 Anette SKALS, Metropolitan University College, Denmark Social Work Discretion in the Welfare State Organization of Employment Services JS-21.8 Nicolas LOT, EDF Lab, France; Olivier GUILLAUME, EDF Lab, France and Nathalie DE BELER, EDF Lab, France Dynamics of Cooperation Between Professional Groups : The Case of Complex Tasks in High Risks Organization

JS-22 Perspectives and Challenges of

Working with Images and New Media

Committees: RC37 Sociology of Arts, WG03 Visual Sociology Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Paulo MENEZES, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, Brazil Discussant: Dennis ZUEV, CIES-ISCTE, Portugal, Portugal AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-22.2 Gulsum DEPELI, Hacettepe University, Turkey New Images: A New Language? JS-22.3 Scott LIZAMA, City University of New York-Graduate Center, USA A (Visual) Tale of Two Parks: Using Instagram Analysis to Examine the Public/Private Economics of Brooklyn Bridge Park JS-22.4 Laura GOBEY, Deakin University, Australia Visual Methods and Intersectional Research: The Advantages and Challenges of Using Participatory Visual Methods to Research Intersectionality

JS-23 The Social Reproductive Worlds of Migrants

Committees: RC06 Family Research, RC31 Sociology of Migration Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Majella KILKEY, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom; Laura MERLA, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium and Loretta BALDASSAR, University of Western Australia, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-23.1 Paola BONIZZONI, University of Milan, Italy Italian Families in London Facing Social Reproduction Dilemmas: Issues of Gender, Ethnicity and Class. JS-23.2 Susanne WILLERS, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico The Effects of Violence on the Reproductive Strategies of Migrant Women from Central America in Transit through Mexico. JS-23.3 Maria VIVAS-ROMERO, University of Liege, Faculty of Social Sciences, Belgium More Than Just “Friends”? the Role of Transnational Voluntary Kin Relationships on Ageing Domestic Workers’ Access to Social Protection JS-23.4 Adela SOURALOVA, Masaryk University, Faculty of Social Studies, Czech Republic Migrant Motherhood and Care-Giving As a Pathway to Integration? Delegation of Child Care in Vietnamese Immigrant Families and Its Consequences for Settlement JS-23.5 Sreerupa SREERUPA, Centre for Development Studies, Trivandrum, Kerala, India The Spatial Reorganisation of Elder Care in a Transnational Setting: Experiences from Kerala, India. Sreerupa.Pillai@ Gmail.Com DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-23.6 Thales SPERONI PEREIRA DA CRUZ, Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain Bolivian Transnational Families in Barcelona: Institutional Configurations and Care Arrangements JS-23.7 Joanna BIELECKA-PRUS, Maria Curie-Sklodowska University (UMCS), Poland Family Care in the Transnational Families: Love, Blame and Obligation JS-23.8 Nihan BOZOK, Beykent University, Turkey and Mehmet BOZOK, Maltepe University, Turkey The Missing, the Present and the Hoped: Three Different Family Modalities of Afghan Unaccompanied Young Male Migrants in Karasu Neighborhood, Istanbul JS-23.9 Heather EDELBLUTE, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA Navigating Motherhood and Social Relationships: A Comparison of Movers and Stayers in the U.S. and Mexico

JS-24 Contested Futures of the South Committees: RC07 Futures Research, RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Dieter NEUBERT, University of Bayreuth, Germany Chair: Elisio MACAMO, University of Basel, Switzerland, Switzerland www.isa-sociology.org

323

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

JS-22.1 Luisa GANDOLFO, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom Material Mnemonics and Mapped Narratives in Palestine/ Israel

09:00 - 10:30

Joint

Chair: Paulo MENEZES, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, Brazil

Monday 11 July

No. JS-25

Joint Session Details

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-24.1 Arland THORNTON, University of Michigan, USA and Shawn DORIUS, Iowa State University, USA The Beliefs of Citizens in Middle Eastern Countries about the Relationship Between Development and Personal Freedom, Democracy, and Human Rights JS-24.2 Pamela ABBOTT, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom and Andrea TETI, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom Contested Futures in the MENA Region JS-24.3 Peter KLEIN, Bard College, USA Collectively Imagined Futures and the Conflict over Brazil’s Belo Monte Dam JS-24.4 Dieter NEUBERT, University of Bayreuth, Germany and Florian STOLL, University of Bayreuth, Germany Kenyan Visions of the Future Between Individual Advancement, Uncertainty and Political Hopes

JS-25 Social Enterprises and Empowerment. Part I

Committees: RC26 Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice, RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Location: Hörsaal 4A KS (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Maria FREGIDOU-MALAMA, University of GAVLE - Faculty of Education and Economic Studies, Department of Business and Economic Studies, 801 76, GAVLE, Sweden Chair: Maria FREGIDOU-MALAMA, University of GAVLE - Faculty of Education and Economic Studies, Department of Business and Economic Studies, 801 76, GAVLE, Sweden

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Joint

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Monday 11 July

JS-26.2 Isabel CRAVEIRO, Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UNL, Portugal; Virginia HORTALE, ENSP - FioCruz, Brazil and Gilles DUSSAULT, IHMT-UNL, Portugal Health Workforce Evidence Informed Policies? Portuguese and Brazilian National Policy-Makers’ Perspectives JS-26.3 Emmanuele PAVOLINI, Macerata University, Italy Health Care As a Labour Market JS-26.4 Kari LUDVIGSEN, Uni Research, Norway Coping with New and Complex Caring Demands: Health Workforce Policies and Practices in Norwegian Care Services JS-26.5 Leah GILBERT, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa “Re-Engineering the Workforce to Meet Service Needs”: Exploring ‘Task-Shifting’ in South Africa in the Context of HIV/AIDS and Antiretroviral Therapy. JS-26.6 Pavel OVSEIKO, University of Oxford, United Kingdom; Laurel EDMUNDS, University of Oxford, United Kingdom and Alastair BUCHAN, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Barriers and Facilitators to Women’s Advancement and Leadership in Academic Medicine DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-26.7 Chika SHINOHARA, Momoyama Gakuin University, Japan Social Issues, Policy Changes, and the Future: Migration of Healthcare Workers from Southeast Asia to Japan JS-26.8 Raluca IUGULESCU LESTRADE, Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Toulouse (Sciences Po Toulouse), France The French Regional Health Agencies: Shaking the Professional Ranks, Shaping New Professional Figures?

JS-25.1 Deirdre HOWARD-WAGNER, University of Sydney, Australia Indigenous Social Enterprises and Empowerment

JS-27 Language in Children’s Socialization

JS-25.2 Jillis KORS, Saxion, Netherlands The European Happy Research Exchange Program (TEHREP) or How to Overcome Borders That Leads to Good Research for a Better Understanding of Social Enterprises.

Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

JS-25.3 Davinia PALOMARES-MONTERO, University of Valencia, Spain; Inmaculada VERDEGUER-ARACIL, University of Valencia, Spain and Alicia ROS-GARRIDO, University of Valencia, Spain University Students’ Perceptions of the Social Entrepreneurship Learning Environment JS-25.4 Mukesh RANGA, CSJM University, Kanpur (INDIA), India Advancing Strengths through Marketing in Social Enterprises

JS-26 The Future Heath Workforce We Need:

Professions, Policy and Planning. Part I

Committees: RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups, RC15 Sociology of Health Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Session Organizer: Federico FARINI, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-27.1 Sara AMADASI, FISPPA Department - University of Padova, Italy Children Playing with Narratives. the Relevance of Interaction and Positioning in the Study of Cultural Identity Construction. JS-27.2 Claudio BARALDI, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy Facilitating Narratives of Memories in Classroom Interactions JS-27.3 Angela SCOLLAN, Middlesex University, United Kingdom Challenges, Opportunities, Risks and Hopes: Making the Voice of Children with English As an Additional Language (EAL) Stronger in Early Years Provision. JS-27.4 Timo SAVELA, University of Turku, Finland Schoolscapes: Participation in Educational Spaces

Session Organizer: Ellen KUHLMANN, Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-26.1 Pablo RIVERA, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain; Jorge RAMIREZ, University of California San Francisco, USA and Elena SANCHEZ, Departmento de Biología Vegetal, Spain Evaluation of the Plan of General Practitioners Zone in Rural Areas. Study Based on the Perception of the Physicians Participating.

324

Committees: RC53 Sociology of Childhood, RC25 Language and Society

JS-27.5 Alma CARRASCO, BENEMERITA UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE OUEBLA, Mexico Reading with Infants in a Mexican Day Care Center DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-27.6 Attila KRIZSÁN, University of Turku, Finland Schola Europaea: Schooling Europeans? – a Preliminary Research Report

www.isa-sociology.org

Monday 11 July

No. JS-31

Joint Session Details

JS-27.7 Magdalena GORCIKOVA, Faculty of Social Sciences at Charles University, Czech Republic The Impact of Socio-Cultural Background on Children’s Literacy Development

JS-28 Biography and Mental Health Committees: RC38 Biography and Society, RC49 Mental Health and Illness Location: Hörsaal 32 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Silvia KRUMM, Ulm University, Germany and Gabriele ROSENTHAL, Georg-August University of Göttingen, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-28.1 Lena INOWLOCKI, University of Applied Sciences Frankfurt, Germany Biographical Evaluation of Psychosocial Treatment in Psychiatric Clinics and Counseling Centers By Service Users JS-28.2 Bruce COHEN, University of Auckland, New Zealand The Meaning of Illness: Narrative Approaches JS-28.3 Ute ZILLIG, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Goettingen, Germany, Germany Trapped Between Self-Understanding and Self-Denial Dealing with the Diagnosis Dissociative Identity Disorder within the German Mental Health and Child Welfare System JS-28.4 Katie WRIGHT, La Trobe University, Australia Narrating the Impact of Child Sexual Abuse on Adult Mental Health JS-28.5 Heike STECKLUM, University of Göttingen, Germany Civic Engagement As Biographical Work and Contribution to Mental Health DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

JS-30 Economic Inequality, Distributive

Preferences and Political Outcomes. Part I

Committees: RC42 Social Psychology, RC18 Political Sociology Location: Hörsaal 31 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Juan Carlos CASTILLO, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Chile AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-30.1 Nadine SCHOENECK, University of Bremen, Germany On the Nimbus of the Middle-Class Society. Perceived Stratification Realities and Perceptions of Social Conflicts in Cross-National Comparison JS-30.2 Oscar MAC-CLURE, Universidad de Los Lagos, Chile and Emmanuelle BAROZET, Universidad de Chile, Chile Social Inequalities in Chile: What Influences What Is Considered (un)Just? JS-30.3 Daniel MIRANDA, P. Catholic University of Chile, Chile Unequal Background on Citizenship Participation: The Role of Civic Knowledge and Political Interest. JS-30.4 Juan Carlos CASTILLO, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Chile Distributive Preferences and Types of Participation in Latin America

JS-31 The Future Heath Workforce We Need:

Professions, Policy and Planning. Part II

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health, RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Ellen KUHLMANN, Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

10:45 - 12:15 JS-29 Social Enterprises and Empowerment. Part II

Committees: RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management, RC26 Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice Location: Hörsaal 4C G (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Maria FREGIDOU-MALAMA, University of GAVLE, Department of Business and Economic Studies, Sweden AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-29.1 Pauline MCGOVERN, University of Greenwich, United Kingdom Small Voluntary Organisations in the ‘Age of Neoliberalism’: Bourdieusian Reflections on Their Opportunities and Challenges JS-29.2 Akhaya NAYAK, Indian Institute of Management Indore, India and Binay Kumar PATTNAIK, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, India Women Empowerment and Participatory Development through Women Self-Help Groups: Empirical Explorations from the Eastern India State of Odisha

JS-31.1 Jean-Luc BEDARD, TÉLUQ - Université du Québec, Canada and Anna Maria ZAIDMAN, Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada Moving from One Professional System to a (seemingly) Similar One: Surprising Challenges and Issues of Policy and Governance JS-31.2 Reiko OGAWA, Kyushu University, Japan Construction of Migrant Care Workers in East Asia: Intersection Between Migration Regimes and Care Regimes JS-31.3 Roman HOFFMANN, University of Vienna, Austria When Communities Participate in Primary Health Care: A Randomized Controlled Trial of an NGO Led Community Health Worker Program in the Philippines JS-31.4 Eszter KOVACS, Health Services Management Training Centre, Semmelweis University, Hungary; Edmond GIRASEK, Health Services Management Training Centre, Semmelweis University, Hungary; Edit EKE, Health Services Management Training Centre, Semmelweis University, Hungary; Karoly RAGANY, Health Services Management Training Centre, Semmelweis University, Hungary; Reka KOVACS, Health Services Management Training Centre, Semmelweis University, Hungary; Zoltan CSERHATI, Health Services Management Training Centre, Semmelweis University, Hungary; Zoltan ASZALOS, Health Services Management Training Centre,

www.isa-sociology.org

325

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

JS-28.7 Minerva ROJAS RUIZ, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico Social Events and Biographical Experiences. The Ayotzinapa Case in Gestalt Therapy Sessions

JS-29.4 Aristea ALEXIOU, University of the Aegean, Greece The Resilience of Social Economy in Times of Crisis and Its Contribution to Community Capacity Building

Joint

JS-28.6 Jasmijn SLOOTJES, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands; Saskia KEUZENKAMP, Movisie - Netherlands Centre for Social Development, Netherlands and Sawitri SAHARSO, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands Migrant Women’s Life Narratives - Paths to Achieving a Strong Soc in the Face of Migration and Acculturation

JS-29.3 Huei-Wen CHIN, Association of Taiwanese Indigenous Peoples’ Development, Taiwan and Jie-Ting CHEN, Agricultural Policy Research Center, Taiwan Local Practice of Solidarity Economy: A Case Study on Pgs Project for the “Tribal E-Shop” in Taiwan

No. JS-32

Joint Session Details

Semmelweis University, Hungary and Miklos SZOCSKA, Health Services Management Training Centre, Semmelweis University, Hungary Towards Strategic Health Workforce Planning - Experiences from the Joint Action of European Health Workforce Planning and Forecasting Project JS-31.5 Thomas GERLINGER, Universität Bielefeld, Germany; Patrick HASSENTEUFEL, Université de Versailles, France; Renate REITER, Fernuniversität Hagen, Germany; Alban DAVESNE, Université de Versailles, France; Rudiger HENKEL, Fernuniversität Hagen, Germany; Barbara KUPPER, Universität Bielefeld, Germany; Aude LECOMTE, Université de Versailles, France; Caspar LUCKENBACH, Universität Bielefeld, Germany; Marie MONCADA, Université de Versailles, France; FrancoisXavier SCHWEYER, Université de Versailles, France and Marc SMYRL, Université de Versailles, France The Politics of Health Care Provision in Disadvantaged Regions: Germany, France, England, and Sweden Compared JS-31.6 Katarzyna WOLANIK-BOSTROM, Umea university, Sweden Swedish Physicians Working for International Help Organizations – on New Work Contexts, Knowledge and Reflexivity DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-31.7 Beverley BRATHWAITE, Univesity of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom The British Minority Ethnic Nurse and the Future of the National Health Service in England JS-31.8 Masahiko KANEKO, National Defense Medical College, Japan Types of Profession-State Relationship

14:15 - 15:45

Joint

JS-32 Gender-Technology Interface:

Implications for Social Transformation and Development

Committees: RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development, RC32 Women in Society Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizer: Bula BHADRA, University of Calcutta, India

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Co-Chair: Bula BHADRA, University of Calcutta, India

JS-32.6 Piyali SUR, Jadavpur University (Department of Sociology), India In Quest of Global Beauty: Gender –Technology Interface through Body Beautification DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-32.7 Yoshie YANAGIHARA, Tokyo Denki University, Japan What Makes Conducting Surrogacy Rationalized in the Modern Society? --from the Analysis of the History and Development

JS-33 Language on Health and Disease Committees: RC25 Language and Society, RC15 Sociology of Health Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Keiji FUJIYOSHI, Otemon Gakuin University, Japan and Miwako HOSODA, Seisa University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-33.1 Lea HAGOEL, Department of Community Medicine and Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Technion, Israel and Paula FEDER-BUBIS, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel Mind the Cancer Screening Gap Between the Medical and Laypersons’ Languages JS-33.2 Alexandra VINSON, Northwestern University, USA What Happens after Diagnosis?: Patient and Physician Roles in Negotiating a Treatment Plan JS-33.3 Micol BRONZINI, Department of Economics and Social Science, Italy The Language of Illness and the Evidence-Based Wor(l)d: A Possible Integration JS-33.4 Shigeru URANO, Mie Prefectural College of Nursing, Japan; Yoshifumi MIZUKAWA, Hokusei Gakuen University, Japan and Kazuo NAKAMURA, Aomori University, Japan Creating “Idiom of Distress” Collaboratively: An Analysis of Practices of Self-Directed Research By People with Mental Illness JS-33.5 Marko UIBU, University of Tartu, Estonia The Plurality of Meanings Related to Symptoms and Illnesses: The Experiences of Estonian Spiritual Practitioners DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-32.1 Manoj JENA, Department of Sociology, Jamia Millia Islamia University, New Delhi, India Digital Technology and Exclusion of Women: Occupational Segregation and Deconstruction of Stereotypes JS-32.2 Saheli CHOWDHURY, UNIVERSITY OF CALCUTTA, India MEDIA Representation and Gendering of Technology: Assessing Social Transformation in 21ST Century India JS-32.3 Deepika SINGH, DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF CALCUTTA, India Contradictory Entitlements: Gendered Digital Inequalities in Urban Kolkata JS-32.4 David DUENAS I CID, SBRlab - Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain; Paloma PONTON, SBRlab - Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain; Angel BELZUNEGUI, SBRlab - Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain and Inma PASTOR, SBRlab - Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain Discriminatory Expressions, the Young and Social Networks: The Effect of Gender JS-32.5 Aleksei BLOKHIN, Saint Petersburg State Univeristy, Russia Digital Weight-Loss: The Mechanisms of the Construction of Beauty in the Russian-Speaking Weight-Loss Online Communities

326

Monday 11 July

JS-33.6 Christina WAGONER, Cardiff University, United Kingdom From Active Offer to Active Delivery: Increasing the Number of Bilingual Health and Social Care Professionals in Wales

JS-34 Professional Occupations and Organizations. Part II

Committees: RC17 Sociology of Organization, RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups Location: Hörsaal III (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Lara MAESTRIPIERI, Universita’ degli Studi di Pavia, Italy and Daniel MUZIO, Newcastle University, United Kingdom Chair: Debby BONNIN, University of Pretoria, South Africa AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-34.1 Sundeep AULAKH, University of Leeds, United Kingdom; Ian KIRKPATRICK, University of Leeds, United Kingdom and Joan LOUGHREY, University of Leeds, United Kingdom ‘Hybrid-Professionalism’ in Professional Service Firms: The Case of Compliance Officers in English Law Firms

www.isa-sociology.org

Monday 11 July

No. JS-37

Joint Session Details

JS-34.2 Clea BOURNE, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom Reconfiguring Creativity and Expert Labour: Darwinian Struggles Between Advertising, Marketing and Public Relations JS-34.3 Farai MAUNGANIDZE, University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa ‘We Play the Music, You Dance’. Perceptions of Engineering Professionals to New Managerialism and Its Implications on Work Organisation. JS-34.4 Alexandre SILVA, Instituto Universitário de Lisboa (ISCTE-IUL), CIES-IUL, Portugal and Luisa VELOSO, Instituto Universitario de Lisboa (ISCTE-IUL), Centro de Investigacion e Estudos de Sociologia (CIES-IUL), Lisboa VAT Nº PT 501510184, Portugal Financial Analysis As Expertise and Profession

Session Organizers: Darcie VANDEGRIFT, Drake University, Department for the Study of Culture & Society, USA and Anna-Britt COE, Umea University, Sweden AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-36.1 Mofoluwake AJAYI, Covenant University, Nigeria; Emmanuel AMOO, Covenant University, Nigeria; Adenike IDOWU, Covenant University, Nigeria; Oluyemi FAYOMI, Covenant University, Nigeria and Patrick EDEWOR, Covenant University, Nigeria Morther’s Time-Use and Daughter Welfare: Implication for Developemnt JS-36.2 Tamara DROVE, UN Women, United Nations., Chile Reclaiming Safe Access to Public Space: Youth Resistance to Street Harassment in Chile.

JS-34.5 Eleanor JOHNSON, Cardiff University, United Kingdom Moral Care: The Spatial Organisation of Work in Residential Homes for Older People

JS-36.3 Guiomar MERODIO, University of Barcelona, Spain; Lidia PUIGVERT, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom and Maria de los Angeles SERRANO, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain END-Trafficking: Research and Policies for Overcoming Sex Trafficking of Youth in Today’s World.

JS-34.6 Stefan KORBER, University of Auckland, New Zealand MICRO-Foundations of Encroachment in the Professional Service Sector

JS-36.4 Diane CROCKER, Saint Mary’s Univeristy, Canada Integrating Complexity into Research on Rape Culture on University Campuses

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

JS-34.7 Naoko YOSHIDA, University of Kyoto-Sangyo, Japan The Career Paths of Local Police Officers and Its Influence on Local Policies --- with a Reference to Those of Senior Female Officers

JS-36.5 Beverley YAMAMOTO, Osaka University, Japan and Kim MAWER, Osaka University, Japan Moving Beyond a Risk-Based Framing: UK Adolescents’ Understanding of Sexuality, Healthy Development and Risky Behaviour

JS-34.8 Olivier GUILLAUME, EDF Lab, France and Charles STOESSEL, Opus Citatum, France Organizational Reliability : From Professional Organizations to Social Articulation

JS-35 Social Movements and the Future They Want

Committees: RC07 Futures Research, RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Chair: Ionel SAVA, University of Bucharest, Romania AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-36.9 Gul OZYEGIN, College of William and Mary, USA Rethinking Patriarchy in Muslim Cultures through Unpatriarchal Male Desires

JS-37 The Visual Construction of Nature and

JS-35.1 Jeffrey GOODWIN, New York University, USA Session on Terrorism: Against Radicalization

Environment

JS-35.2 Kevin MCDONALD, Middlesex Univesity, United Kingdom #Radicalisation: Social Media and the Mutation of Humanitarianism JS-35.3 Guadalupe OLIVIER, Universidad Pedagógica Nacional, Mexico and Sergio TAMAYO, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Mexico Citizenship Projects for a Better Future: The Struggle for Education in Mexico JS-35.4 Angela PAIVA, PUC-Rio, USA Mobilizations and Social Movements in the Contentious Brazilian Public Sphere

JS-36 Creating Safety for Youth in a Gendered World

Committees: RC32 Women in Society, RC34 Sociology of Youth Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

JS-36.8 Sreyashi GHOSH, Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, India, India Beyond Spaces: Debunking the Public/Private Divide in Understanding Violence Against Women in India

Committees: WG03 Visual Sociology, RC24 Environment and Society Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Valentina ANZOISE, European Center for Living Technology, Ca’ Foscari University, Italy Chair: Debra DAVIDSON, University of Alberta, Canada Discussant: Lourdes ARIZPE, Centro Regional de Investigaciones Multidisciplinarias, Mexico AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-37.1 Joe ALIZZI, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia The Construction of Common Understanding and Its Interplay with Lifeworld – Objects, Taken-for-Grantedness, and the Human Space of Action JS-37.2 Julia BENNETT, Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom Whose Place Is This Anyway? a Tale of a Hill, a Heath and Some Big Weeds

www.isa-sociology.org

327

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Session Organizer: Jeffrey GOODWIN, New York University, USA

JS-36.7 Oguzcan KARAKAYA, Baskent University, Turkey High School Youth’s Fear of Crime in Turkey

Joint

16:00 - 17:30

JS-36.6 Arun Kumar ACHARYA, Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Mexico Characteristics of Youth Dating Violence and Risk Factors in Mexico: An Analysis from a National Sample

No. JS-38

Joint Session Details

JS-37.3 Marie Louise CONILH DE BEYSSAC, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Maria Inacia D’AVILA NETO, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Paiter-Surui on Google Earth: Interative Mapping for Local-Global Sociabilities and Sensibilities on Environment Conservation

JS-39 The Sociology of Social Movements As

JS-37.4 Lynne CIOCHETTO, College of Creative Arts, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand Advertising and Consumerism Versus Social and Environmental Activism in Myanmar, Malaysia and Indonesia through the Lens of Visual Communication

Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

JS-37.5 Denise MILSTEIN, Columbia University, USA Views on Building a New Park in Brooklyn

a General Sociology. Around and with Alain Touraine

Committees: RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements, RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Session Organizer: Kevin MCDONALD, Middlesex Univesity, United Kingdom Chair: Benjamin TEJERINA, University of the Basque Country, Spain Panelist: Alain TOURAINE, CADIS, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Tuesday 12 July

JS-39.1 Tova BENSKI, College of Management Studies, Israel Between Subjectivation and Dignity. Homage to Alain Touraine

09:00 - 10:30

JS-39.2 Kevin MCDONALD, Middlesex Univesity, United Kingdom Alain Touraine’s Sociology of the Subject

JS-38 Gender, Youth, and Migration:

Modalities and Trajectories for Development

Committees: RC32 Women in Society, RC34 Sociology of Youth

JS-40 Climate Change, Famines and Conflicts in Globalised World: Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Glenda BONIFACIO, University of Lethbridge, Canada; Mark Anthony ABENIR, University of Santo Tomas, Philippines and Lena NARE, University of Helsinki, Finland Chair: Lena NARE, University of Helsinki, Finland JS-38.1 Evelyn RODRIGUEZ, University of San Francisco, USA Invisible, but Working for Liberty and Justice for All: Local and Global Political Views and Behaviors of US SecondGeneration Youth

Joint

Committees: WG05 Famine and Society, RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management Location: Seminarsaal 20 (Juridicum)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Tuesday 12 July

JS-38.2 Mehmet BOZOK, Maltepe University, Turkey and Nihan BOZOK, Beykent University, Turkey “Brotherhood” for Survival: Homosocial Solidarity Networks of Afghan Unaccompanied Young Male Migrants in a Shantytown in Istanbul, Turkey JS-38.3 Eric POPKIN, Colorado College, USA and Rachel MAREMONT, Colorado College, USA Central American Unaccompanied Minors in the U.S.: Motivation for Migration and Precarious Status in the Host Society JS-38.4 Leo IGBANOI, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Dominances and Diversities: Solidarity, Discontent, and Masculinity Among Young, Migrant, African, Male Entrepreneurs in Johannesburg DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-38.5 Charles ADEYANJU, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada Migration for Higher Education: Case of Parent-Sponsored Nigerians in Undergraduate Programs in Canada JS-38.6 Swati VIJAYA, The Ohio State University, USA Gendered Mobility and Caste-Ed Morality: Exploring Migrant Trajectories of Women from Gounder Caste in Southern India

Session Organizers: P.P. BALAN, Kerala Inst Local Administration, India and Harjit Singh ANAND, Glownet Knowledge Services, India AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-40.1 Maria Zefisa SOARES MENEZES, Planning and Gestion Secretary, Brazil Social and Political Implications of Drought Northeast of Brazil JS-40.2 Abba Gana SHETTIMA, University of Maiduguri, Nigeria SEEDS of Famine: The Boko Haram Insurgency and Agricultural Production in North-Eastern Nigeria JS-40.3 Niharranjan MISHRA, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, India and Suman DEVI, National Institute of Technology Rourkeal Odisha, India Self Governance and Watershed Development Programme a Case from Eastern India

10:45 - 12:15 JS-41 Gendered Human Rights, Human

Dignity, and Intersecting Inequalities

Committees: RC32 Women in Society, TG03 Human Rights and Global Justice Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Bandana PURKAYASTHA, University of Connecticut, USA; Anurekha CHARI WAGH, Savitribal Phule University, India and Shweta MAJUMDAR ADUR, Women’s Studies, USA Chair: Shweta MAJUMDAR ADUR, California State University, Fullerton, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-41.1 Evangelia TASTSOGLOU, Saint Mary´s University, Canada Engendering International Human Rights Protection: Women Asylum Seekers on the Southern Borders of the European Union

328

www.isa-sociology.org

Tuesday 12 July

No. JS-43

Joint Session Details

JS-41.2 Diana Therese VELOSO, De La Salle University, Philippines Gender-Based Violence and Human Rights in (Post)Conflict Zones: The Narratives of Internally Displaced Persons in Zamboanga City

JS-42.7 Apostolos PAPADOPOULOS, Harokopio University of Athens, Department of Geography, Greece and Loukia-Maria FRATSEA, Harokopio University of Athens, Greece Migrant Labour, Casualization of Work and Social Clashes in Greek Agriculture: A ‘Post-Crisis’ Aftermath

JS-41.3 Hiromi MAKITA, The University of Tokyo, Japan Changing Roles of Women in Social Movements – a Case Study of Bolivian Water War and Gas War

JS-42.8 Piotr ZULIKOWSKI, Instytut Socjologii, Uniwersytet Warszawski, Poland Changes in Work Relations and Mobility in Northern Kazakhstan’s Farm

JS-41.4 Ruthie GINSBURG, Minerva Humanities Center, Tel Aviv University, Israel Critical Reading of Human Rights Violations Visual Documentations By Palestinian Women in the Occupied Territories. JS-41.5 Anatoly BOYASHOV, St. Petersburg State University, Russia and Alexander KUTEYNIKOV, St. Petersburg State University, Russia Development of Global Professional Groups in Dignity Protection before the European Court of Human Rights JS-41.6 Rashalee MITCHELL, The University of the West Indies Mona campus, Jamaica, Jamaica Labour Rights for Commercial Sex Workers in Jamaica: Implications for Social Policy and Development.

14:15 - 15:45 JS-42 Farm Work Issues within Globalization. Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work, RC40 Sociology of Agriculture and Food Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Stéphanie BARRAL, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, France and Josefa Salete B CAVALCANTI, Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil Chair: Stéphanie BARRAL, Universite Paris Est Marne V, France

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-42.2 Josefa Salete B CAVALCANTI, Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil and Evander Eloi KRONER, Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil OF QUALITY FOOD AND LABOR IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH. CASES FROM THE NORTHEASTERN OF BRAZIL JS-42.3 MariVí HARO MATAS, EHESS, France The Japanese Brazilian Ethnicity Today. an Anthropological Theory about Post- Migration, Agriculture and Global Social Economy JS-42.4 Iain CAMPBELL, RMIT University, Australia and Martina BOESE, Latrobe University, Australia “Slaving Away”: Temporary Migrant Workers in Australia’s Farm Workforce

Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Milos DEBNAR, Doshisha University, Department of Sociology, Japan and Minori MATSUTANI, Kyoto University, Japan Chair: Milos DEBNAR, Doshisha University, Japan AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-43.1 Helena HOF, Graduate School of Asia-Pacific Studies, Waseda University, Japan Young Europeans’ Mobilities in Times of Globalization: Negotiating Foreignness in Tokyo and Singapore JS-43.2 Jian-Bang DENG, Graduate Institute of Futures Studies, Tamkang University, Taiwan, Taiwan Privileged Migrants Transformation: Young Taiwanese Skilled Migrants in China JS-43.3 Miloslav BAHNA, Institute for Sociology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia From International Students to International Migrants: Cultural and Economic Capital and the Career Paths of Slovak Foreign Students in a Visa Free Europe JS-43.4 Elaine MORIARTY, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Young Irish Graduates Navigating a Global Workspace after the Recession JS-43.5 Susanne STEDTFELD, Federal Institute for Population Research, Germany; Andreas ETTE, Federal Institute for Population Research, Germany and Lenore SAUER, Federal Institute for Population Research, Germany Education to Work Transitions By Detours: The Experiences of Young Spaniards in Germany DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-43.6 Chia-Ling YANG, Department of Sociology and Work Science, Gothenburg University, Sweden and Denis FRANK, Department of Sociology and Work Science, Gothenburg University, Sweden Chinese Migrant Workers with High Educational Backgrounds in Sweden JS-43.7 Jan SKROBANEK, Sogn og Fjordane University College, Norway and Volha VYSOTSKAYA, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg Meet the Young European Mobile Employee: Context, Agency and Employment Mobility Patterns within the European Union

JS-42.5 Lileko LISHOMWA, Charles Sturt University, Australia Governments’ Notion of a ‘Shared Responsibility’ for PostBorder Biosecurity Management: Australian Sheep Farmers’ Perspective

JS-43.8 Elena SAMARSKY, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Highly Skilled Migration Between Developed Countries: The Case Study of German Emigrants in the UK.

JS-42.6 Hiroshi KOJIMA, Waseda University, Japan International Migration and the Employment of “Workers” By Farm Households in Japan

JS-43.9 Ilenya CAMOZZI, University of Milan Bicocca, Italy A Cosmopolitan Youth? New Directions in Research on Contemporary Youth

www.isa-sociology.org

329

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

JS-42.1 Laura CHARTAIN, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS/Paris), France How an Organic Certification System Transforms Farmers’ Work: The Case of a Transnational Cotton Production Chain Between France and Brazil

Struggles in New Global Trends

Committees: RC34 Sociology of Youth, RC31 Sociology of Migration

Joint

Discussant: Josefa Salete B CAVALCANTI, Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil

JS-43 Young Skilled Migrants: Hopes and

No. JS-44

Joint Session Details

JS-43.10 Monica SANTORO, University of Milan, Italy The Migratory Experience of Young Italians to England: A Comparison Between the Experience of Immigration before and after the Economic Crisis

16:00 - 17:30

JS-43.11 Jessica SCHWITTEK, University of Wuppertal, Germany and Muhammad ZAMAN, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan Education Changes Everything? a Comparative Analysis of Young Educational Migrants from Pakistan and Kyrgyzstan

Committees: RC02 Economy and Society, RC44 Labor Movements

JS-44 Democracy in the Squares: Global

Resistence Movements and Women

Committees: RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements, RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Nilufer GOLE, EHESS Paris, France and Buket TURKMEN, Galatasaray University, Turkey Chair: Buket TURKMEN, Galatasaray University, Turkey AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-44.1 Hande COSKAN, Crossways Cultural Narratives Master Student, Turkey The Colour of the Resistance; Is It Red, Purple or Green? the Grassroots of the Eco-Feminism in Gezi Resistance JS-44.2 Janet CONWAY, Brock University, Canada and Elise THORBURN, Brock University, Canada Feminist Struggles over Social Reproduction: In the Squares and Beyond JS-44.3 Ozge DERMAN, EHESS Paris (CRAL), Turkey The “Standing Man” As a Performative Creation of Immediate Collectivities and Counter-Public Spaces

Joint

JS-46 Careworkers Organizing Challenges, Strategies and Successes. Part I

Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Mary ROMERO, Arizona State University, USA; Heidi GOTTFRIED, Wayne State University, USA and Kim VOSS, University of California, Berkeley, USA Chair: Franca VAN HOOREN, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands Discussant: Mary ROMERO, Arizona State University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-46.1 Jussara BARBOSA DOS SANTOS RAXLEN, The New School for Social Research, USA My Home Is Someone’s Workplace: The Challenges and Possibilities of Careworkers’ Employers Organizing for Change JS-46.2 Kyoko SHINOZAKI, Osnabrück University, Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies, Germany Chances and Challenges of Migrant Care and Domestic Workers Organizing: Experiences from Germany

JS-47 Expertise and Interests: For a Sociology of Think Tanks

Committees: RC18 Political Sociology, RC14 Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

JS-45 Imagining Futures through the Visual Committees: WG03 Visual Sociology, RC07 Futures Research Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Gary BRATCHFORD, Manchester Institute for Research and Innovation in Art and Design, United Kingdom Chair: Emanuela C. DEL RE, UNiv. Unicusano Roma, Italy Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Tuesday 12 July

Discussant: Gary BRATCHFORD, Flat 5/1 The Apple Building, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-45.1 Rebecca COLEMAN, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom Developing a Sensory Sociology of the Future: Affect, Participation and Politics

Session Organizers: Fiorenza GAMBA, University of Sassari, Italy and Marcos GONZALEZ HERNANDO, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-47.1 Fernanda SILVA, Universidade Federal de Itajuba, Brazil Think Tanks in Transition: An Analysis of Scientific Development of Cebrap in the 80s and 90s JS-47.2 Katarzyna JEZIERSKA, University of Gothenburg, Centre for European Research, Sweden Vehicles for Change or Preservation? the Role of Think Tanks in Poland JS-47.3 Jasmin SIRI, University of Bielefeld, Germany Political Consulting Between Public Service and Deligitimization: Empirical Observations in a Secret Chamber

JS-45.2 Dawn LYON, School of Sociology, Social Policy and Social Research, University of Kent, United Kingdom and Peter HATTON, School of Music and Fine Art, University of Kent, United Kingdom Using Arts Practice to Research Young People’s Orientations to the Future

JS-47.4 Michael HOELSCHER, German University of Administrative Sciences Speyer, Germany; Thomas LAUX, University of Chemnitz, Germany and Alexander RUSER, Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen, Germany, Germany Think Tanks in the Knowledge Society: A Comparative Approach for Analyzing the Role and Impact of Scientific Expertise

JS-45.3 Heidi DUMREICHER, OIKODROM - The Vienna Institute for Urban Sustainability, Austria and Bettina KOLB, Department of Sociology - University of Vienna, Austria Alegria for a Future Life - Photointerviews with the Women of Huizachera, Mexico

JS-47.5 Holger BÄHR, Institute for Employment Research, Germany and Peter KUPKA, Institute for Employment Research, Germany Think Tanks Between Science and Politics: The German Governmental Research Institutes

JS-45.4 Karen CRINALL, Federation University Australia, Australia The Quest for a Violence-Free Future: Drawing Visual Connections to End Men’s Violence Against Women.

JS-47.6 Jean Philippe DECIEUX, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg Bargaining for Evidence in a Hybrid Forum. the Case of an Indicator Expert Group Chaired By the European Commission.

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Wednesday 13 July

No. JS-51

Joint Session Details

JS-48 Global Social Protection and Migration: Reproduction of Inequalities or Safety Net?

Committees: RC19 Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy, RC31 Sociology of Migration Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Paolo BOCCAGNI, University of Trento, Italy and Thomas FAIST, Bielefeld University, Germany

JS-49.2 Yang-Sook KIM, University of Toronto, Canada A Comparative Study of Organizing Co-Ethnic Migrant and Local Women Workers in the Care Market of South Korea: Challenges, Strategies and Successes JS-49.3 Rizza Kaye CASES, University of Trento, Italy Filipina Domestic Workers and Caregivers in London and New York: Networks, Networking, and the Limits of Organising

Authors and Papers: JS-48.1 Armin MUELLER, University of Goettingen, Germany The Interface Between Migration and (Global) Social Protection in China

JS-50 Re-Imagining Gendered & Raced

JS-48.2 Karolina BARGLOWSKI, Bielefeld University, Germany and Joanna Jadwiga SIENKIEWICZ, Bielefeld University, Germany The Symbolic Dimension of Social Protection: Unequal Expectations in Transnational Social Relations

Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

JS-48.3 Peggy LEVITT, Wellesley College,, USA; Erica DOBBS, University of Pennsylvania, USA; Sonia PARELLA RUBIO, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain; Alisa PETROFF, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain and Anahi VILADRICH, City University of New York, USA The Role of Sub-National Governance in Global Social Protection: A Comparative Case Study of Spain and USA in Health Care JS-48.4 Anna AMELINA, Department of Sociology, University of Frankfurt/M., Germany; Nora REGOES, Department of Sociology University of Vienna, Austria and Elisabeth SCHEIBELHOFER, Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, Austria Social Protection: Practices and Experiences of Mobile Europeans. the European Promise of Portability of Social Rights Revisited

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Wednesday 13 July

Session Organizers: Roberta VILLALON, St. John’s University, USA and Natalie BYFIELD, St. John’s University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-50.1 Shruti TAMBE, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune, India, India Reading Against the Grain: Gender and Modernity in the Colonial ‘public Sphere’ in Maharashtra, India JS-50.2 Mathieu ARBOGAST, Ehess/IMM-Cems ; Paris-ouest Nanterre/Cresppa-GTM, France Nailed ! a Quantitative Study of Gender and Racial Representations in Cop-Shows JS-50.3 Paul SCHEIBELHOFER, University of Innsbruck, Austria, Austria Integrating the Patriarch? Contested Representations of Turkish Migrant Men in Austria JS-50.4 Virginie MESANA, University of Ottawa, Canada Beyond the “Black Atlantic”: (En)Gendering Blackness and Building Bridges at African Diaspora Film Festivals JS-50.5 Zhuo JING-SCHMIDT, University of Oregon, USA Sexism in Wireless China DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-50.6 Silvia GOMES, University of Minho, Portugal and Sofia NEVES, University Institute of Maia, Portugal An Examination of the Media Portrayal of Femicide in Portugal JS-50.7 Emmanuel H. RODRIGUES, Universidade de Brasília, Brazil Brazilian “Natural” Family?: A Critical Analysis of Parliamentary Discourses

10:45 - 12:15

09:00 - 10:30

JS-51 Women’s Migrant Worker : Have They

JS-49 Careworkers Organizing Challenges,

Committees: RC12 Sociology of Law, RC32 Women in Society

Strategies and Successes. Part II

Committees: RC44 Labor Movements, RC02 Economy and Society

Protected?

Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum)

Session Organizer: Anis FARIDA, University of Wijaya Kusuma Surabaya, Indonesia

Session Organizers: Mary ROMERO, Arizona State University, USA and Heidi GOTTFRIED, Wayne State University, USA

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Chair: David FASENFEST, Wayne State University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-49.1 Sabrina MARCHETTI, European University Institute, Italy C189: A Tool for States or for Paid Domestic Workers? Examples from Ecuador and India

JS-51.1 Shikha SHARMA, ICSSR, New Delhi, India Dealing with Gender Vulnerabilities of Women Migrants: In Reference to Female Domestic Workers of New Delhi. JS-51.2 Chika SHINOHARA, Momoyama Gakuin University, Japan Employment Rights and Challenges in a New Country: Women Healthcare Workers from Southeast Asia to Japan

www.isa-sociology.org

331

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

JS-48.6 Martin SEELEIB-KAISER, Oxford Institute of Social Policy, University of Oxford, United Kingdom and Cecilia BRUZELIUS, Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, United Kingdom EU Migrant Citizens, Welfare States and Social Rights

Committees: RC32 Women in Society, RC25 Language and Society

Joint

JS-48.5 Maria VIVAS-ROMERO, University of Liege, Faculty of Social Sciences, Belgium “Who Cares for Those Who Cared? Ethnography on Ageing Migrant Domestic Workers Negotiations for Social Protection “

Representations in the Public Sphere

No. JS-52

Joint Session Details

JS-52 Migrant Labor and Development in

Comparative Perspective: Lessons from the Chinese Case

Committees: RC44 Labor Movements, RC02 Economy and Society Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Lu ZHANG, Temple University, USA; Sarah SWIDER, Wayne State University, USA and Elena SHIH, Brown University, USA Chair: Lu ZHANG, Temple University, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-52.1 Shaohua ZHAN, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Protest with a Safety Net: Rural-Urban Linkages and Migrant Labor Activism in China JS-52.2 Lin CHEN, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Out of Rural Community While in the Family: The New Form of Work-and-Family Linkage of Migrant Women Workers in the Construction Site JS-52.3 Xinrong MA, Institute of Area Study Leiden University, Netherlands Ethnic Network and Labor Brokerage in the Temporary Employment System in Contemporary China JS-52.4 Irene PANG, Brown University, USA Precarious Stateness: How Construction Workers in Beijing and Delhi Navigate Informality in Claim-Making JS-52.5 Guowei LIANG, Johns Hopkins University, USA Labor Resistance and Capital Response in China’s Auto Parts and Garment Industry

JS-52.6 Cheng LI, University of Campinas, Brazil Labour Surplus Economy Under Transitions

Joint

JS-53.4 Christoph SCHWARZ, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany The Moral Economy of Indignation: From Individualized Despair to Collective Action in the Spanish Housing Crisis. JS-53.5 Pal SUSANSZKY, MTA-ELTE Peripato Comparative Social Dynamics Research Group, Hungary; Marton GERO, ELTE, Hungary; Akos KOPPER, ELTE, Hungary and Gergely TOTH, MTA-ELTE Peripato Comparative Social Dynamics Research Group, Hungary Two Necessary Ingredient: Role of Emotions and Efficacy in Social Movement Participation in Hungary

14:15 - 15:45 JS-54 Ageing in Place in a Mobile World: New Media and Older People’s Support Networks

Committees: RC11 Sociology of Aging, RC31 Sociology of Migration Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Loretta BALDASSAR, University of Western Australia, Australia; Paolo BOCCAGNI, University of Trento, Italy; Majella KILKEY, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom; Laura MERLA, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium and Raelene WILDING, La Trobe University Melbourne, Australia AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-54.1 Glenda BALLANTYNE, Swinburne University, Australia New Media, Ageing, and Migration: The Impact of Digital Technologies on Melbourne’s Elderly Immigrant Irish Community JS-54.2 Maria MARCHETTI-MERCER, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa “ but I Cannot Touch Her” : Relational Loss and the Use of Technology in South African Emigrant Families

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

JS-52.7 Silvia ARLINI, National University of Singapore, Singapore Labor Migration and Migrants’ Aspiration: Analyzing the Migration Pattern Based on Social-Economic Status of Households in Rural Indonesia

JS-53 Emotions and Social Movements Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Wednesday 13 July

Committees: RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change, RC36 Alienation Theory and Research Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Camilo TAMAYO GOMEZ, The University of Huddersfield, United Kingdom; Anna DOMARADZKA, University of Warsaw, Poland and Lauren LANGMAN, Loyola University of Chicago, USA Chair: Camilo TAMAYO GOMEZ, The University of Huddersfield, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-53.1 Katarzyna WOJNICKA, University of Gothenburg, Sweden Between Love and Anger: The Role of Emotions in the European Fathers’ Rights Movements JS-53.2 Maciej KOWALEWSKI, University of Szczecin, Poland Grumblers, Malcontents, Activists. Does Ritual Complaining Lead to Political Activism? JS-53.3 Ekaterina LYTKINA, National Research University Higher School of Economics Laboratory for Comparative Social Research, Russia Emotionalization of Protest: A Case of Russia

JS-54.3 Satu HEIKKINEN, Karlstad university, Sweden Mobile Lives in a Neighbourhood – Physical Mobility, Life Stories and Ageing JS-54.4 Joao FERREIRA DA SILVA, Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil; Keika INOUYE, Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil; Fabiana de Souza ORLANDI, Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil and Sofia Cristina PAVARINI, Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil Trajectories of Desire: Notes about the Homossexual Aging in Digital Media in Brazil JS-54.5 Chris GILLEARD, UCL (University College London), United Kingdom; Paul HIGGS, University College London, United Kingdom and Ian Rees JONES, University of Cardiff, United Kingdom Connectivity in Later Life: Changes in Mobile/Cell Phone Ownership

JS-55 Innovation in Discourse: Promotion,

Defensiveness, Reflexivity and Hidden Fears

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work, RC25 Language and Society Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Peter OEIJ, TNO, Netherlands and Stephanie CASSILDE, Centre d’Études en Habitat Durable, Belgium AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-55.1 Christiane SCHNELL, Institute of Social Research at the Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany Framing or Praying? on the Paradox of the Discourse of Innovation. JS-55.2 Davinia PALOMARES-MONTERO, University of Valencia, Spain; Maria Jose CHISVERT-TARAZONA, University

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Wednesday 13 July

No. JS-58

Joint Session Details

of Valencia, Spain and Jose SANCHEZ-SANTAMARIA, University of Castilla la-Mancha, Spain What Makes the Difference Between Entrepreneurs and Social Entrepreneurs? a Pop up Discourse.

JS-57.2 Patrick LAZAREVIC, TU Dortmund, Germany Rating Your Health: An Examination of Non-Health-Related Factors and Differential Item Functioning in the Self-Rating of Health

JS-55.3 Vega PEREZ-CHIRINOS CHURRUCA, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain El Discurso Del Emprendimiento Como Máscara Del Trabajo Informal

JS-57.3 Nadine REIBLING, University of Siegen, Germany Intersectionality and Social Inequalities in Health: A Comparative Study

JS-55.4 Byoung-Hoon LEE, Chung-Ang Univ., South Korea and Hannah KIM, Chung-Ang University, South Korea Contested Discourse of Labor Market Reforms: The Case of South Korea JS-55.5 Ignasi BRUNET, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain and Liviu Catalin MARA, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain Vocational Education and Training (VET) and Innovation: Impact of the VET Centres in the SMEs in Catalonia (Spain)

JS-56 Young Activists, Subjectivity and “the

JS-57.4 Suparna SHOME, Indian Statistical Institute, India and Manoranjan PAL, Indian Statistical Institute, India Role of Gender and Socioeconomic Inequality in Women’s Health and Health Care: Evidences from India JS-57.5 Susmita BHARATI, Indian Statistical Institute, India and Premananda BHARATI, Indian Statistical Institute, India Socio-Economic Inequality in Childhood Obesity in a Metro City in India

JS-58 Les Carrières Créatives: Modèles Contemporains D’organisation Du Travail / Creative Careers: Contemporary Models of Work Organization

Future They Want”

Committees: RC34 Sociology of Youth, RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Carmen LECCARDI, University of MilanoBicocca, Italy Chair: Carmen LECCARDI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-56.1 Andrea PIRNI, University of Genoa, Italy and Luca RAFFINI, University of Genoa, Italy The Youth and the Perception of the Future. Between New Values, Transnational Orientations, and the Reinvention of Politics

JS-56.3 Abeer MUSLEH, Bethlehem University, Palestine Youth Mobilizing in the City of Jerusalem on a Cross Road: Changing and Teaching Ourselves

JS-56.5 Felix KRAWATZEK, University of Oxford (Nuffield College & Department of Politics), United Kingdom Youth Support for an Authoritarian Future. Imagining a Pro-Putin Future in Contemporary Russia

16:00 - 17:30 JS-57 Health Inequalities in Comparative Perspective

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health, RC20 Comparative Sociology Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Amelie QUESNEL-VALLEE, McGill University, Canada; Peter KRIWY, Technische Universität Chemnitz, Germany and Sigrun OLAFSDOTTIR, Boston University, USA Chair: Amelie QUESNEL-VALLEE, McGill University, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-57.1 Rasmus HOFFMANN, European University Institute, Italy and Pekka MARTIKAINEN, University of Helsinki, Finland Mortality By Different Dimensions of Stratification – a Comparison of Education, Class, Status and Income with Finish Register Data

Session Organizers: Amina YAGOUBI, Université du Québec, Canada and Diane-Gabrielle TREMBLAY, University of Québec Téluq, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-58.1 Christian MAHIEU, CNRS, France Coopérer Sur Les Activités Support à La Création Artistique Du Spectacle Vivant Pour Réduire L’incertitude Des Parcours Et Des Organisations : Le Cas De Metalunet JS-58.2 Amina YAGOUBI, Teluq, Universite du Quebec, Canada and Diane-Gabrielle TREMBLAY, University of Quebec - Teluq, Canada Creative Trajectories of Fashion Designers : An Exploration of Creative Workshops and Professional Strategies in Montreal Fashion JS-58.3 Valerie ROLLE, London School of Economic and Political Science, United Kingdom From Shared Uncertainties to Inequalities in Discontinuous Work Regimes. Professional Mobility within Actors and Independent Graphic Designers JS-58.4 Beata KOWALCZYK, Warsaw University, Poland Japanese Classical Musicians in Europe: Institutional Constraints and Survival Strategies JS-58.5 Amina YAGOUBI, Teluq, Universite du Quebec, Canada Les Questions De L’action Dans Un Régime De Réputation: Le Designer De Mode à Montréal. JS-58.6 Marcos Roberto PINA, Federal University of São Carlos, Brazil Work Hard, Party Harder: Le Travail Des Djs Dans La Ville De São Paulo DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-58.7 Mathilde MONDON-NAVAZO, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS) / Universite Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3, Brazil Une Analyse Des Trajectoires De Professionnels Créatifs En Termes De Mobilisation De Ressources : Les Travailleurs Indépendants Économiquement Dépendants Du Secteur De Technologies De L’information

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333

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

JS-56.4 Franka WINTER, Maynooth University, Ireland Young Middle-Class Activists in Lima, Peru: Hopes, Fears, and Civic Subjectivities.

Language: French Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

Joint

JS-56.2 Alexandra KASSIR, EHESS, France “Civil Marriage, Not Civil War!” Anti-Sectarian Activism in Post-War Lebanon

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work, TG04 Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

No. JS-59

Joint Session Details

JS-58.8 Marjorie GLAS, IRIS, France L’atout De La Multipositionnalité Dans Les Carrières Artistiques : Le Cas Du Théâtre Français

JS-60.2 Abdurrahim GULER, Hacettepe University, Turkey Cultural Involvement and Cultural Preference of Ahiska Turks in the United States

JS-58.9 Rocio GUADARRAMA, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Unidad Cuajimalpa, Mexico Trajectoires Et Identités Professionnelles à Risque. Le Cas Des Musiciens De Concert Au Mexique.

JS-60.3 Molly FEE, University of California, Los Angeles, USA Resettlement Policy and the Well-Being of Refugees in the U.S.: Are Political and Economic Incorporation Enough?

JS-59 Migrant Women’s Biographies within

the Economic Crisis: Transnationalism As a Coping Strategy Reconsidered

Committees: RC32 Women in Society, RC38 Biography and Society Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Ursula APITZSCH, Goethe University, Germany and Francesca Alice VIANELLO, University of Padua, Italy Chair: Ursula APITZSCH, Goethe University, Germany Co-Chair: Francesca Alice VIANELLO, University of Padua, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-59.1 Pragna RUGUNANAN, University of Johannesburg, South Africa Indian Migrant Women’s Biographies: Revisiting Transnationalism in South Africa JS-59.2 Laura MANKKI, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland Paradoxes of Feminization of Labor Migration in Finland and Italy: An Intersectional Reading JS-59.3 Ina ALBER, University of Goettingen, Germany Care Workers in Transnational Polish-German Spaces

Joint

JS-59.4 Anil AL-REBHOLZ, Okan University, Dept. of Sociology, Turkey Transnational Strategies of Education for Social Mobility By Young Migrant Women in Germany

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Thursday 14 July

JS-59.5 Susanne WILLERS, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Gender and Violence in the Experiences of Central American Women: Migration As a Coping Strategy? JS-59.6 Phung SU, UC Berkeley, USA The Market for Vietnamese Brides: Global Marriages As Strategy Deployments DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-59.7 Macarena TRUJILLO, Universidad de Playa Ancha, Chile Más Allá De Las Exclusiones y Resistencias: Experiencias De Monomarentalidad En Mujeres Latinoamericanas En Contexto Migratorio. JS-59.8 Marita HAAS, Vienna Technical University, Austria “I Was a Woman. I Was Skilled. I Had a Doctoral Degree and [I Was] a Foreigner“. Migrant Coping Strategies of Women in Highly Qualified Areas

JS-60.4 Jock COLLINS, UTS Business School, University of Technology Sydney., Australia Aspirations and Outcomes for Temporary Migrants to Australia: Korean Working Holiday Makers and Pacific Island Seasonal Workers JS-60.5 Neda MOINOLMOLKI, University of Delaware, USA A Critical Investigation of Well-Being on Migrant Populations: A Composited Approach

Thursday 14 July 09:00 - 10:30 JS-61 Justice and Inequality in Education Committees: RC42 Social Psychology, RC04 Sociology of Education Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Nura RESH, School of Education, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-61.1 Martin MILLS, University of Queensland, Australia; Kitty TE RIELE, Victoria University, Australia; Debra HAYES, University of Sydney, Australia; Glenda MCGREGOR, Griffith University, Australia and Aspa BAROUTSIS, University of Queensland, Australia Distribution, Recognition, Representation and Contribution - Social Justice at Micro and Macro Levels in Alternative Education Programs JS-61.2 Roland BURGER, University of Tubingen, Germany and Martin GROSS, University of Tuebingen, Germany Student Perceptions of the Fairness of Grading Procedures: The Role of the Academic Environment JS-61.3 Hernan CUERVO, The University of Melbourne, Australia Using Iris Marion Young to Discover the Meaning of Justice for Rural Students and Teachers JS-61.4 Yulia EPIKHINA, Institute of Sociology of Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Assessment of Justice in the Institutions of Learning

JS-62 How Did Environment Call

Development Pathways out?

Committees: RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development, RC24 Environment and Society Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

JS-60 Migration and Well-Being. Part III Committees: RC31 Sociology of Migration, RC55 Social Indicators

Session Organizer: Bernard HUBERT, Ecole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, France

Location: Hörsaal 33 (Main Building)

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Session Organizers: Sergiu BALTATESCU, University of Oradea, Romania and David BARTRAM, University of Leicester, United Kingdom Chair: Sergiu BALTATESCU, University of Oradea, Romania AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-60.1 Martijn HENDRIKS, EHERO (Erasmus University Rotterdam), Netherlands Subjective Well-Being and International Migration: What Kinds of People Suit Migration?

334

JS-62.1 Ulrike M.M. SCHUERKENS, Ecole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, France The Ecological Transformation of Modern Societies JS-62.2 Jyoti DAS, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainable Development: A Case Study of Zabo.

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Thursday 14 July

No. JS-65

Joint Session Details

JS-62.3 Ekaterina HOLLER, Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Deconstructing Austrian Identities: Components of the Bipolar System.

JS-63 Contextualizing Inter- & Multinational

Survey Research. Discussing Regional Perspectives on Effects & Outcomes of Global Trends / Linear & Non-Linear (Multi-Level-)Modelling with Aggregate or Regional Data for Policy Analysis & Evidence Based Councelling

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology, RC20 Comparative Sociology, WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Dimitri PRANDNER, University of Salzburg, Austria; Daniela WETZELHUTTER, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, FH OÖ Campus Linz, Faculty of Applied Health & Social Sciences, Austria; Jaroslaw GORNIAK, Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego, Poland; Peter GRAEFF, Christian-Albrechts University Kiel, Germany; Heinz LEITGÖB, University of Linz, Austria and Stefanie EIFLER, Catholic University of EichstattIngolstadt, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-64.2 Sigrun OLAFSDOTTIR, Boston University, USA and Emily BARMAN, Boston University, USA Do Societal Ties Matter? the Role of Associational Participation in Shaping Health and Health Inequalities in Advanced Welfare States JS-64.3 Giulia TATTARINI, University of Trento, Italy; Raffaele GROTTI, University of Trento, Italy and Stefani SCHERER, University of Trento, Italy Health Consequences of Losing Job in Europe. Do the Contexts Make the Difference? JS-64.4 Katie POWELL, University of Sheffield, USA; Judy GREEN, JUDY, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, United Kingdom; Sarah MILTON, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, United Kingdom; Stefanie BUCKNER, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; Sarah SALWAY, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom and Suzanne MOFFATT, Newcastle University, United Kingdom Conditional and Universal Welfare Benefits in the UK: Social Framings of Entitlement and the Implications for Wellbeing and Inequalities in Health JS-64.5 Mauro SERAPIONI, Centre for Social Studies, Portugal Health Systems and Inequalities in the Southern European Countries DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

JS-63.1 Aki KOIVULA, University of Turku, Finland; Pekka RASANEN, University of Turku, Finland; Arttu SAARINEN, University of Turku, Finland and Outi SARPILA, University of Turku, Finland How Much Does the Mode of Response Matter? a Comparison of Web-Based and Mail-Based Response When Examining Sensitive Issues in Social Surveys JS-63.2 Miloslav BAHNA, Institute for Sociology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia Issp National Identity: Pitfalls in Measuring Nationalism Across Countries and Across Time

JS-63.5 Landy SANCHEZ, El Colegio de México, Mexico and Ana ESCOTO, El Colegio de México, Mexico Multilevel Models Vs. Fixed Regression, Insights from Food Prices and Consumption in Mexico

10:45 - 12:15

Futures in the Making: Analyzing Transnational Orders of Discourse 1

Committees: RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology, RC14 Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture, WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Reiner KELLER AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-65.1 Magdalena A. NOWICKA, University of Lodz, Poland Transnational Dispositive Analysis? Cross-Cultural Limitations of Post-Foucauldian Methodology JS-65.2 Felix KRAWATZEK, University of Oxford (Nuffield College & Department of Politics), United Kingdom Can We Demarcate the Future? a Discourse Analysis of the Future Studying Congressional Hearings in the US JS-65.3 Yasuko SHIBATA, The Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Beyond the Orient: Contemporary Polish Discourse on Japanese Global Culture

JS-64 Welfare States and Health Care

Systems: In Search for Solutions to Social Inequalities in Health

Committees: RC15 Sociology of Health, RC19 Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Tuba AGARTAN, Providence College, USA and Claus WENDT, University of Siegen, Germany Chair: Claus WENDT, University of Siegen, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-64.1 Philipp HESSEL, Harvard University, USA and Jason BECKFIELD, Harvard University, USA Living Institutions: A Life-Course Approach to Evaluating Welfare-State Effects on Health Inequalities

JS-65.4 Kristina NOTTBOHM, Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Germany and Luis HERNÁNDEZ AGUILAR, Independent Researcher, Mexico The West Vs. the Rest – Locating the “Transnational” in Discourses on Islam JS-65.5 Dimitri PRANDNER, University of Salzburg / University of Linz, Austria Moving Beyond the Mediated Discourse - How the Austrian Public and Journalists Understand the “War on Terror” and How This Relates Newspaper Depictions.

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Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

JS-63.4 Masood ALAMINEISI, Professor, Iran Functional Disintegration of Institutions; From Theory to Indicator

JS-65 The Complex Discursivity of Global

Joint

JS-63.3 Inna VOLOSEVYCH, GfK Ukraine, Ukraine and Tetiana KOSTIUCHENKO, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine Factors of Human Trafficking in Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine

JS-64.6 Ivaylo VASSILEV, University of Southampton, United Kingdom and Anne ROGERS, University of Southampton, United Kingdom Neoliberalism and the Political and Economic Embedding of the Experience of Diabetes Chronic Illness Management in Bulgaria and the United Kingdom

No. JS-66

Joint Session Details

JS-66 Youth Mental Health: Intersections and Directions

Committees: RC49 Mental Health and Illness, RC34 Sociology of Youth Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Kate TILLECZEK, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-66.1 Lars Geer HAMMERSHOJ, Aarhus University, Denmark Desperate and Raging Minds: The Negative Consequences of Individualization? JS-66.2 Brandi BELL, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada and Tracy DEYELL, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada Patient Journeys in Youth Mental Health: Arts-Based Methods for Exploring Youth, Parent, and Service Provider Perspectives

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Joint

JS-66.3 Alvaro JIMENEZ, Université Sorbonne Paris Cité, France Non Suicidal Self-Injury As a Social Regulation Strategy: Experiences of Suffering Among Chileans and French Adolescents

Thursday 14 July

JS-67.3 Nadezhda GEORGIEVA-STANKOVA, Trakia University, Bulgaria The New Political Discourse of Roma Activism: The International Romani Movement and the Language of National Self-Determination JS-67.4 Luz GALLEGOS, Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Mexico Mexicans Versus Mexicans: Coping with Everyday Ethnic Discrimination

JS-68 Professional Work in a Globalized

World: Migration, Cross-Bordering and Globalization of Knowledge Workers / El Trabajo Profesional En Un Mundo Globalizado: Migración, Transnacionalización y Globalización De Los Trabajadores Del Conocimiento.

Committees: RC30 Sociology of Work, RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Javier HERMO, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

JS-66.4 Brandi BELL, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada and Matthew MUNRO, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada Digital Media and Youth Mental Health: “It Just Takes over Everything”

JS-68.1 Premilla D’CRUZ, Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, India and Ernesto NORONHA, Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, India Globalising Commodification: Outsourcing Legal Work to India

JS-66.5 Marie-Christine BRAULT, Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi, Canada Mental Health Inequalities Among Youth: The Importance of the Quality of the School Environment

JS-68.2 Quentin DEFORGE, IRISSO - Paris-Dauphine University / CNRS, France When after the Struggles the Experts Come: Sociology of a “Worldwide Parliamentary Development Community of Practice”

JS-66.6 Adenike IDOWU, Covenant University, Nigeria; Gbadebo ADEJUMO, Covenant University, Nigeria; Mofoluwake AJAYI, Covenant University, Nigeria; Tolulope ALLO, Covenant University, Nigeria and Tomike OLAWANDE, Covenant University, Nigeria Neighbourhood Characteristics and Psychosocial Health Among Young Adolescent Living in Urban Slum in Lagos State, Nigeria

JS-68.3 Maria MARQUES, Polytechnic Institute of Setubal - College of Business and Administration, Portugal and Jose REBELO DOS SANTOS, Institute Polytechnic of Setubal- College of Business and Administration, Portugal Trends in Employment and HRM Practices: The Influence of New Technologies

14:15 - 15:45 JS-67 The Use of Language and Silences in Coping with Everyday Nationalism, Racism and Sexism

Committees: RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations, RC25 Language and Society Language: French Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizers: Stephanie CASSILDE, Centre d’Études en Habitat Durable, Belgium and Helma LUTZ, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-67.1 Christian KARNER, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom Biographical Subtleties and Subaltern Resistance Against Everyday Nationalism: Asylum-Seekers in Austria’s “Megaphon” JS-67.2 Wiebke SCHARATHOW, University of Education Freiburg, Germany The Risks of Resistance. the Complexity of Dealing with Situations of Racism.

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JS-68.4 Yingchan ZHANG, Northeastern University, USA Tapping the Flow: The Global Circulation of Talent and Urban Development in China DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-68.5 Javier HERMO, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina; Cecilia LUSNICH, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina and Cecilia PITTELLI, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Global Professors in a Global World: National, Transnational and Crossbordering JS-68.6 Meltem YILMAZ SENER, Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey Knowledge Workers in Istanbul Practicing Self-Management JS-68.7 Anna SPIEGEL, Bielefeld University, Germany Working in Cultural Contact Zones: Paradoxes in Expatriate Managers’ Knowledge Translation and Identity Construction JS-68.8 Xinia PEREZ QUESADA, ALAS ISA, Costa Rica La Configuraci”N DEL Sujeto a Partir De La Experiencia De Nadar Contra Corriente EN La Burocracia DEL Estado JS-68.9 Arturo BALLESTEROS LEINER, Universidad Pedagógica Nacional, Mexico Cuerpos Académicos y Clausura Profesional En La Universidad Pedagógica Nacional (México)

www.isa-sociology.org

Thursday 14 July

No. JS-72

Joint Session Details

JS-69 Migration and Well-Being. Part I

JS-71 How Are Science and Technology Engaged in Eco-Innovations?

Committees: RC55 Social Indicators, RC31 Sociology of Migration Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG)) Session Organizers: Sergiu BALTATESCU, University of Oradea, Romania and David BARTRAM, University of Leicester, United Kingdom Chair: Martijn HENDRIKS, Erasmus University, Netherlands Authors and Papers: JS-69.1 Stephanie AYERS, Southwest Interdisciplinary Research Center, Arizona State University, USA and Elizabeth KIEHNE, School of Social Work, Arizona State University, USA How the Parent-Adolescent Acculturation Gap Impacts Youth Risky Behavior in Latino Immigrant Families JS-69.2 Elaine CHASE, University of Oxford, United Kingdom and Francesca MELONI, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Unsettled Transitions to ‘Adulthood’: Young Migrants’ Experiences of Future, Self, and Wellbeing in the UK JS-69.4 Keun-Young PARK, Yonsei University, South Korea; Jeong Won CHOI, The Seoul Institute, South Korea and Jeehun KIM, Inha University, South Korea Friendship Networks and Satisfaction with Life Among International Exchange Students in a Korean University DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-69.5 Abdirashid ISMAIL, University of Helsinki, Finland Transnational Somali Families and Children’s Well-Being: The Case of Finland

Committees: RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology, RC24 Environment and Society Location: Hörsaal 10 (Juridicum) Session Organizer: Sophie NEMOZ, University of Versailles, France AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-71.1 Martin DAVID, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Germany; Alena BLEICHER, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Germany and Magdalena WALLKAMM, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ, Germany The Relational Sociology of Shaping Eco-Innovations JS-71.2 Michiel DE KROM, Department of Sociology - Ghent University, Belgium Understandings of Human-Animal Relations and Animal Welfare in ‘Precision Livestock Farming’ Research and Development JS-71.3 Les LEVIDOW, Open University, United Kingdom and Paul UPHAM, Leuphana Universität, Germany Beyond Incineration? Beyond Incineration? Representing Gasification for Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) Treatment JS-71.4 Beretta ILARIA, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore di Brescia, Italy The Social Effects of Eco-Innovations in Italian Smart Cities JS-71.5 Sophie NEMOZ, International Centre REEDS, France The Intertwining of Macro-, Meso- and Micro-Social Scales to Understand Innovation in Sociology. the Case of EcoHousing in Europe.

JS-69.6 Eszter BALOGH, University of Vienna, Austria Social Security of Hungarian Migrants?

16:00 - 17:30 JS-70 Exploring the Role of Seeing in Racism, Committees: RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations, WG03 Visual Sociology Location: Hörsaal 18 (Juridicum)

JS-71.7 Yuan Zheng LI, Université Laval, Canada Join the Eco-Innovation Bandwagon: Evidence from Chinese Firms

JS-72 Silos or Synergies? Can Labor Build

AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Committees: RC44 Labor Movements, RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements

JS-70.1 Clara RODRIGUEZ, Fordham University, USA Do Exported US TV Programs Introduce or Reinforce Racial/ Ethnic and/or Gender Inequality – American Style – to Other Countries? JS-70.2 Doris WEICHSELBAUMER, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria and Julia SCHUSTER, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria The Discriminatory Power of a Photograph in the Job Market: A Field Experiment JS-70.3 Gerard BOUCHER, University College Dublin, Ireland and Iarfhlaith WATSON, University College Dublin, Ireland Ireland’s National Diaspora Centre, Fortress Europe and Europe’s Migration Crisis JS-70.4 Gaia PERUZZI, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy Images of Hybridization. Cross-Cultural Couples in the European Cinema JS-70.5 Benjamin FOLEY, Rutgers University, USA A New Kind of “Color-Blind” Human Rights Discourse in a “Facebook World”: Unpacking the Hierarchical Humanitarian Sensibility of Kony 2012

Effective Alliances with Other Global Social Movements

Location: Hörsaal 50 (Main Building) Session Organizers: Peter EVANS, University of CaliforniaBerkeley, USA and Daniele DI NUNZIO, Fondazione Di Vittorio, Italy Chair: Chris TILLY, University of California Los Angeles, USA AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-72.1 Rebecca GUMBRELL-MCCORMICK, Birkbeck, University of London, United Kingdom ‘European Trade Unions and Their Links with NGOs and New Social Movements: How to Explain Differences Between Countries?’ JS-72.2 Mario DIANI, University of Trento, Italy Union Activists in Collective Action Fields: A Comparative Exploration JS-72.3 Peter EVANS, Watson Institute for International Studies, USA When and Why Do Synergies Work? Comparing Synergistic Movements to Stop “Free Trade” to Synergies Between Transnational Labor and Feminist Movements

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Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

Session Organizers: Jerome KRASE, City University of New York, USA; Vilna BASHI-TREITLER, The Graduate Center, and Baruch College, CUNY, USA and Annalisa FRISINA, University of Padova, Italy

Joint

Nationalism and Ethnic Relations

JS-71.6 Cecile CARON, EDF R&D, France Ambivalences Experimental Devices on the Appropriation and Diffusion of Eco-Innovations in the Field of Energy

No. JS-73

Joint Session Details

JS-72.4 Robert J.S. ROSS, Clark University, USA Parallel Government, Privatization, Soft Law, Jobber’s Contract, Union Power, and/or Ngo Leverage?: The Many Meanings of Progress after the Rana Plaza Disaster. JS-72.5 Sabrina ZAJAK, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany and Saida RESSEL, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany Increasing Power Resources By Cross-Border, CrossOrganizational Cooperation? Synergies and Trade-Offs of Transnational Alliance Between Trade Unions and Social Movements. the Case of Bangladesh JS-72.6 Nobuyuki YAMADA, Komazawa University, Japan The Position of Labor in Civil Activism: The Labor Movement and the Classness of the Bersih Movement in Malaysia

JS-72.7 Stephanie LIMONCELLI, Loyola Marymount University, USA Laboring Against Human Trafficking: INGOs, Unions, and Anti-Trafficking Responses JS-72.9 Heather BLAKEY, University of Bradford, United Kingdom and Graeme CHESTERS, University of Bradford, United Kingdom Social Movement Unionism: from the IWW to Wisconsin and the World

Committees: RC22 Sociology of Religion, RC54 The Body in the Social Sciences Location: Hörsaal 21 (Main Building) Session Organizer: Bianca Maria PIRANI, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy AUTHORS AND PAPERS:

Joint

JS-73.5 Loreley FRANCHINA, Université de La Réunion, Reunion Le Corps Dans Le Rituel De La Marche Sur Le Feu à La Réunion JS-73.6 Leticia R.T. SILVA, University of Brasilia, Brazil and Dulce FILGUEIRA DE ALMEIDA, University of Brasilia, Brazil The Embodiment of the Youth in the Charismatic Catholic Movement

JS-74 Migration and Well-Being. Part II Committees: RC31 Sociology of Migration, RC55 Social Indicators Session Organizers: Sergiu BALTATESCU, University of Oradea, Romania and David BARTRAM, University of Leicester, United Kingdom Chair: David BARTRAM, University of Leicester, United Kingdom AUTHORS AND PAPERS: JS-74.1 Polina MANOLOVA, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom ‘I Didn’t Expect It to be so Hard’. Expectations and Realities of Life in the West. JS-74.2 Christoph REINPRECHT, University of Vienna, Austria Migration Success As an Indicator of Migrants’ Well-Being

JS-73 Rhythms and Rituals

Joint RC, WG and TG Committee Sessions

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

Location: Hörsaal I (Neues Institutsgebäude (NIG))

DISTRIBUTED PAPERS:

JS-73.1 Ephraim SHAPIRO, Columbia, USA and Irit ELROY, Myers-JDC-Brookdale Institute, Israel Mental Health Care Use Among the Most Religious Jews and Muslims in Israel: Opportunities for Faith-Based Interventions? JS-73.2 Maria Carla BERTOLO, University of Padova, Italy The Embodied Practices: Spirituality As a New Cultural Category JS-73.3 Seyed Hossein SERAJZADEH, Kharazmi University of Tehran, Iran and Masoud ZAMANI MOGHADAM, Kharazmi University of Tehran, Iran Religious and Secular Attitudes Towards Death: The Study of a Sample of University Students in Tehran

JS-74.3 Driss HABTI, University of Eastern Finland, Finland Wellbeing Among Russian Physicians in Finnish Healthcare in Relation to Work and Personal Life JS-74.4 Jonnabelle ASIS, University of Brescia, Italy Growing Gap While Growing Grey: Ageing Non-EU Migrants’ Social Networks and Economic Well-Being JS-74.5 Sonia PARELLA RUBIO, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain; Leonardo DE LA TORRE, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain and Clara PIQUERAS, Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain Life Course Perspective on Return Migration: Coming Back from Spain to Cochabamba (Bolivia) DISTRIBUTED PAPERS: JS-74.6 Apostolos PAPADOPOULOS, Harokopio University of Athens, Department of Geography, Greece and Loukia-Maria FRATSEA, Harokopio University of Athens, Greece “Putting Their Lives on Hold’: The Adventurous Path Towards Migrant Integration into Greek Society

JS-73.4 Seil OH, Sogang University, Dept of Sociology, South Korea Exploring Youth Religiosity and Multiple-Secularities in Korea: Quests for Happiness in the Immanent Frames

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Program Coordinators List of Program Coordinators: Alphabetical and by Committee

List of Program Coordinators: Alphabetical and by Committee Alphabetical

A

ABREU, Alice — RC23 ACHTERBERG, Peter — RC03 ADOMAKO AMPOFO, Akosua — RC32 ALARCON ALARCON, Amado — RC25 ALMAGUER-KALIXTO, Patricia — RC51

BOATCA, Manuela — WG02 BONNEVILLE, Luc — RC14 BRECKNER, Roswitha — RC38 BRESKAYA, Olga — RC22

C

CARREIRAS, Helena — RC01 CHAMBERLAIN, John Martyn — TG04

ANZOISE, Valentina — WG03

CHIESI, Antonio M. — RC45

ASAKURA, Takashi — RC49

COMPANION, Michele — RC39

ASHEULOVA, Nadia — RC23

CONSTANTOPOULOU, Christiana — RC14

ASSUNCAO, Fatima — RC10

CORREIA, Tiago — RC52

B

BAERT, Patrick — RC16 BARALDI, Claudio — RC53 BARBOSA NEVES, Barbara — RC06 BARRAL, Stéphanie — RC30 BATAN, Clarence — RC34 BAUR, Nina — RC33 BENSKI, Tova — RC48 BEOKU-BETTS, Josephine — RC32 BIELER, Andreas — RC44

FARINI, Federico — RC25 FAYOMI, Oluyemi — TG03 FUJIYOSHI, Keiji — RC25

G

GERBAUDO, Paolo — RC47 GIARELLI, Guido — RC15

COORDINATORS

ANSON, Jonathan — RC41

F

GOTTFRIED, Heidi — RC02

H

HASEGAWA, Koichi — RC24 HATANAKA, Maki — RC40

D

HVINDEN, Bjorn — RC19

DA COSTA, Isabel — RC10 DAHLVIK, Julia — RC12 DALOZ, Jean Pascal — RC20 DAPHI, Priska — RC47 DWORKIN, Anthony Gary — RC04

E

I

INOWLOCKI, Lena — RC38

J

JEANS, Cynthia Lisa — TG03

EMBRICK, David — RC36

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Program Coordinators (Alphabetical)

K

P

KHONDKER, Habibul — RC09 KRUMM, Silvia — RC49 KU, Agnes — RC16

L

LAMPIS, Andrea — RC39 LEUPRECHT, Christian — RC01

TEOTIA, Manoj — WG05

PIRANI, Bianca Maria — RC54 PLEYERS, Geoffrey — RC47

TĘSTIŇGTĘSTIŇG, DărĉyDărĉy — RC T

THEOBALD, Hildegard — RC19 TIMONEN, Virpi — RC11

Q

TSOLIDIS, Georgina — RC05

QUESNEL-VALLEE, Amelie — RC15

S

U

UYS, Tina — RC46

SABBAGH, Clara — RC42

V

LOW, Kelvin — TG07

SACCA, Flaminia — RC26

LUKEN, Paul — TG06

SALATA, Andre — RC07

M

SCHUERKENS, Ulrike M.M. — RC09

VELIKAYA, Nataliya — WG01

SEEDAT KHAN, Mariam — RC46

VERDUZCO, Gustavo — RC31

SERRA, Helena — RC52

VRYONIDES, Marios — RC04

MARCUELLO-SERVOS, Chaime — RC51 MENEZES, Paulo — RC37 MENNELL, Stephen — WG02 MERCIER, Delphine — RC30 MILNE, Elisabeth-Jane — WG03 MISHEVA, Vessela — RC36 MODI, Ishwar — RC13 MOREL, Laurence — RC18

O

O’BRIEN, Margaret — RC06

SERRANO-VELARDE, Kathia — RC17 SIEH, Edward — TG03 SINHA, Vineeta — RC22 SPICKARD, James — RC22 SPRACKLEN, Karl — RC13 STRECKER, David — RC35 SUTER, Christian — RC55

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VAN KRIEKEN, Robert — RC17

W

WAGNER, Elke — RC35 WEICHBOLD, Martin — RC33 WIERENGA, Ani — RC34 WILLIAMSON, Howard — RC34

Z

T

TAVARES-DOS-SANTOS, Jose Vicente — RC29

COORDINATORS

List of Program Coordinators: Alphabetical and by Committee

LOCONTO, Allison — RC40



www.isa-sociology.org

ZUEV, Dennis — WG03

Program Coordinators (by Committee)

by Committee RC01 —LEUPRECHT, Christian; CARREIRAS, Helena

RC23 —ABREU, Alice; ASHEULOVA, Nadia

RC02 —GOTTFRIED, Heidi

RC24 —HASEGAWA, Koichi

RC03 —ACHTERBERG, Peter

RC25 —ALARCON ALARCON, Amado; FUJIYOSHI, Keiji; FARINI, Federico

RC04 —DWORKIN, Anthony Gary; VRYONIDES, Marios RC05 —TSOLIDIS, Georgina RC06 —BARBOSA NEVES, Barbara; O’BRIEN, Margaret

RC26 —SACCA, Flaminia RC29 —TAVARES-DOS-SANTOS, Jose Vicente

RC07 —SALATA, Andre

RC30 —MERCIER, Delphine; BARRAL, Stéphanie

RC09 —KHONDKER, Habibul; SCHUERKENS, Ulrike M.M.

RC31 —VERDUZCO, Gustavo

RC10 —DA COSTA, Isabel; ASSUNCAO, Fatima RC11 —TIMONEN, Virpi RC13 —MODI, Ishwar; SPRACKLEN, Karl RC14 —BONNEVILLE, Luc; CONSTANTOPOULOU, Christiana

RC33 —BAUR, Nina; WEICHBOLD, Martin RC34 —BATAN, Clarence; WILLIAMSON, Howard; WIERENGA, Ani

RC45 —CHIESI, Antonio M. RC46 —UYS, Tina; SEEDAT KHAN, Mariam RC47 —DAPHI, Priska; PLEYERS, Geoffrey; GERBAUDO, Paolo RC48 —BENSKI, Tova RC49 —KRUMM, Silvia; ASAKURA, Takashi RC51 —ALMAGUER-KALIXTO, Patricia; MARCUELLOSERVOS, Chaime RC52 —CORREIA, Tiago; SERRA, Helena RC53 —BARALDI, Claudio RC54 —PIRANI, Bianca Maria RC55 —SUTER, Christian TG03 —JEANS, Cynthia Lisa; FAYOMI, Oluyemi; SIEH, Edward

RC35 —STRECKER, David; WAGNER, Elke

TG04 —CHAMBERLAIN, John Martyn

RC15 —GIARELLI, Guido; QUESNELVALLEE, Amelie

RC36 —EMBRICK, David; MISHEVA, Vessela

TG07 —LOW, Kelvin

RC16 —BAERT, Patrick; KU, Agnes

RC37 —MENEZES, Paulo

WG01 —VELIKAYA, Nataliya

RC17 —SERRANO-VELARDE, Kathia; VAN KRIEKEN, Robert

RC38 —INOWLOCKI, Lena; BRECKNER, Roswitha

WG02 —MENNELL, Stephen; BOATCA, Manuela

RC18 —MOREL, Laurence

RC39 —COMPANION, Michele; LAMPIS, Andrea

WG03 —ZUEV, Dennis; MILNE, Elisabeth-Jane; ANZOISE, Valentina

RC19 —THEOBALD, Hildegard; HVINDEN, Bjorn RC20 —DALOZ, Jean Pascal

WG05 —TEOTIA, Manoj

RC41 —ANSON, Jonathan

COORDINATORS

RC22 —SINHA, Vineeta; SPICKARD, James; BRESKAYA, Olga

RC40 —LOCONTO, Allison; HATANAKA, Maki

TG06 —LUKEN, Paul

RC42 —SABBAGH, Clara

www.isa-sociology.org

List of Program Coordinators: Alphabetical and by Committee

RC12 —DAHLVIK, Julia

RC32 —ADOMAKO AMPOFO, Akosua; BEOKU-BETTS, Josephine

RC44 —BIELER, Andreas

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NOTES

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Session Organizers List of Session Organizers

A

AMIN, Pirzada — No. 23

B

ABDELRAHMAN, Maha — No. 550

ANAND, Harjit Singh — No. 661, No. JS-40

BAH, Abu — No. 20

ABDULLAH, Noorman — No. 700

ANDRE-BECHELY, Lois — No. 694

BAIRD, Marian — No. 345, No. 346

ABENIR, Mark Anthony — No. JS-38

ANSON, Ofra — No. 478

BALAN, P.P. — No. 121, No. JS-40

ABLAZHEY, Anatoly — No. 278

ANTON, Mihail — No. 21

ABREU, Alice — No. 282

ANZOISE, Valentina — No. JS-37

BALDASSAR, Loretta — No. JS-23, No. JS-54

ACHARYA, Arun Kumar — No. 354

APITZSCH, Ursula — No. 452, No. JS-59

ABBASI, Parvez Ahmad — No. 594

ACHTERBERG, Peter — No. 40 ADAMS, Tracey — No. 598 ADOMAKO AMPOFO, Akosua — No. 374 AGARTAN, Tuba — No. 244, No. JS-64 AGARWALA, Rina — No. 508 AGBOOLA, Caroline — No. 329

ARAGONA, Biagio — No. 387 ARJOMAND, Said — No. 270 ARLIKATTI, Sudha — No. 455, No. 456

BAGAYOKO, Sidylamine — No. 664

BALDIN, Dominik — No. 201, No. 337 BALTATESCU, Sergiu — No. JS-60, No. JS-69, No. JS-74 BANDELJ, Nina — No. 108, No. 109 BANSAL, Sunil — No. 663 BARALDI, Claudio — No. 605

ARNASON, Johann P. — No. 639

BARBERET, Rosemary — No. 532

ARTEAGA, Nelson — No. 206

BARBIER, Pascal — No. 345, No. 346

ARTEGUI ALCAIDE, Izaskun — No. 397

BARBOSA, Maria Ligia — No. 43

ARZA, Camila — No. 237

BARBOSA NEVES, Barbara — No. 88 BARDHAN ROY, Subir Kumar — No. 472

ASHEULOVA, Nadia — No. 280

BARIK, Bishnu Charan — No. 472

ASSUNCAO, Fatima — No. 123

BARRAL, Stéphanie — No. JS-42

ASTOR, Avi — No. 268, No. 272

BARROS, Nelson — No. 196

ALBERTH, Lars — No. 603

ATAC, Ilker — No. 543

BARTL, Walter — No. 488

ALENDA, Stephanie — No. 225

ATZENI, Maurizio — No. 506

ALMAGUER-KALIXTO, Patricia — No. 580

AUCHMUTY, Rosemary — No. 153, No. 155

BARTRAM, David — No. 365, No. JS60, No. JS-69, No. JS-74

ALVARADO, Arturo — No. 334

AULENBACHER, Brigitte — No. 3, No. 372

AKAHORI, Saburo — No. 577 ALABI, Joshua — No. 673 ALARCON ALARCON, Amado — No. 313

AMARAL, Isabel — No. 283

BASHI-TREITLER, Vilna — No. JS-70 BASTIDA-GONZALEZ, Elena — No. 482 BAUMLE, Amanda — No. 492 BAYATRIZI, Zohreh — No. 209

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343

ORGANIZERS

ASAKITIKPI, Alex — No. 190

AIZAWA, Shinichi — No. 46

List of Session Organizers

ADOGAME, Afe — No. 260

AMATURO, Enrica — No. 387

C BECKERS, Tilo — No. 274 BEGIN, Camille — No. 698, No. 699 BELL, Susan — No. 447 BELLO, Barbara G — No. 148

BURGESS, Adam — No. 675

BENSKI, Tova — No. 559, No. 560

BUSSE, Erika — No. 358

BEOKU-BETTS, Josephine — No. JS-14

BYFIELD, Natalie — No. JS-50

BEZUIDENHOUT, Andries — No. 514 BHADRA, Bula — No. 609, No. JS-32 BHAMBRA, Gurminder — No. 408, No. 411 BIALAKOWSKY, Alejandro — No. 405 BIANCHI, Alison — No. 496

CABUK KAYA, Nilay — No. 379 CALNAN, Michael — No. 682 CALVO, Esteban — No. 131 CAMARENA-CORDOVA, Rosa Maria — No. 393, No. 396

BIJL, Robert — No. 620

CAPPELLO, Gianna — No. 164

BIRD, Chloe — No. 188

CARBALLO, Marita — No. 250

BJORNGREN-CUADRA, Carin — No. 454

CARROLL, William — No. 25

BLASKO, Andrew — No. 418 BLOKKER, Paul — No. 226 BLUMBERG, Rae — No. 107, No. 115

CHUAQUI, Jorge — No. 571 CICCHELLI, Vincenzo — No. 633 CIOCHETTO, Lynne — No. 163, No. 291 CISAR, Ondrej — No. 226 COE, Anna-Britt — No. 382, No. JS-36 COHEN, Bruce — No. 572 COHN, Samuel — No. 111

CAMBRE, Carolina — No. 656, No. 658

BLAIN, Michael — No. 181, No. 229

List of Session Organizers

C

BIELER, Andreas — No. 505

BLAD, Cory — No. 36

ORGANIZERS

BUEHLER-NIEDERBERGER, Doris — No. 609 BURCHARDT, Marian — No. 268, No. 272

BESIO, Cristina — No. 218

D

Session Organizers

CASEY, Catherine — No. 122 CASIMIRO, Claudia — No. 88 CASSILDE, Stephanie — No. JS-55, No. JS-67 CASTILLO, Juan Carlos — No. 501, No. JS-30

COLIC-PEISKER, Val — No. 70 COLLIN, Johanne — No. 184, No. 567 COLLYER, Fran — No. 194 COMINELLI, Luigi — No. 146 CONILH DE BEYSSAC, Marie Louise — No. 324 CONSTANCE, Douglas — No. 470, No. 471 CONSTANTOPOULOU, Christiana — No. 172, No. 173 COOK, Craig — No. 617 COOPER, Trudi — No. 400 CORRADI, Consuelo — No. 381 CORRADI, Laura — No. 370 CORREIA, Tiago — No. 590, No. 591, No. 593 CORSALE, Massimo — No. 525

BOATCA, Manuela — No. 61

CASTRO, Jose Esteban — No. 101, No. 637

BOCCAGNI, Paolo — No. JS-48, No. JS-54

CATERINA, Raffaele — No. 145

COSTA, Rosalina — No. 85

BOEHLE, Knud — No. 289

CAVALCANTI, Josefa Salete B — No. JS-42

COTTINGHAM, Marci — No. 495, No. 500

BOGNER, Alexander — No. 304

CELIK, Ercument — No. 514

CRESPI, Isabella — No. 80

BOGNER, Artur — No. 246

CERDEIRA, Maria — No. 123

BONIFACIO, Glenda — No. 381, No. JS-38

CERSOSIMO, Giuseppina — No. JS-9, No. JS-12

D

BONNEVILLE, Luc — No. 171

CERVINO, Mariana Eva — No. 432

BOOKMAN, Sonia — No. 252

CHAMBERLAIN, John Martyn — No. 686

DA COSTA, Isabel — No. 119, No. 120

BOSTROM, Magnus — No. 295, No. 296

CORTEN, Rense — No. 517

D’AVILA NETO, Maria Inacia — No. 324 DAHER, Liana Maria — No. 554

CHAMPY, Florent — No. 595

BOWDEN, Gary — No. 285

DAHLVIK, Julia — No. 144, No. 151

CHANG, Hsin-Chieh — No. 356

BRADLEY, William — No. 685

CHANG, Jason Chien-chen — No. 42

DALOZ, Jean Pascal — No. 251, No. 255

BRATCHFORD, Gary — No. JS-45

DAPHI, Priska — No. 540, No. 542

BRECKNER, Roswitha — No. JS-4

CHANTRAINE, Olivier — No. 175, No. 176

BRENES TORRES, Alonso — No. 462

CHARI WAGH, Anurekha — No. JS-41

DASH, Anita — No. 369, No. 666

BRESKAYA, Olga — No. 260, No. 262

CHASE-DUNN, Christopher — No. 33

BRICOCOLI, Massimo — No. 239

CHEN, Guangjin — No. 207

DAVIDSON, Debra — No. 295, No. 298

BRINGEL, Breno — No. 551, No. JS-6

CHENPITAYATON, Keerati — No. 641

DAVIES, Sharyn — No. 704, No. 705

BROADBENT, Jeffrey — No. 292

CHEREDNICHENKO, Galina — No. 44

DAVIS, Kathy — No. 447, No. 448

BROWN, Patrick — No. 683

CHESTERS, Jennifer — No. 629

DAWSON, Marcelle — No. 547

BROWNE, Craig — No. 415

CHIESI, Antonio M. — No. 521

DE LA FUENTE, Eduardo — No. 428

BUCHINGER, Eva — No. 588

CHIFFOLEAU, Yuna — No. 467, No. 468

DE LUIGI, Nicola — No. 399

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DAS, Emmanuel — No. 473, No. 474

DE MARINIS, Pablo — No. 405

E

G

Session Organizers

F

G

FABIEN, Jean — No. 22

GALE, Nicola — No. 196

FACHELLI, Sandra — No. 630

GALINDO, Jorge — No. 383

FACUSE, Marisol — No. 430

GALLAS, Alexander — No. 508

FADAEE, Simin — No. 551

GALLON, Luciano — No. 578

DELLO BUONO, Ricardo — No. 36

FAIST, Thomas — No. JS-48

DELMOTTE, Florence — No. 642

FARIDA, Anis — No. JS-51

GAMBA, Fiorenza — No. 180, No. JS-47

DEMIR, Ipek — No. 64

FARINI, Federico — No. 315, No. JS-27

DEACON, Bob — No. 236 DEBNAR, Milos — No. JS-43 DECATALDO, Alessandra — No. 377 DEITCH, Cynthia — No. JS-17 DEL RE, Emanuela C. — No. 652 DELGADO PUGLEY, Deborah — No. JS-20

DENIS, Ann — No. JS-17 DENNEY, Justin — No. 195 DEPOY, Liz — No. 614, No. 619 DESAI, Manisha — No. 371, No. 373 DEVLIN, Maurice — No. 401 DI BONAVENTURA, Florence — No. 642 DI NUNZIO, Daniele — No. JS-72 DILL, Brian — No. 104 DIXON, Jeremy — No. 573 DOBUSCH, Laura — No. 201, No. 337 DOMARADZKA, Anna — No. JS-14, No. JS-53 DOMINGUES, Jose Mauricio — No. 646 DONG, Weizhen — No. 527 DREHER, Jochen — No. 405

FABIANSSON, Charlotte — No. 681

FARQUHARSON, Karen — No. 70 FASSIO, Adriana — No. 137

GAL-EZER, Miri — No. 563

GANTZIAS, George — No. 327 GENOV, Nikolai — No. 103 GEORGIEVA-STANKOVA, Nadezhda — No. 308

FAYOMI, Oluyemi — No. 671

GERBAUDO, Paolo — No. 541, No. 545

FEIXA, Carles — No. 394

GERING, Zsuzsanna — No. 97

FERNANDEZ ESQUINAS, Manuel — No. JS-10

GIARELLI, Guido — No. JS-12

FERREÑO, Laura — No. 689 FERRER, Marion — No. 394 FIALA, Valentin — No. 476 FIEDLSCHUSTER, Micha — No. 565

GIBAS, Petr — No. 702 GIGLIETTO, Fabio — No. 582 GIORDAN, Giuseppe — No. 264 GLASER, Karen — No. 129

FIGOLS, Florence — No. 703

GLAUSER, Andrea — No. 427, No. 706

FIGUEROA-DREHER, Silvana — No. 385

GOLDRING, Luin — No. 361

FILGUEIRA DE ALMEIDA, Dulce — No. 613 FISHMAN, Robert M. — No. 220

GOLE, Nilufer — No. JS-44 GOMES, Christianne — No. 162 GOMEZ QUINTERO, Juan David — No. 581

DUBROW, Joshua — No. 221

FITTIPALDI, Edoardo — No. 145, No. 149

DUMITRESCU, Lucian — No. 638

FLAM, Helena — No. 552

GONZALEZ, María — No. 315

DUNLAP, Riley — No. 297

FLECKER, Joerg — No. 4

DURR, Marlese — No. 373 DURUZ, Jean — No. 698, No. 699

FLORES CAMACHO, Orion Arturo — No. 240

GONZALEZ HERNANDO, Marcos — No. JS-47

DWORKIN, Anthony Gary — No. 56

FOLAMI, Olkunle Michael — No. 370

GORNIAK, Jaroslaw — No. JS-63

DWYER, Tom — No. 99, No. 207

FONG, Eric — No. 366

E

FOSSATI, Flavia — No. 245

GOTTFRIED, Heidi — No. 28, No. JS46, No. JS-49 GOUVIAS, Dionysios — No. 47 GOVENDER, Jayanathan — No. 99

FREYER, Bernhard — No. 476

GRAEFF, Peter — No. JS-63

FREZZO, Mark — No. 670

GRAUGAARD, Jeppe Dyrendom — No. 305

EMBRICK, David — No. 421

FRIED, Gabriela — No. 407

EREL, Umut — No. 59, No. 66

FRIEDMAN, Eli — No. 510

ESCRICHE, Pedro — No. 583

GRAZIOSI, Mariolina — No. 94, No. 205

FRISINA, Annalisa — No. JS-70

ESSACK, Shaheeda — No. 54

GRIERA, Mar — No. 268, No. 272

FRITZ, Jan Marie — No. 529

EUN, Ki-Soo — No. 76

GRIFFITH, Alison — No. 692

FUENTES, Sebastian — No. 51

EVANS, Bryan — No. 506

GROSS, Matthias — No. 280

FUJIYOSHI, Keiji — No. 314, No. JS-33

EVANS, Peter — No. JS-72

FUNKE, Peter — No. 545

GROSSI PORTO, Maria Stela — No. 328

EVERHARDT, Sharon — No. 533

FUSULIER, Bernard — No. 345, No. 346

EVETTS, Julia — No. 599 EYDAL, Gudny — No. 454

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GUENTHER, Julia — No. 228 GUILLEN RODRIGUEZ, Ana Marta — No. 238 345

ORGANIZERS

EIFLER, Stefanie — No. 386, No. JS-63

GOODWIN, Jeffrey — No. JS-35

List of Session Organizers

EGUAVOEN, Agatha — No. 376

FREGIDOU-MALAMA, Maria — No. JS-25, No. JS-29

GONZALEZ, Jorge — No. 440

H GUIMARAES, Nadya — No. 96

HUBERT, Bernard — No. JS-62

KAZEPOV, Yuri — No. 239

GUIMARAES, Sonia — No. 279

HUDSON, Chris — No. 382

KAZIBONI, Anthony — No. 526

GUTIERREZ, Filomin — No. 714

HUGHEY, Matthew — No. 424

KEARNS BLAIN, Angeline — No. 230

GUTIERREZ CHONG, Natividad — No. 63

HUNDAL, Manmohanjit S. — No. 668

KELLER, Reiner — No. JS-15, No. JS-65

GUTIERREZ RODRIGUEZ, Encarnacion — No. 372 GUYARD-NEDELEC, Alexandrine — No. 148

HUTTER, Mark — No. 83 HYMAN, Richard — No. 505

KENNY, Bridget — No. 509 KERN, Thomas — No. 254

I

IBANEZ-ANGULO, Monica — No. 352

KHOR, Diana — No. JS-7

HAGEN, Malfrid Irene — No. 431

IGNAZI, Piero — No. 223

KILIAN, Reinhold — No. 570

HALAFOFF, Anna — No. 275

ILERI, Esin — No. 538

HALLER, Max — No. 4

IMBRASAITE, Jurate — No. 219

KILKEY, Majella — No. 75, No. JS-23, No. JS-54

HALLEY, Jeffrey — No. 430

INOUE, Hiroko — No. 32, No. 640

HALVORSEN, Rune — No. 231

INOWLOCKI, Lena — No. 444

HAMMERSHOJ, Lars Geer — No. 93

ITZIGSOHN, Jose — No. 643

HAMMERSLEV, Ole — No. 143

IWAI, Hachiro — No. 76

HAN, Ziqiang — No. 465

IYER, Krishna Gopal — No. 668

HANAFI, Sari — No. 709

J

HASEGAWA, Koichi — No. 294, No. 302

KHONDKER, Habibul — No. 106

HASSARD, John — No. 211, No. 217

JAIME-CASTILLO, Antonio M. — No. 516

HATANAKA, Maki — No. 470

JAIN, Rashmi — No. 142

HATHAZY, Paul Carlos — No. 330

JANSEN, Giedo — No. 224

HAZAMA, Itsuhiro — No. 612

JASSO, Guillermina — No. 494

HEATH, Melanie — No. 369

JEVTIC, Miroljub — No. 262, No. 631

HELMAN, Sara — No. 558

JIMENEZ GUZMAN, Jaime — No. JS-13

HERAN CUBILLOS, Tamara — No. 107, No. 114, No. 115

JODHKA, Surinder — No. 662

HERBRIK, Regine — No. 385 List of Session Organizers

HURD CLARKE, Laura — No. 132

KEUSCHNIGG, Marc — No. 386

H

HERMO, Javier — No. 343, No. JS-68 HERNANDEZ-LEON, Ruben — No. 355 HERRERO, Marta — No. 439 HILLER, Petra — No. 212 HIPP, Lena — No. 79, No. JS-1 HIRANO, Yuko — No. 187

ORGANIZERS

K

Session Organizers

JOHNSTON, Hank — No. 553 JOLY, Pierre-Benoit — No. 467, No. 469 JONAS, Michael — No. 301, No. 706 JOSEPH, Cynthia — No. 378 JUKKALA, Tanya — No. 420 JUNGMANN, Robert — No. 213

K

KIRALY, Gabor — No. 97 KJELLMAN, Arne — No. 585 KLIMEK, Milena — No. 476 KOBAYASHI, Jun — No. 523 KOCH, Max — No. 241 KOENIG, Alexandra — No. 384 KOETTIG, Michaela — No. 449, No. 453 KÖHLER, Sina-Mareen — No. 384 KOHN, Ayelet — No. JS-4 KOMP, Kathrin — No. 130 KONEFAL, Jason — No. 470, No. 471 KONO, Shintaro — No. 165 KONSTANTINOVSKIY, David — No. 52 KOROTAYEV, Andrey — No. 640 KORZENIEWICZ, Roberto P — No. 644 KOSMINSKY, Ethel — No. 607, No. 608 KOZLAREK, Oliver — No. 408, No. 411 KRASE, Jerome — No. JS-70 KRINSKY, John — No. 537 KRISHNAN, Preethi — No. 376

KAASCH, Alexandra — No. 236, No. 244

KRIWY, Peter — No. 193, No. JS-57

HOCHGERNER, Josef — No. 5

KALBERG, Stephen — No. 266

HOELSCHER, Michael — No. 254

KRUMM, Silvia — No. JS-28

KAMANO, Saori — No. JS-7

HOFSTAETTER, Lukas — No. 214

KRZYZOWSKI, Lukasz — No. 360

KANAI, Masayuki — No. 518

HOGSBRO, Kjeld — No. 566

KU, Dowan — No. 300

KANTASALMI, Kari — No. 45

HOLMWOOD, John — No. 711

KAROLAK, Mateusz — No. 512

KUHLMANN, Ellen — No. JS-26, No. JS-31

HONKANEN, Antti — No. 166

KARPINSKI, Zbigniew — No. 502

KULCZYCKI, Andrzej — No. 483

HORII, Mitsutoshi — No. 267

KARSTEN, Andreas — No. 401

HOSODA, Miwako — No. JS-33

KASI, Eswarappa — No. 228

KUMAR SLARIYA, Mohinder — No. 665

HIRSCH ADLER, Anita Cecilia — No. 57

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KRIZSÁN, Attila — No. 312

KUMKAR, Nils C. — No. 565

L

N

Session Organizers

L

M

LAMPIS, Andrea — No. 458, No. 466

MACAMO, Elisio — No. 416

LANGMAN, Lauren — No. 417, No. JS-53

MAESTRIPIERI, Lara — No. JS-21, No. JS-34

LAPEGNA, Pablo — No. 539

MAGGINO, Filomena — No. 624, No. 625

MISKOLCI, Richard — No. 423

MAIER, Tobias — No. 58

MODI, Ishwar — No. 167

MAJASTRE, Christophe — No. 642

MONIZ, Antonio — No. 288

MAJUMDAR ADUR, Shweta — No. JS-41

MONTANARI, Arianna — No. 319

LAI, Chia-ling — No. 90, No. 92

LAPPI, Tiina-Riitta — No. 664 LAPRESTA-REY, Cecilio — No. 309, No. 310 LASKA, Shirley — No. 461 LAUX, Thomas — No. 254 LECCARDI, Carmen — No. JS-56 LEE, Byoung-Hoon — No. 347, No. 348 LEE, Feng-Jihu — No. 42 LEHNERER, Melodye — No. 534 LEHTI, Lotta — No. 312

MILLER, DeMond — No. 459

MAASS, Elisa Margarita — No. 584

MANZO, Gianluca — No. 520 MAPADIMENG, Mokong Simon — No. 99 MARCHANT, Alexandre — No. 701 MARENT, Benjamin — No. 185 MARONTATE, Jan — No. 437

LEITGÖB, Heinz — No. JS-63

MARQUART-PYATT, Sandra — No. 297

LENZER, Gertrud — No. 320

MARQUES DA SILVA, Sofia — No. 50

LEW, Ilan — No. 564

MARSHALL, Barbara — No. 133

LI, Chunling — No. 89

MARTELLI, Alessandro — No. 399

LIDSKOG, Rolf — No. 304

MARTIN, Eloisa — No. 712

LIDZ, Victor — No. 197

MARTIN, Wendy — No. 128, No. 133

LIEBIG, Brigitte — No. 372

MARTINEZ FRANZONI, Juliana — No. 237

LINDBERG, Staffan — No. 662 LINN, James — No. 574 LITTIG, Beate — No. 301 LO VERDE, Fabio Massimo — No. 164 LOBO, Francis — No. 161 LOMBARDI, Lia — No. 191 LONGEN, Jessica — No. 342 LONGO, Maria Eugenia — No. 338 LOPES JR, Orivaldo — No. 269 LOPEZ, Felix — No. JS-2

MASLOWSKI, Nicolas — No. 639 MATOS ALMEIDA, Marlise — No. 371

MCCOY, Liza — No. 693 MCDANIEL, Susan — No. 138 MCDONALD, Kevin — No. JS-39

MENSE-PETERMANN, Ursula — No. 38, No. 39

LYTKINA, Ekaterina — No. 419

MORAWSKA, Ewa — No. 364 MORENO MINGUEZ, Almudena — No. 80 MORI, Chikako — No. 546 MORTIMER, Jeylan — No. 403 MOTTA, Renata — No. 539 MROZOWICKI, Adam — No. 512 MULLER, Fernanda — No. 607, No. 608 MURJI, Karim — No. 61 MURRAY, Georgina — No. 31 MUZIO, Daniel — No. JS-21, No. JS-34 MUZZIN, Linda — No. 378 MYKHALOVSKIY, Eric — No. 693 MYTHEN, Gabe — No. 678, No. 680

N

NAGLA, Madhu — No. 170

MEO, Analia — No. 50 MERCIER, Delphine — No. 340 MERINO MALILLOS, Lucia — No. 397

NARE, Lena — No. 390, No. JS-38 NASCIMENTO, Maria Leticia — No. 602, No. 610 NASU, Hisashi — No. 405 NATHANSOHN, Regev — No. 653, No. 654 NAUCK, Bernhard — No. 81 NEDERVEEN PIETERSE, Jan P. — No. 100 NELSON, Gloria Luz — No. 481 NEMOZ, Sophie — No. JS-71

MERLA, Laura — No. JS-23, No. JS-54

NEUBERT, Dieter — No. 416, No. JS-24

MEYER, Uli — No. 213, No. 218

NEVES, Fabricio — No. 281

MICHAEL, Maureen — No. 650

NINA-PAZARZI, Eleni — No. 118

MILKMAN, Ruth — No. 513

NOBILE, Mariana — No. 51

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347

ORGANIZERS

LORINI, Giuseppe — No. 145

LUY, Marc — No. 491

MOORE, Sarah — No. 674

NAKAZATO, Hideki — No. 345, No. 346

MCCARTHY, Jane — No. 86

MENNELL, Stephen — No. 645

LUTZ, Helma — No. 62, No. JS-67

MISUMI, Kazuto — No. 515

NAIDOO, Maliga — No. 160

LORENTZ, Pascaline — No. 159

LUKEN, Paul — No. 690, No. 695

MISHEVA, Vessela — No. 422

MATTHEWS, Julie — No. 48

LOPEZ-ROLDAN, Pedro — No. 630

LOW, Kelvin — No. 710

MILSTEIN, Diana — No. 50

MATSUTANI, Minori — No. JS-43

MENEZES, Paulo — No. 429, No. JS-22

LOW, Jacqueline — No. 615

MILNE, Elisabeth-Jane — No. 655

List of Session Organizers

LOCONTO, Allison — No. 467

MARTINEZ-IGLESIAS, Maria — No. 308

MILLER, Lee — No. 463

O NOHL, Arnd-Michael — No. JS-3

PILKINGTON, Hilary — No. 394

RESENDE, Viviane — No. 318

NOLL, Heinz-Herbert — No. 620

PILON, Andre — No. 670

RESH, Nura — No. JS-61

NOMIYA, Daishiro — No. 549

PIRANI, Bianca Maria — No. 611, No. JS-73

RESTREPO-AMARILES, David — No. 147

PIRZIO, Gloria — No. 319

REZAEV, Andrey — No. 249

PITASI, Andrea — No. 589

RHOMBERG, Chris — No. 507

PITLUCK, Aaron — No. 29, No. 30

RICCIONI, Ilaria — No. 436

PITTI, Ilaria — No. 399

RICUCCI, Roberta — No. 263

PIZZIMENTI, Eugenio — No. 223

RIEKER, Patricia — No. 188

O

PLEYERS, Geoffrey — No. 91

RIEMANN, Gerhard — No. 444

PLUSS, Caroline — No. 351

RINGEL, Leopold — No. 212

O’BRIEN, Margaret — No. 73

POCHET, Philippe — No. 505

RINGOE, Pia — No. 568

O’DOHERTY, Damian — No. 217

POHN-LAUGGAS, Maria — No. 443

ODHAV, Kiran — No. 99

POKROVSKY, Nikita — No. 326

RODRIGUES, Emmanuel H. — No. 318

OEIJ, Peter — No. JS-55

PORIO, Emma — No. 105

OISHI, Nana — No. 70

POSSAMAI, Adam — No. 264

ROMERO, Mary — No. JS-46, No. JS-49

OLAFSDOTTIR, Sigrun — No. JS-57

POSSAMAI-INESEDY, Alphia — No. 684

ROOKS, Ronica — No. 136

NOORDEGRAAF, Mirko — No. JS-21 NOWICKA, Magdalena — No. 360 NTOIMO, Favour — No. 487 NUSS, Shirley — No. 134 NWAOZUZU, Daisy — No. 671 NYKLOVA, Blanka — No. 702

OLIVEIRA, Elsa — No. 651 ONDA, Morio — No. 464 ONYIGE, Chioma Daisy — No. 370 OVERLAND, Gwynyth — No. 531 OZAKI, Ritsuko — No. 303

P

PACE, Vincenzo — No. 273 PAETAU, Michael — No. 583 PALACIOS BUSTAMANTE, Rafael Antonio — No. 287 PALERMO, Alicia Itati — No. 380 List of Session Organizers

PALME, Joakim — No. 243

ORGANIZERS

S

Session Organizers

PASCALE, Celine-Marie — No. 313 PATIL, Rajendra — No. 290, No. 490 PAUKNEROVA, Karolina — No. 702 PAVOLINI, Emmanuele — No. 238 PEACOCK, David — No. 688 PEETZ, David — No. 504 PELLIZZONI, Luigi — No. 198, No. 208

POSTON, Dudley — No. 489 POYNTING, Scott — No. 69 PRANDNER, Dimitri — No. JS-63 PRECUPETU, Iuliana — No. 622, No. 623

ROZANOVA, Julia — No. 118 RUIZ SAN ROMAN, Jose A. — No. 182, No. 183

PUTTERGILL, Charles — No. 493

RUOKONEN-ENGLER, MinnaKristiina — No. 441, No. 442

Q

RUSH, Michael — No. 87

QUESNEL-VALLEE, Amelie — No. JS-57

R

RABE, Marlize — No. 72 RAIZER, Leandro — No. 281 RAJAGOPALAN, Prema — No. 340 RAMALHO, Jose Ricardo — No. 339 RAPAPORT, Lynn — No. 95

PETERSSON, Frida — No. 317

RAVEN, John — No. 586

PETROVA KAFKOVA, Marcela — No. 139, No. 140

REICHER, Dieter — No. 564

348

ROSENTHAL, Gabriele — No. 445, No. 446, No. JS-28

PURKAYASTHA, Bandana — No. JS-41

RATTON, Jose Luiz — No. 330

PIERIDES, Dean — No. 211

ROSENBERGER, Sieglinde — No. 543

PRZEPIORKA, Wojtek — No. 517

PEREZ-AGOTE, Jose Maria — No. 413, No. 414

PICKER, Giovanni — No. 61

ROSA, Hartmut — No. 406

ROVENTA-FRUMUSANI, Daniela — No. 177

RATHZEL, Nora — No. 504

PIANA, Daniela — No. 152

ROOTES, Christopher — No. 544

PRIES, Ludger — No. 362

PENG, Ito — No. 235

PETTERSSON, Per — No. 259

ROJAS, Mariano — No. 621

RAU, Henrike — No. 305

RUZZEDDU, Massimiliano — No. 102

S

SABATINELLI, Stefania — No. 239 SABBAGH, Clara — No. 497, No. 499 SACCA, Flaminia — No. 322 SAHA, Lawrence — No. JS-5 SAKAI, Chie — No. 353 SAKS, Michael — No. 196, No. 600 SAKTANBER, Ayse — No. 714 SAKURAI, Yoshihide — No. 276 SALA, Emanuela — No. 388 SALAS-PORRAS, Alejandra — No. 31

REID, Carol — No. 53

SALOMA-AKPEDONU, Czarina — No. 281

REIS, Elisa — No. JS-8, No. JS-13

SAMPSON, Helen — No. 339

REISCHAUER, Georg — No. 212

SANCHEZ ANTELO, Victoria — No. JS-19

RENARD, Marie-Christine — No. 475

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SANCHEZ-ANCOCHEA, Diego — No. 237

T SANDHU, Ranvinder Singh — No. 668 SANDRI, Giulia — No. 222 SANTOS, Hermilio — No. 449 SAPINSKI, Jean Philippe — No. 26 SATGAR, Vishwas — No. 24 SATO, Yoshimichi — No. 32, No. 33, No. 522 SCALON, Celi — No. 89

T

Session Organizers SIKORA, Joanna — No. JS-5 SILVA, Tania — No. 284 SIMOES, Solange — No. 371 SIMON, Karl-Heinz — No. 576 SINGH, Virendra Pal — No. 174, No. 594 SINGH, Yash Pal — No. 665 SINHA, Vineeta — No. 708, No. 714

T

TAJMAZINANI, Ali Akbar — No. 392 TAKITA-ISHII, Sachiko — No. 407 TALBOT, Debra — No. 688 TAMAYO GOMEZ, Camilo — No. 555, No. JS-53 TAN, JooEan — No. 74 TARKO, Klara — No. 158

SCHAPER-RINKEL, Petra — No. 289

SIOUTI, Irini — No. 441, No. 442, No. 453

SCHILLING, Elisabeth — No. 384

SMEBY, Jens-Christian — No. 597

TASTSOGLOU, Evangelia — No. 368

SCHINKEL, Sebastian — No. 384

SMITH, Jackie — No. 538

SCHLEMBACH, Christopher — No. 204, No. 336

SON, Joonmo — No. 628

TAVARES-DOS-SANTOS, Jose Vicente — No. 332

SCHMIDT, Luisa — No. 303 SCHMIERL, Klaus — No. 344 SCHNELL, Christiane — No. 596 SCHOBER, Anna — No. 653, No. 654 SCHOBER, Pia — No. 79, No. JS-1 SCHOLTZ, Hanno — No. 247, No. 519 SCHOYEN, Mi Ah — No. 234, No. 241 SCHUBERT, Cornelius — No. 213

SOREMSKI, Regina — No. 384 SORJ, Bila — No. 96 SOUSA RIBEIRO, Joana — No. 187 SOUZA, Luciana — No. 117, No. 124 SOWA, Frank — No. 341 SPICKARD, James — No. 261, No. 265 SPRACKLEN, Karl — No. 157 SRINIVASAN, Amrit — No. 661 STAPLES, Ronald — No. 341

TARUMOTO, Hideki — No. 359

TAVERA FENOLLOSA, Ligia — No. 562 TAZREITER, Claudia — No. 67 TEIXEIRA, Ana Lucia — No. 433 TEJERINA, Benjamin — No. JS-6 TELESIENE, Audrone — No. 303 TELLJOHANN, Volker — No. 122 TEOTIA, Manoj — No. 663 TERACHI, Mikito — No. 391 THEOBALD, Hildegard — No. 232

SCHULZ, Markus S. — No. 2

STARKEY, Caroline — No. 275

TILLY, Chris — No. 503

SCHWARTZ, Germano — No. 150, No. 154

STAROSTA, Pawel — No. 117, No. 125

TINDALL, David — No. 293

STAUBMANN, Helmut — No. 197

SCOTT, Bernard — No. 579

TING, Tin-Yuet — No. 556

STEBBINS, Robert — No. 169

SCOTT, John — No. 331

TOGNATO, Carlo — No. 206

STEFAN, Barbara — No. JS-11

SECKIN, Gul — No. 186

TOGNETTI, Mara — No. 191

STEFANEL, Adriana — No. 177

SEEBACHER, Deniz — No. JS-11

TOMALIN, Emma — No. 275

STERETT, Susan Marie — No. 457

SEEDAT KHAN, Mariam — No. 528

TOSCANO, Emanuele — No. 546

STIAWA, Maja — No. 569

SEGAL, Marcia — No. 367

TRABUT, Loic — No. 485

SEILHAMER, Mark — No. 306

STODDART, Mark — No. 293, No. JS-16

TRASK, Bahira — No. 77, No. 78

SELLAMUTHU, Gurusamy — No. 479

STOLL, Florian — No. JS-18

SERRA, Helena — No. 590, No. 592

STRECKER, David — No. 410

TREMBLAY, Diane-Gabrielle — No. 345, No. 346, No. JS-58

SERRANO-VELARDE, Kathia — No. 218

STREINZER, Andreas — No. JS-11

TRERE, Emiliano — No. 545

STUBBS, Paul — No. 236

SETTLES, Barbara — No. 77, No. 78

TRNKA, Susanna — No. 704, No. 705

STUMMVOLL, Günter — No. 333

SHARMA, Rajiv — No. 663

TSAI, Ming-Chang — No. 626

SHARONOVA, Svetlana — No. 44

SUBRAMANANIAN, Mangala — No. 376

TSOBANOGLOU, Georgios — No. 321, No. 632

SHIH, Elena — No. JS-52

SUBRT, Jiri — No. 639

TSOLIDIS, Georgina — No. 68

SHIRE, Karen — No. 37

SUNDARAM, Devanayak — No. 142

TURKMEN, Buket — No. JS-44

SHKOLNIKOV, Vladimir — No. 486

SVENSTRUP, Morten — No. 305

TURNER, Frederick — No. 257

SHUAYB, Maha — No. 49

SWARTZ, Sharlene — No. 403

TWIGG, Julia — No. 128

SIBIREVA, Maria — No. 604

SWIDER, Sarah — No. JS-52

SIEGERS, Pascal — No. 274

SZEKELY, Julia — No. 451

TRAUE, Boris — No. 178

SZTOMPKA, Piotr — No. 660

www.isa-sociology.org

349

ORGANIZERS

TILLECZEK, Kate — No. 395, No. JS-66

List of Session Organizers

STARK, Laura — No. 664

SCHUERKENS, Ulrike M.M. — No. 112, No. 116

U

U

ULVER, Sofia — No. 248 URBINA-FERRETJANS, Marian — No. 244 URZE, Paula — No. 283 UZZELL, David — No. 504

V

VAJDA, Julia — No. 451 VALLE, Trinidad — No. 307, No. 311 VAN DER MERWE, Sinteche — No. 530 VAN KRIEKEN, Robert — No. 215, No. 246, No. 647

Z

Session Organizers VERZELLONI, Luca — No. 152

WINDELER, Arnold — No. 213

VIANELLO, Francesca Alice — No. JS-59

WOLBRING, Tobias — No. 386

VIDOVICOVA, Lucie — No. 135 VIETEN, Ulrike — No. 60 VILLALON, Roberta — No. 377, No. JS-50

WOLFSON, Tod — No. 545 WOODMAN, Dan — No. 391 WORM, Arne — No. 445, No. 446 WOYDACK, Johanna — No. 314

VILLARESPE, Veronica — No. 667

WUNDRAK, Rixta — No. 443

VOGL, Susanne — No. 386

WYSIENSKA-DI CARLO, Kinga — No. 502

VOSS, Kim — No. 506, No. JS-46 VRATUSA, Vera — No. 126 VRYONIDES, Marios — No. 43

W

Y

YAGOUBI, Amina — No. JS-58 YAMAMOTO, Beverley — No. 535 YAMAMOTO, Tatsuya — No. 561

VAN OOSTROM, Madelon — No. JS-10

WAECHTER, Natalia — No. 402

VANDEGRIFT, Darcie — No. JS-36 VANDERSTRAETEN, Raf — No. 45

WEAKLIEM, David L. — No. 249, No. 256

VANDERVEEN, Gabry — No. 657

WEISS, Anja — No. JS-3

VASQUEZ LUQUE, Tania — No. 358

WELZ, Frank — No. 5, No. 409

VAUGHAN, Suzanne — No. 696, No. 697

WENDT, Claus — No. 192, No. JS-64

Z

VDOVICHENKO, Larissa — No. 635

WETZELHUTTER, Daniela — No. JS-63

ZAMPONI, Lorenzo — No. 542

VEENHOVEN, Ruut — No. 620

WIERENGA, Ani — No. 398

ZEMNUKHOVA, Liliia — No. 277

VELAYATI, Masoumeh — No. 379

WIHTOL DE WENDEN, Catherine — No. 363

ZHANG, Lu — No. JS-52

VELIKAYA, Nataliya — No. 325, No. 636

WALBY, Sylvia — No. 34

WILDING, Raelene — No. JS-54

VERLOO, Mieke — No. 35

WILLIAMSON, Howard — No. 401

VERTIGANS, Stephen — No. 258

WILLIS, Karen — No. 194

ORGANIZERS

List of Session Organizers

VELOSO, Luisa — No. 283

WILL-ZOCHOLL, Mascha — No. 342

350

www.isa-sociology.org

YI, Chin-Chun — No. 82 YOUNG, Gay — No. 380 YUSUF, Farhat — No. 484 YUVAL-DAVIS, Nira — No. 60, No. 65

ZAKHAROV, Nikolay — No. 421

ZINN, Jens — No. 676, No. 679 ZOKAEI, Mohammad — No. 392 ZUBIETA GARCIA, Judith — No. 282 ZUEV, Dennis — No. 659

Person Index List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

A AALTONEN, Heli – No(s). 367.2 AARONS, Haydn – No(s). 271.2 AARTSEN, Marja – No(s). 136.1, 136.4 ABARCA, Bruno – No(s). 535.2 ABAZIE-HUMPHREY, Margaret – No(s). 23.3 ABBASZADEH MARZBALI, Mohsen – No(s). 120.5 ABBOTT, Pamela – No(s). 626.2, JS-24.2 ABDELRAHMAN, Maha – Session No(s). 550 ABDULLAH, Noorman – No(s). 700.2 Session No(s). 702 ABE, Koji – No(s). 300.5 ABEJON MENDOZA, Paloma – No(s). 183.1 ABLAZHEY, Anatoly – No(s). 279.4 ABOIM, Sofia – No(s). 203.1, 566.2 ABOOFAZELI, Tahereh – No(s). 49.12, 659.5 ABRAHAM, Margaret – No(s). 1.2, 374.1 Session No(s). 709

ABREU, Alice – No(s). 282.1 ACHARYA, Arun Kumar – No(s). JS-36.6 ACHATZ, Juliane – No(s). 231.3 ACHILIKE, Adaku – No(s). 671.2

ACOCELLA, Ivana – No(s). 384.8 ADACHI, Satoshi – No(s). 275.6 ADAM, Frane – No(s). JS-10.6 ADAMS, Suzi – No(s). 415.3 ADAMS, Tracey – No(s). 598.9 Session No(s). 591 ADEJUMO, Gbadebo – No(s). JS-66.6

AGARWAL, Ruchi – No(s). 675.1 AGARWAL, Siddharth – No(s). 396.3, 193.12 AGARWALA, Rina – No(s). 513.2 Session No(s). 503 AGBOOLA, Caroline – Session No(s). 535 AGIRREAZKUENAGA, Irati – No(s). 183.5

ADENIYI, Oladele Vincent – No(s). 192.5

AGODI, Maria Carmela – No(s). 374.4

ADENSAMER, Angelika – No(s). 376.3

AGUIAR, Sebastian – No(s). 551.5

ADEYANJU, Charles – No(s). JS-38.5 ADJEPONG, Anima – No(s). 260.5

AGRAWAL, Ayushi – No(s). JS-17.5 AGUILERA, Isabel – No(s). 63.4

ADKINS, Lisa – No(s). 198.1 Session No(s). 203

AGUILUZ-IBARGUEN, Maya – No(s). 413.2 Session No(s). 411

ADOGAME, Afe – No(s). 261.4 Session No(s). 259

AGUNBIADE, Ojo Melvin – No(s). 190.6

ADOMAKO AMPOFO, Akosua – No(s). 6.2 Session No(s). 374

AHLAWAT, Neerja – No(s). 381.7

ADORNO, Sergio – No(s). 331.5 Session No(s). 332 ADU-YEBOAH, Christine – No(s). 392.7

AHMAD, Javeed – No(s). 397.9 AHMED, Hilal E. – No(s). 107.2 AHN, Changhye – No(s). 68.2 AHULE, Benjamin – No(s). 371.4 AIDAR, Tirza – No(s). 83.3

ADUR, Shweta – No(s). 382.5, 369.17

AIELLO, Emilia – No(s). 285.5

ADZAHLIE-MENSAH, Vincent – No(s). 392.7

AIZAWA, Masao – No(s). 314.13

AFOLABI, Funmilayo – No(s). 190.6 AGARTAN, Tuba – No(s). 244.4, 598.3

AJAYI, Mofoluwake – No(s). JS-36.1, JS-66.6

AGARWAL, Kabir – No(s). 396.3, 559.5

AKAHORI, Saburo – No(s). 578.5 Session No(s). 588

www.isa-sociology.org

AJAYI, Anthony – No(s). 192.5

351

PERSON INDEX

ABRAMCZUK, Katarzyna – No(s). 186.3

ACIK, Necla – No(s). JS-14.1

AGARWAL, Kuntal – No(s). 396.3, 559.5

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

ABBASI, Parvez Ahmad – No(s). 174.1

ACHOUCH, Yuval – No(s). 126.3 ACHRAI, Orna – No(s). 331.1

Akaliyski – Arcuri AKALIYSKI, Plamen – No(s). 602.5, JS-1.3 AKBARPOURAN, Sepideh – No(s). 51.6 AKBAŞ, Melda – No(s). 608.3 AKGUL, Ali Erdem – No(s). 174.8 AKPAN, Wilson – No(s). 192.5, 287.4 Session No(s). 9 AKPINAR, Aylin – No(s). JS-7.6

AN, Sofiya – No(s). 236.1 ANAND, Harjit Singh – No(s). 664.1

ALMACK, Kathryn – No(s). 195.4

ANAND, Neha – No(s). 370.5

ALMAGUER-KALIXTO, Patricia – No(s). 580.4

ANANGA, Eric – No(s). 392.7

ALMEDA, Elisabet – No(s). 369.25

ANDERSEN, Bengt – No(s). 40.2

ALMEIDA, Joana – No(s). 196.3 ALMQVIST, Anna-Lena – No(s). 87.1

AKUTSU, Beatriz – No(s). 343.4 AL DAHDAH, Marine – No(s). 192.1

ALONSO, Angela – No(s). 554.2

AL-REBHOLZ, Anil – No(s). JS-59.4

ALPAGU, Faime – No(s). 452.2

ALAMINEISI, Masood – No(s). 247.3, JS-63.4

ALTINTAS, Ihsan – No(s). 263.17

ANAYA, Juan Jaime – No(s). 580.4 ANDERSON, Claire – No(s). 677.1 ANDERSSEN, Jorid – No(s). 681.5 ANDERSSON, Janicke – No(s). 132.5, JS-9.8 ANDERSSON, Reka – No(s). 591.5 ANDRADE, Elaine – No(s). 50.2 ANDRE-BECHELY, Lois – Session No(s). 688, 694

ALANG, Sirry – No(s). 566.3

ALTMANN, Philipp – No(s). 583.4, 559.11

ALARCON ALARCON, Amado – No(s). 317.4, 314.11

ALTREITER, Carina – No(s). 346.1, 402.1

ALBABA, Ahmed – No(s). 445.3

ALVARADO VIVAS, Sergio – No(s). 660.1

ANDREW, Simon – No(s). 456.4

ALVARADO, Arturo – No(s). 382.6 Session No(s). 332

ANGELUCCI, Alba – No(s). 353.1

ALBAGLI, Sarita – No(s). 277.3 ALBANESE, Patrizia – No(s). 1.3, 77.11 ALBER, Ina – No(s). 443.1, JS-59.3 ALBERT, Alan – No(s). 580.4 ALBERT, Gert – No(s). 383.1

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

ALLEX, Brigitte – No(s). 456.5 ALLO, Tolulope – No(s). JS-66.6

ALMUDARRA, Sumaiah – No(s). 315.12 Session No(s). 314

AKSNES, Siri – No(s). 696.3

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

ALVARES MUNIZ, Nildson – No(s). 198.5

ALBERT, Kyle – No(s). 596.4 Session No(s). 598

ALVAREZ-BENAVIDES, Antonio – No(s). 540.15 Session No(s). 100

ALBERT, Mathieu – No(s). 281.12

ALVARO, Daniel – No(s). 405.4

ALBERTH, Lars – No(s). 86.9, 595.5

ALVES, Adriana – No(s). 293.4

ALBORNOZ MORALES, Pablo – No(s). 430.2

ALVES, Alves – No(s). 160.3

ALBUQUERQUE, Cristina – No(s). 119.5

ALVES, Nuno – No(s). 390.8

ALCANTARA, Livia – No(s). 545.1 ALDAR, Dolgion – No(s). 623.4 ALDEGUER CERDA, Bernabe – No(s). 123.1, 183.3 ALEDO, Antonio – No(s). 294.3 ALENDA, Stephanie – No(s). 225.2 ALEXANDRE, Dilson – No(s). 540.1 ALEXIOU, Aristea – No(s). 322.3, JS-29.4 ALFINITO VIEIRA, Ana Carolina – No(s). JS-3.3 ALI, Harris – No(s). 302.5 ALIEVA, Dilbar – No(s). 197.3 ALIKHANI, Behrouz – No(s). 645.4 ALIPOUR, Mohammad Reza – No(s). 478.3 ALIZZI, Joe – No(s). 262.7, JS-37.1 ALKAN USTUN, Ceren – No(s). 433.4 ALLASTE, Airi-Alina – No(s). 91.7, 391.5 ALLEN, Henry – No(s). 334.3 ALLEN, Walter – No(s). 49.5, 298.7 352

ALVES, Benno – No(s). 63.6 ALVIAL PALAVICINO, Carla – No(s). 289.1 AMADASI, Sara – No(s). 307.1, JS-27.1 AMADOR BAUTISTA, Maria del Rocio – No(s). 57.2 AMARAL, Giverage – No(s). 298.11 AMASYALI, Emre – No(s). 23.2 AMATRUDO, Anthony – No(s). 333.4 AMBROSINI, Maurizio – No(s). 83.1, 340.1 AMELINA, Anna – No(s). JS-48.4 AMEMIYA-RAMIREZ, Michiko – No(s). 580.4

ANDREA, Breitenbach – No(s). 97.1 ANDREEV, Andrey – No(s). 640.7 ANDREEVA, Anna – No(s). 249.8 ANGEL, Stefan – No(s). 234.4, 388.3 ANIMENTO, Stefania – No(s). 384.4, 390.10 ANNANDALE, Ellen – No(s). 593.1 ANNER, Mark – No(s). 114.4, 507.3 ANSON, Jonathan – No(s). 15.2 Session No(s). 480 ANTENORE, Marzia – No(s). 581.4 ANTON, Mihail – No(s). 597.9 ANTONELLI, Francesco – No(s). 537.3 ANTONY, Alexander – No(s). 617.3 ANTUNES, Catia – No(s). 131.5 ANUKUL, Cholnapa – No(s). 287.3, 193.10 ANZOISE, Valentina – No(s). 296.22 Session No(s). JS-16 AOKI, Yoshiyuki – No(s). 554.1 AOYAGI, Midori – No(s). 293.2, 296.2 APABLAZA, Mauricio – No(s). 456.1 APELT, Maja – No(s). 212.1 APITZSCH, Birgit – No(s). 37.5 APITZSCH, Ursula – Session No(s). 452, JS-59 ARAI, Noriko – No(s). 345.3

AMIN, Nyna – No(s). 207.2

ARAN-RAMSPOTT, Sue – No(s). 182.3

AMIN, Pirzada – No(s). 163.2 Session No(s). 160

ARANGO, Catalina – No(s). 88.1

AMINI, Saeedeh – No(s). 103.8 AMLING, Steffen – No(s). JS-3.1

ARAUJO, Kathya – No(s). 646.1 Session No(s). 644

AMOO, Emmanuel – No(s). JS-36.1

ARBER, Sara – No(s). 131.1

AMOZURRUTIA, Jose Antonio – No(s). 584.1, 585.2

ARBOGAST, Mathieu – No(s). JS-50.2

AMPUDIA DE HARO, Fernando – No(s). 645.5 www.isa-sociology.org

ARAUJO, Ariella – No(s). 509.12

ARCIDIACONO, Davide – No(s). 219.10 ARCURI, Sabrina – No(s). 468.3

Person Index

Ardevol – Barbetta

ARDEVOL, Elisenda – No(s). 102.3, 284.4

ASTOR, Avi – No(s). 272.2

BAGIC, Dragan – No(s). 512.5

ARELLANO MORLAS, Fermin – No(s). 585.4

ASZALOS, Zoltan – No(s). JS-31.4

BAHL, Eva – No(s). 446.2, JS-11.5

ATANASOVSKI, Srdan – No(s). 706.1

BAHNA, Miloslav – No(s). JS-43.3, JS-63.2

AREVALO, Luis Miguel – No(s). 580.4 ARIZPE, Lourdes – Session No(s). JS-37 ARJOMAND, Said – No(s). 266.2 Session No(s). 270 ARLIKATTI, Sudha – No(s). 456.4 ARLINI, Silvia – No(s). JS-52.7 ARMBRUSTER, Andre – No(s). 212.6, 262.18 ARNAL, Maud – No(s). 184.6, 706.3 ARNBERGER, Arne – No(s). 157.8, 456.5 ARNHOLD, Valerie – No(s). 458.4, 683.2

ATEIA, Nora – No(s). 553.3 ATTIEH, Reem – No(s). 360.1

BÄHR, Holger – No(s). JS-47.5

ATTRACHE, Ghaleb – No(s). 230.2

BAILEY, Christine – No(s). 283.2

ATURINDE, Tumwerinde Emmanuel – No(s). 327.1

BAKARDJIEVA, Maria – No(s). 541.7 BAKER, Zoe – No(s). 399.7

ATZMUELLER, Roland – No(s). 402.2

BAKKER, Dieko – No(s). 517.4

AUER, Daniel – No(s). 245.5

BALABANIC, Ivan – No(s). 171.6

AULAKH, Sundeep – No(s). JS-34.1

BALAN, P.P. – Session No(s). 121

AULENBACHER, Brigitte – Session No(s). 3, 372 AULIA, Fisca – No(s). 667.2 AUSPURG, Katrin – No(s). 386.1, 494.5 AUTADE, Mansaram – No(s). 166.8

BALAZS, Balint – No(s). 468.4 BALDASSAR, Loretta – No(s). 134.6 Session No(s). 75 BALDI, Teresa – No(s). 390.11

ARNON, Sara – No(s). 54.8

AVACHAT, Vidya – No(s). 290.3

BALDIN, Dominik – Session No(s). 201, 337

AROCHA, Lorena – No(s). 636.2

AVILA, Lirous K’yo Fonseca – No(s). 659.6

BALDINO, José Maria – No(s). 43.5 BALL, Mary – No(s). 72.4

AWACHAR, Smita – Session No(s). 166

BALLANTYNE, Glenda – No(s). JS-54.1

AWADA, Hala – No(s). 52.1

BALLESTEROS LEINER, Arturo – No(s). JS-68.9

ARONSON, Pamela – No(s). 399.6 ARRIGONI, Alessandro – No(s). 32.1 ARRIGONI, Paola – No(s). JS-2.5 ARSENTYEVA, Nina – No(s). 44.1 ARTAMONOVA, Marina – No(s). 52.8 ARTEAGA, Nelson – No(s). 206.1 ARTEGUI ALCAIDE, Izaskun – Session No(s). 390 ARTUS, Ingrid – No(s). 506.2

ARUNOTAI, N. – No(s). 290.1 ARZUAGA MAGNONI, Javier – No(s). 206.1 ASAKITIKPI, Alex – No(s). 190.8 ASAKITIKPI, Aretha – No(s). 166.3, 190.5 ASAKURA, Takashi – Session No(s). 575 ASAMIZU, Munehiko – No(s). 163.1 ASANO, Tomohiko – No(s). 390.17 ASARA, Viviana – No(s). 540.11 ASCHAUER, Wolfgang – No(s). 623.1 ASHENDEN, Samantha – No(s). 144.5 ASHEULOVA, Nadia – No(s). JS-13.2 ASHRAF EMAMI, Hengameh – No(s). 68.7, 271.3

AYER, Nadina – No(s). 164.1 AYERS, Stephanie – No(s). JS-19.4, JS-69.1 AYKUT, Stefan – No(s). 284.5 AYUSO-SANCHEZ, Luis – No(s). 83.2, 624.4 AYVAZYAN, Nune – No(s). 314.18 AZAR, Riad – No(s). 417.5 AZERBAEVA, Natalia – No(s). 44.2 AZEVEDO, Elaine – No(s). 475.3, 658.4 AZURMENDI, Ana – No(s). 183.4

BALLESTEROS PENA, Ana – No(s). 191.5 BALOGH, Eszter – No(s). JS-69.6 BALOUM, Yasmin – No(s). 46.3 BALOURDOS, Dionyssis – No(s). 321.1, 400.11 BALTATESCU, Sergiu – No(s). 620.1 Session No(s). JS-60 BALTAZAR, Maria da Saudade – No(s). 123.4, 362.7 BALTIN, Arno – No(s). 604.3 BALZEKIENE, Aiste – No(s). 675.3 BAMBERG, Ingrid – No(s). 50.6 BAMYEH, Mohammed – Session No(s). 708, 711

B BABYESIZA, Akiiki – No(s). JS-13.1 BACAL ROIJ, Azril – Session No(s). 126 BACALSO, Cristina – No(s). 399.2, 400.1 BACHNER, Yaacov – No(s). 133.2, 676.1

BANDELE, Oluwafemi – No(s). 262.8 BANDELJ, Nina – No(s). 109.3 Session No(s). 108 BANEGAS, Israel – No(s). 621.4 BANKOVSKAYA, Svetlana – No(s). 208.5, 656.1 BAR-HAIM, Eyal – No(s). 256.3 BARALDI, Claudio – No(s). 603.4, JS-27.2

BADER, Dina – No(s). 543.4

BARAT, Erzsebet – No(s). 312.1

ASOCHAKOV, Yury – No(s). 180.2

BAECKER, Ron – No(s). 133.3

BARBALET, Jack – No(s). 355.8

ASSUNCAO, Fatima – No(s). 12.2, 118.3

BAERT, Patrick – No(s). 9.4

BARBERET, Rosemary – Session No(s). 532, 712

ASTINFESHAN, Parvaneh – No(s). 350.4 ASTLEITHNER, Franz – No(s). 698.1

BAEZ URBINA, Francisco – No(s). 150.3 BAGDADIOGLU, Ezgi – No(s). 197.2 www.isa-sociology.org

BARBERIS, Eduardo – No(s). 353.1 BARBETTA, Tommaso – No(s). 164.7, 198.2 353

PERSON INDEX

BACZKO DOMBI, Anna – No(s). 50.5, 521.1

ASIS, Jonnabelle – No(s). 232.3, JS-74.4

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

ARUN KUMAR, Duru – No(s). 158.6, 287.5

AYASS, Ruth – No(s). 313.2, 656.2

BarbosadosSantosRaxlen–Beyer BARBOSA DOS SANTOS RAXLEN, Jussara – No(s). 367.13, JS-46.1

BASQUES, Maria de Lourdes – No(s). 296.5

BEMBIC, Branko – No(s). 509.5

BARBOSA NEVES, Barbara – No(s). 82.4, 133.3

BASSI, Marina – No(s). 115.1

BEN ZEEV, Efrat – No(s). 447.4

BARBOSA, Maria Ligia – No(s). 54.3

BASTARD, Benoit – No(s). 152.2

BARCA, Stefania – No(s). 504.3

BENAVIDES MARTÍNEZ, Benigno – No(s). 47.28 BENDIT, Rene – No(s). 397.5

BARDHAN ROY, Maitreyee – No(s). 472.4

BASTOS, David Ferreira – No(s). 121.1

BARDHAN ROY, Subir Kumar – No(s). 473.1

BASU, Aditi – No(s). JS-7.1

BENIWAL, Anju – No(s). 158.2 Session No(s). 170

BASU, Chandni – No(s). 609.7

BENKO, Zsuzsanna – No(s). 158.3

BATAGLION, Giandra Anceski – No(s). 158.5

BENNETT, Julia – No(s). 451.5, JS-37.2

BATAN, Clarence – No(s). 403.3

BENSKI, Tova – No(s). JS-39.1 Session No(s). 558

BARGLOWSKI, Karolina – No(s). JS-48.2 BARI, Dora – No(s). 499.6 BARIL, Alexandre – No(s). 337.3, 571.6

BATSON, Christie – No(s). 334.1 BAUMANN, Janosch – No(s). 212.5

BARKER GALE, Jesse – No(s). 69.2

BAUMELER, Carmen – No(s). 47.15

BARKER, Colin – No(s). 565.2 Session No(s). 537

BAUR, Nina – No(s). 642.1, 645.7 BAYAT, Asef – No(s). 6.1

BARKER, Kristin – No(s). 684.4

BAYKAL, Zeynep – No(s). 436.2, 560.4

BARMAN, Emily – No(s). JS-64.2 BARN, Ravinder – No(s). 369.7 BARNES, Alison – No(s). 698.2 BARNES, Tom – No(s). 510.5

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

BASSOLI, Matteo – No(s). 239.2

BEN DAVID, Nissim – No(s). 137.8

BASTIDA-GONZALEZ, Elena – No(s). 481.1

BARCLAY, Kieron – No(s). 486.1

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

BAYMURZINA, Guzel – No(s). 114.5 BAZZOLI, Nico – No(s). 252.1 BEACHAM, Jonathan – No(s). 470.3

BENGTSON, Vern – No(s). 135.2

BENNETT, Matthew – No(s). 346.5

BEOKU-BETTS, Josephine – No(s). 373.2 Session No(s). 374 BEREMENYI, Balint-Abel – No(s). 308.1 BERGER, Joel – No(s). 502.4, 518.4 BERGH, Arild – No(s). 430.4 BERGHAMMER, Caroline – No(s). 491.1 BERGSTRÖM, Marie – No(s). 485.2

BAROUTSIS, Aspa – No(s). JS-61.1

BEAMAN, Jean – No(s). 40.5

BAROZET, Emmanuelle – No(s). JS-30.2

BECCALLI, Bianca – No(s). 506.2 BECERRA, Ana Araceli – No(s). 47.18

BARRAL, Stéphanie – Session No(s). JS-42

BECERRA, Gaston – No(s). 585.2

BERICAT, Eduardo – No(s). 625.2

BARREIRA, Cesar – No(s). 328.7 Session No(s). 332

BECKER, Johannes – No(s). 451.2 BECKER, Susanne – No(s). 313.3, 314.20

BERLATTO, Fabia – No(s). 225.1 BERLI, Oliver – No(s). 280.3

BARRETO, Aldecilene – No(s). 613.1

BECKERS, Tilo – No(s). 256.7 Session No(s). 274

BERNATH, Krisztina – No(s). 47.8

BARRETT, Damon – No(s). JS-19.1

BECKFIELD, Jason – No(s). JS-64.1

BARREY, Sandrine – No(s). 296.17

BEDARD, Jean-Luc – No(s). 598.4, JS-31.1

BARRETO BECK, Carlos – No(s). 481.1

BARROMI PERLMAN, Edna – No(s). 657.1 BARRON-PASTOR, Juan Carlos – No(s). 578.3 BARROS MACIEL, Tania M.Freitas – No(s). 160.3, 298.23

BEDOYA, Gerson – No(s). 578.2 BEERMANN, Christian – No(s). 133.3 BEGA, Maria Tarcisa Silva – No(s). 40.3 BEHLE, Heike – No(s). 47.10

BERHEIDE, Catherine – No(s). 367.15, JS-5.4 BERIAIN, Josetxo – No(s). 414.1 Session No(s). 413

BERNBURG, Jon Gunnar – No(s). 336.3, 493.3 BERNINGER, Ina – No(s). 79.2 BERNY, Nathalie – No(s). 544.2 Session No(s). 91 BERRA, Mariella – No(s). 288.4, 117.11 BERRUECOS, Luis – No(s). 418.3

BEISIEGEL, Marlon – No(s). 196.2

BERSHADSKAYA, Margarita – No(s). 52.8, 279.1

BEJARANO BELLA, Juan Francisco – No(s). 290.4

BERTI, Alessio – No(s). 653.2 BERTILSSON, Margareta – No(s). 5.1

BARTOLINI, Fabio – No(s). 468.3

BEKESAS, Wilson – No(s). 180.6, 633.2

BERTOLO, Maria Carla – No(s). JS-73.2

BARTOLOME PERAL, Edurne – No(s). 494.3

BELAND, Daniel – Session No(s). 237, 244

BERTON, Fabienne – No(s). 87.2

BARTRAM, David – No(s). 356.5 Session No(s). JS-74

BELEK ERSEN, Umut – No(s). 369.11

BESEDOVSKY, Natalia – No(s). 214.4, 674.4

BARUAH, Nabanita – No(s). 46.7

BELL, Brandi – No(s). JS-66.2, JS-66.4

BESIO, Cristina – No(s). 211.4, 212.6

BELL, Kenton – No(s). 115.3

BESSANT, Judith – No(s). 394.1, 399.9

BELL, Susan – No(s). 187.1 Session No(s). 447

BESTE, Jonas – No(s). 621.1

BELL, Vikki – No(s). 95.4

BEYER, Heiko – No(s). 263.19

BARROS, Marfisa – No(s). 146.9 BARROS, Nelson – No(s). 196.2, 196.8 BARSONY, Fanni – No(s). 540.4

BARUTCU, Atilla – No(s). 78.1 BASER, Vehbi – No(s). 530.2 Session No(s). 528 BASHI-TREITLER, Vilna – No(s). 59.1 354

BELZUNEGUI, Angel – No(s). JS-32.4 www.isa-sociology.org

BEYCAN, Tugce – No(s). 621.3, 624.1

Person Index BEYNON-JONES, Sian – No(s). 593.1 BEZUIDENHOUT, Andries – No(s). 514.3 BHADRA, Bula – No(s). 373.4 Session No(s). JS-32 BHADURI, Sanjukkta – No(s). 662.3 BHAMBRA, Gurminder – No(s). 408.1, 641.1 BHARATI, Premananda – No(s). 193.5, JS-57.5 BHARATI, Susmita – No(s). 193.5, JS-57.5 BHATTACHARYA, Saswati – No(s). 268.6, 427.3 BHATTACHARYYA, Asmita – No(s). 666.2 BHOI, Dhaneswar – No(s). 54.4 BHOSLE, Smriti – No(s). 483.3 BIAGAS, David – No(s). 496.4 BIALAKOWSKY, Alberto Leonard – No(s). 343.5 Session No(s). 17 BIALAKOWSKY, Alejandro – No(s). 405.1 BIANCHERI, Rita – No(s). JS-12.9 BIANCHI, Alison – No(s). 496.4 BIBI, Rashida – No(s). 68.1 BIDIKHOVA, Iya – No(s). 268.7 BIDISHA, Sayema – No(s). 481.2

BIELER, Andreas – No(s). 24.1, 505.2 BIELEVICIUTE, Indre – No(s). 72.5 BIELINSKI, Jacek – No(s). 419.5 BIETTI, Federico – No(s). JS-13.6 BIFULCO, Lavinia – No(s). 239.1, JS-2.5 BIGLER, Christine – No(s). 107.6 BIJAOUI, Sylvie – No(s). 264.1, 371.1 Session No(s). 559 BIJL, Robert – Session No(s). 620, 621

BISHT, Bhagwan S. – Session No(s). 163

BOICU, Ruxandra-Ileana – No(s). 359.4

BISKAMP, Floris – No(s). 408.3

BOL, Thijs – No(s). 590.2

BISOFFI, Federico – No(s). 535.2

BONAZZI, Michele – No(s). 102.5

BJORNGREN CUADRA, Carin – No(s). 454.6

BONELLI, Maria da Gloria – No(s). 143.2

BLAD, Cory – No(s). 36.1

BONIFACIO, Glenda – No(s). 138.1

BLAIN, Michael – Session No(s). 230

BONILLA YARZABAL, Luis Fabian – No(s). 621.4

BLAKE, Brett – No(s). 309.3

BONIZZONI, Paola – No(s). 65.5, JS-23.1

BLAKEY, Heather – No(s). JS-72.9 BLAMIRE, Joshua – No(s). 554.4 BLANCHARD, Melissa – No(s). 350.5, 358.1 BLANCO GREGORY, Rocío – No(s). 183.6, 359.3

BONNER, Florence – No(s). 49.5 BONNEVILLE, Luc – No(s). 173.4 BONNIN, Debby – No(s). 598.7 Session No(s). JS-34 BONVIN, Jean-Michel – No(s). 241.3

BLASKO, Andrew – No(s). 420.4

BONZANINI, Osmar Antonio – No(s). 597.8

BLAZEJEWSKI, Franziska – No(s). 213.2

BORDE, Radhika – No(s). 552.3

BLANK-GOMEL, Rony – No(s). 674.2

BLEDAU, Lena – No(s). 464.4 BLEE, Kathleen – No(s). 67.6 BLEICHER, Alena – No(s). 285.1, JS-71.1 BLOKHIN, Aleksei – No(s). JS-32.5

BOON, Heather – No(s). 598.10 BORGES FORTES, Pedro Rubim – Session No(s). 147 BORGHI, Vando – No(s). 239.1 BORJA ALARCON, Miguel – No(s). 539.4

BLOKKER, Paul – No(s). 226.4

BORKATAKI, Dola – No(s). 228.4

BLOMGREN MANNERHEIM, Ann – No(s). 569.2

BORRELL, Luisa N. – No(s). 191.2 BOSANCIC, Sasa – No(s). JS-15.3

BLUM, Silvia – No(s). 501.2

BOSCARDIN, Livia – No(s). 471.3

BLUMBERG, Rae – No(s). 112.6, 115.1

BOSCH, Gerhard – No(s). 344.1 Session No(s). 344

BO-RUEY, Huang – No(s). 42.8 BOATCA, Manuela – No(s). 4.3, 642.1 BOBYLEV, Sergey – No(s). 326.3 BOBYLEVA, Alla – No(s). 326.3

BOSCH, Josep Lluis C. – No(s). 623.2 BOSISIO, Roberta – No(s). 87.9 BOSTROM, Magnus – No(s). 302.2

BOCCACIN, Lucia – No(s). 135.8

BOTHFELD, Silke – No(s). 233.1

BOCCAGNI, Paolo – No(s). 201.3, 360.2

BOTTEL, Matthias – No(s). 37.3 BOTTERO, Wendy – No(s). 203.2

BOCCIA ARTIERI, Giovanni – No(s). 581.5

BOTTNER, Miriam – No(s). 693.4

BODDY, Janet – No(s). 86.5

BOTZEM, Sebastian – No(s). 214.4

BINDER, Werner – No(s). 272.3, 385.2

BODNAR, Judit – No(s). 255.1 BODOR, Peter – No(s). 362.5

BINGEN, Jim – No(s). 469.3 BINGMA, Vangile D – No(s). 534.1

BOEDIONO, Kushariyaningsih – No(s). 300.3

BINNER, Kristina – No(s). 600.7, 367.17

BOEGENHOLD, Dieter – No(s). 5.2 BOELHOUWER, Jeroen – No(s). 622.2

BIOCCA, Mercedes – No(s). 476.5

BOESE, Martina – No(s). JS-42.4

BIRCAN, Tuba – No(s). 234.2

BOGERTS, Lisa – No(s). 563.4

BIRD, Chloe – No(s). 188.5 Session No(s). 188

BOGNER, Artur – No(s). 246.1

BISCHOFF, Christine – No(s). 514.3

BOGUNIA-BOROWSKA, Malgorzata – No(s). 660.2

BISHOP, Jalil – No(s). 49.5

BOHLER, Kjetil Klette – No(s). 240.3 www.isa-sociology.org

BOUCHER, Gerard – No(s). JS-70.3 BOUMA, Gary – No(s). 261.3 BOURDIN, Marie-Jo – No(s). 191.3 BOURNE, Clea – No(s). 30.2, JS-34.2 BOUTSIOUKI, Sofia – No(s). 47.27 BOVENKAMP, Hester M. – No(s). 185.5 BOWER, Peter – No(s). 677.1 BOYADJIEVA, Pepka – No(s). 52.6, 58.1 BOYASHOV, Anatoly – No(s). JS-41.5 BOYD, Michal – No(s). 314.12 BOYD, Monica – No(s). JS-17.1 355

PERSON INDEX

BILIC, Pasko – No(s). 171.6

BODE DE MORAES, Pedro Rodolfo – No(s). 225.1

BOTTRELL, Dorothy – No(s). 50.1

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

BIELECKA-PRUS, Joanna – No(s). 425.5, JS-23.7

Beynon-Jones – Boyd

Boyer – Campbell BOYER, Carol – No(s). 193.6 BOZOK, Mehmet – No(s). JS-23.8, JS-38.2 BOZOK, Nihan – No(s). JS-23.8, JS-38.2 BOZONNET, Jean-Paul – No(s). 298.9 BOZUKOVA, Katya – No(s). 395.9 BOZYKOWSKI, Marek – No(s). 521.4 BOZZON, Rossella – No(s). 499.4 BRACARENSE, Natalia – No(s). 670.1 BRACARENSE, Paulo – No(s). 670.1 BRACKE, Piet – No(s). 193.18 BRADLEY, William – Session No(s). 685 BRADY, Johanne – No(s). 132.3 BRANCO, Frederico Castelo – No(s). 334.5, 117.12 BRAND, Ulrich – No(s). 298.4 BRANDON, Anita – No(s). 382.2 BRATCHFORD, Gary – Session No(s). 652, JS-45 BRATHWAITE, Beverley – No(s). JS17.7, JS-31.7 BRAULT, Marie-Christine – No(s). JS-66.5

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

BROOKS-GUNN, Jeanne – No(s). 482.1

BURGUES, Ana – No(s). 49.16

BROWN, Patrick – No(s). 595.2 Session No(s). 683

BURNS, Robert – No(s). 157.8

BROWNE, Craig – No(s). 417.2 Session No(s). 410 BRUCE, Nigel – No(s). JS-9.5 BRULE, Elizabeth – No(s). 693.1 BRUMLEY, Krista – No(s). 79.3, 369.8 BRUNET, Ignasi – No(s). 183.2, JS-55.5

BRICHZIN, Jennifer – No(s). 219.1 BRIGUGLIO, Michael – No(s). 540.10 BRIKEN, Kendra – No(s). 341.3

BRUZELIUS, Cecilia – No(s). JS-48.6

BUCAITE-VILKE, Jurga – No(s). 325.3

CABALLERO, Hilda – No(s). 667.4

BUCHAN, Alastair – No(s). JS-26.6

CABRAL, Cristiane – No(s). 610.1, 610.6

BUCHEL, Ondrej – No(s). 501.3, 521.3 BUCHER, Julien – No(s). 652.5, 657.4 BUCHINGER, Eva – No(s). 588.2 Session No(s). 577 BUCHNER, Tobias – No(s). 50.11 BUCKER, Meike – No(s). 255.7

BUDGINAITE, Irma – No(s). 72.5, 86.3 BUDNICK, Jamie – No(s). 492.1 BUDOWSKI, Monica – No(s). 192.6, 622.1 BUEHLER-NIEDERBERGER, Doris – No(s). 19.2, 86.9 BUENO, Arthur – No(s). 410.4 Session No(s). 415

BULATOVIC, Bojana – No(s). 324.4

BRITO DE OLIVEIRA, Lucia Maria – No(s). 148.1

BUNN, Matthew – No(s). 679.2

BRITTAIN, Katie – No(s). 133.8

BURAWOY, Michael – Session No(s). 3, 711

BRONZINI, Micol – No(s). 341.2, JS-33.3 BRONZINO, Liubov – No(s). 369.3, 429.4 BROOKE, Elizabeth – No(s). 136.6 BROOKS, Ann – No(s). 373.6 356

BUTLER, Nina – No(s). 90.4

C

BRINKMAN, Anna – No(s). 274.4, 276.8

BROCK, Tom – No(s). 159.2, 159.3

BUSSE, Britta – No(s). 94.4

BRZOZOWSKA, Zuzanna – No(s). 491.1

BUJARD, Martin – No(s). JS-1.4

BROADBENT, Jeffrey – No(s). 9.1, 292.1

BUSLON, Nataly – No(s). 285.5

BYFIELD, Natalie – No(s). 61.3, 311.1

BUITRAGO ROA, Luis – No(s). 22.3

BRIZIC, Katharina – No(s). 449.6

BUSE, Christina – No(s). 593.1

BUTOLLO, Florian – No(s). 288.2

BRINGEL, Breno – No(s). 539.3, 545.1

BRITTO, Ana Lucia Nogueira de Paiva – No(s). 101.5

BUSCHMEYER, Anna – No(s). 87.5, 603.2

BRUNSSON, Nils – No(s). 212.2

BUCKNER, Stefanie – No(s). JS-9.5, JS-64.4

BRETXA, Vanessa – No(s). 309.1, 314.6

BURTZ, Randy – No(s). 160.1

BRUNORI, Gianluca – No(s). 468.3

BREINLINGER, Stefanie – No(s). 240.1

BRESLIN, Rachel – No(s). JS-17.3

BURNS, Tom R. – No(s). 144.1, 576.2

BUSSE, Erika – No(s). 352.3

BUCHS, Milena – No(s). 241.1

BRESKAYA, Olga – No(s). 264.3 Session No(s). 260

BURKE, Peter – No(s). 496.2

BRUNNER, Karl-Michael – No(s). 296.11

BRECKNER, Roswitha – No(s). JS-4.5 Session No(s). 448 BRENTS, Barbara – No(s). 166.7

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

BURAU, Viola – No(s). JS-21.1

BURCH, Karly – No(s). 681.3, 296.19 BURCHARDT, Marian – No(s). 272.2 Session No(s). 268 BUREAU, Marie-Christine – No(s). 87.2 BURGER, Kaspar – No(s). 48.2 BURGER, Roland – No(s). JS-61.2 BURGESS, Adam – No(s). 674.1 Session No(s). 675 BURGESS, Elisabeth O – No(s). 72.4 www.isa-sociology.org

CABUK KAYA, Nilay – Session No(s). 379 CACHAPA, Filipa – No(s). 85.5 CADEMARTORI, Daniela – No(s). 150.5 CADEMARTORI, Sergio – No(s). 150.5 CAETANO, Ana Paula – No(s). 616.2 CALASANTI, Toni – No(s). 135.1 CALDERA GONZALEZ, Diana del Consuelo – No(s). 182.1 CALDERON COCKBURN, Julio – No(s). 124.3 CALLEGARI, Jose – No(s). 121.1, 150.1 CALLEROS-RODRÍGUEZ, Héctor – No(s). JS-14.4, JS-20.3 CALLES-SANTILLANA, Jorge – No(s). 171.7 CALMON, Tatiana – No(s). 234.1 CALNAN, Michael – No(s). 192.14 CALOVSKI, Vid – No(s). 194.4 CALVO, Dolores – No(s). 576.2 CALVO, Esteban – No(s). 131.2, 137.2 CAMACHO HIGAREDA, Manuel – No(s). 47.17 CAMARENA-CORDOVA, Rosa Maria – No(s). 484.4 CAMARERO, Mercedes – No(s). 624.5 CAMBRE, Carolina – Session No(s). 656, 658 CAMOZZI, Ilenya – No(s). 394.3, JS-43.9 CAMPA, Riccardo – No(s). 93.3 CAMPBELL, Iain – No(s). JS-42.4

Person Index

Campbell – Chen

CAMPBELL, Marie – No(s). 695.3 Session No(s). 690

CASALS BALAGUER, Marta – No(s). 434.4

CHAN, Tak Wing – No(s). 81.2

CAMPBELL, Stephen – No(s). 677.1

CASANOVA REYES, Carmen Wendy – No(s). 580.1

CHANDRA, Vinod – No(s). 279.3, 403.1

CAMPBELL, Thomas – No(s). 205.1 CANO, Ana Belen – No(s). 394.2 CAO, Siyang – No(s). 77.3 CAPOBIANCO, Paul – No(s). 314.14 CAPPELLINA, Bartolomeo – No(s). 147.3, 152.3 CAPPELLO, Gianna – No(s). 164.4, 178.2 CARANGIO, Vassilissa – No(s). JS-17.6

CASANOVA, Georgia – No(s). 137.3 CASCINO, Giada – No(s). 47.13

CHANDRIKA, K.B. – No(s). 490.6, 483.11

CASELLI, Graziella – No(s). 491.2

CHANG, Benjamin – No(s). 42.4

CASES, Rizza Kaye – No(s). 360.3, JS-49.3

CHANG, Cheng-Heng – No(s). 203.3

CASEY, Catherine – No(s). 12.2

CHANG, Heng-hao – No(s). 560.2

CASIMIRO, Claudia – Session No(s). 88

CARBAJAL, Maria – No(s). 137.5

CASPAR, Christian – No(s). 423.2

CARBAJO PADILLA, Diego – No(s). 390.4

CASSIANO, Marcella – No(s). 20.4 CASSILDE, Stephanie – No(s). 314.23

CARBONE, Domenico – No(s). 52.5

CASTANOS, Fernando – No(s). 206.4

CARCABA, Ana – No(s). 625.4

CASTELLOTTI, Tatiana – No(s). 467.2

CARDENAS TOMAZIC, Ana – No(s). 343.5

CASTILHO, Cesar – No(s). 162.6

CARDENAS, Julian – No(s). JS-8.3

CASTILLO, Juan Carlos – No(s). JS-30.4

CARDIEL, Jorge – No(s). 579.4

CASTRO, Carla – No(s). 343.4, 643.1

CAREJA, Romana – No(s). 245.1

CASTRO, Maria Pia – No(s). 597.6

CARNEIRO, Bia – No(s). 123.2

CASUSO, Gianfranco – No(s). 410.1

CARO, Erka – No(s). 512.4

CATALAN, Marcos – No(s). 150.2

CARON BOUCHARD, Monique – No(s). 186.5

CATALDI, Silvia – No(s). 232.4, 384.8

CARON, Cecile – No(s). JS-71.6

CATIK, Nerih – No(s). 106.4

CARR, Ewan – No(s). 129.4

CHANCER, Lynn – No(s). 420.2

CATALDO, Rosanna – No(s). 624.2 CAVAGHAN, Rosalind – No(s). 35.2

CHANG, Chihming – No(s). 42.1 CHANG, Hsin-Chieh – No(s). 356.7, 366.6 CHANG, Juhui – No(s). 54.7, 68.3 CHANG, Shin-Ock – No(s). 208.4 CHANKOVA, Elena – No(s). 174.12 CHANTRAINE, Olivier – No(s). 181.1, 528.4 Session No(s). 10 CHAROENRATANA, Sayamol – No(s). 476.3, 296.23 CHARRIER, Dominique – No(s). 162.6 CHARRON, Jacques-Olivier – No(s). 30.1 CHARTAIN, Laura – No(s). JS-42.1 CHASE, Elaine – No(s). JS-69.2 Session No(s). 365 CHASE-DUNN, Christopher – No(s). 257.4 Session No(s). 28, 32, 640 CHATTERJEE, Dwiparna – No(s). 301.2

CAVALCANTI, Josefa Salete B – No(s). JS-42.2 Session No(s). JS-42

CHAUDHURY, Sandhya – No(s). 170.7 CHAUDHURY, Sukant – No(s). 163.3 Session No(s). 479

CARRERAS AGUERRI, Jesus – No(s). 580.3

CEBOTARI, Victor – No(s). 608.4

CHAUHAN, Abha – No(s). 174.7, 381.6

CARRILLO SAENZ, Roberto – No(s). 540.13

CELDRAN, Montserrat – No(s). 135.7 CELLINI, Erika – No(s). JS-11.4

CHAUHAN, Arvind – No(s). 174.4, 598.6

CARRASCO, Silvia – No(s). 308.1 CARREIRAS, Helena – No(s). 15.4

CARRILLO, Fernando – No(s). 580.4 CARROLL, William – No(s). 25.1, 31.3 Session No(s). 26 CARSON, Marcus – No(s). 292.4 CARTAGENA FARIAS, Javiera – No(s). 131.3 CARTER, Julia – No(s). 85.2, 86.7 CARTER, Neil – No(s). 544.1 CARTER, Pam – No(s). 185.1 CARVALHO, Danielle Domingues de – No(s). 47.20, 574.7 CARVALHO, Diana – No(s). 80.3 CARVALHO, Priscila – No(s). 552.1 CARVALHO, Teresa – No(s). 600.1 CASALECCHI, Gabriel – No(s). 250.1 CASALEIRO, Paula – No(s). 146.4, 146.10

CERRONI, Andrea – No(s). 118.1 CERVIA, Silvia – No(s). JS-12.9 CERVINO, Mariana Eva – No(s). 434.1 CHACON REYNOSA, Karla Jeanette – No(s). 57.5 CHAI, Choon Lee – No(s). 657.5 CHAKMAKOVA, Zornitsa – No(s). 560.5 CHAKRABARTI, Nirmal – No(s). 329.1 CHAMAKALAYIL, Lalitha – No(s). 66.6 CHAMBERLAIN, John Martyn – Session No(s). 686 CHAMPY, Florent – No(s). 600.6 Session No(s). 595 CHAN, Cheris Shun-Ch. – No(s). 559.1 CHAN, Kin-man – No(s). 549.1 CHAN, Shun-hing – No(s). 263.16 www.isa-sociology.org

CHAUVEL, Louis – No(s). 248.2, 256.3 CHAVAN, Arun – No(s). 472.1 CHAVES, Jose Ignacio – No(s). 660.1 CHAVES, Mariana – No(s). 397.8 Session No(s). 396 CHAVEZ MOGUEL, Rosario Guadalupe – No(s). 57.5 CHAVEZ MOLINA, Eduardo – No(s). 33.4 CHAVEZ, Lazaro – No(s). 414.2 CHAVEZ-GONZALEZ, Guadalupe – No(s). 47.23 CHELLURI, Naga – No(s). 288.5

PERSON INDEX

CARVALHO, Marilia – No(s). 53.1

CEPOI, Victor – No(s). JS-10.5

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

CAVALCANTE, Cláudia – No(s). 43.5

CARRASCO, Alma – No(s). JS-13.4, JS-27.5

CHEN, Chen – No(s). 89.5 CHEN, Chi Yuan – No(s). 49.2 CHEN, Hsing-Jung – No(s). 82.5 CHEN, Jie-Ting – No(s). JS-29.3 CHEN, Lin – No(s). JS-52.2 CHEN, Martha – No(s). 503.1 357

Chen – Costa CHEN, Ming-chi – No(s). 466.1 CHEN, Ting – No(s). JS-12.8 CHEN, Wan-Chi – No(s). 47.12 CHEN, Wei – No(s). 507.2 CHEN, Yi-fu – No(s). 82.5, 500.2 CHEN, Yu-Hua – No(s). 74.7, 467.3 CHENG, Sheng Yao – No(s). 42.5 CHERUBINI, Daniela – No(s). 394.3, 399.1 CHESTERS, Graeme – No(s). JS-72.9 CHESTERS, Jennifer – No(s). 48.1 Session No(s). 629 CHEUNG, Yannie – No(s). 49.10 CHEUNG, Yuk Man – No(s). 46.8 CHIAZOR, Idowu – No(s). 370.4, 476.1 CHIFFOLEAU, Yuna – No(s). 469.2 CHILDS, Alison – No(s). 629.2 CHILDS, Mike – No(s). 544.1 CHIN, Huei-Wen – No(s). JS-29.3 CHISVERT-TARAZONA, Maria Jose – No(s). JS-55.2 CHIU, Hua-Mei – No(s). 294.2 CHIU, Tuen Yi – No(s). 356.1 CHMIELEWSKA-SZLAJFER, Helena – No(s). 178.6 CHOE, Ryeora – No(s). 684.4 CHOI, Jeong Won – No(s). JS-69.4

PERSON INDEX

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

CHOI, Susanne – No(s). 353.6 CHORYNSKI, Adam – No(s). 455.2, 680.5 CHOUDRY, Aziz – No(s). 506.1 CHOUHY, Gabriel – No(s). 551.5 CHOWDHURY, Saheli – No(s). 609.2, JS-32.2 CHRISTOFOROU, Andri – No(s). 615.5 CHRISTOU, Miranda – No(s). 56.2 CHTOURIS, Sotirios – No(s). 400.11 CHUAQUI, Jorge – No(s). 571.1

Person Index CIOCCHINI, Pablo – No(s). 151.1, 152.4

CONTAMIN, Jean Gabriel – No(s). 304.4

CIOCHETTO, Lynne – No(s). JS-37.4 Session No(s). 169

CONTRERAS, Paola – No(s). 63.5

CIPRIANI, Roberto – No(s). 263.8 Session No(s). 13

CONVERT, Bernard – No(s). 175.4

CIVELEK, Cansu – No(s). 462.1 CIVETTINI, Nicole – No(s). 195.3 CLAIR, Amy – No(s). 193.11 CLAUSEN, Jette Aaroe – No(s). 696.4

CONVERSI, Daniele – No(s). 646.4 CONWAY, Janet – No(s). JS-44.2 COOK, Craig – No(s). 611.3 Session No(s). 617, 619 COOLS, Pieter – No(s). 239.5

CLEGG, Stewart – No(s). 7.4, 211.1

COOMBER, Ross Coomber – No(s). 331.4

CLOUET, Claire – No(s). 437.4

COOPER, Charlie – No(s). 400.4

COBOS, Daniel – No(s). 33.4

CORBISHLEY, Grant – No(s). 703.2

COBURN, Elaine – No(s). 31.3

CORDEIRO, Israel – No(s). 176.1

COCKBURN, Jenny – No(s). 380.4, 470.4

CORMAN, Michael – No(s). 696.1 Session No(s). 690

CODATO, Adriano – No(s). 225.1

CORNA, Laurie – No(s). 129.2 Session No(s). 129

COE, Anna-Britt – No(s). 380.3 Session No(s). 382 COELHO, Denise – No(s). 106.8 COGUA-LOPEZ, Jasney – No(s). 361.2 COHEN, Bruce – No(s). 566.1, JS-28.2 COHN, Samuel – No(s). 112.1 Session No(s). 104 COLEMAN, Rebecca – No(s). 198.3, JS-45.1 COLES, Benjamin – No(s). 698.2 Session No(s). 699

CORNEY, Tim – No(s). 400.13 CORRADI, Consuelo – No(s). 374.4 Session No(s). 381 CORRADI, Laura – Session No(s). 370, 376 CORREA, Patricia – No(s). 343.4 CORREIA, Tiago – No(s). 591.4, 592.3 CORSALE, Massimo – Session No(s). 525, 534 CORSI, Giancarlo – No(s). 154.5

COLETTO, Diego – No(s). 341.2

CORTE, Ugo – No(s). 495.4, 576.2

COLLIN, Johanne – No(s). 184.1 Session No(s). 567

CORTES MORALES, Alexis – No(s). 539.2

COLLINS, Jock – No(s). JS-60.4

CORTES OCAZIONEZ, Martha Isabel – No(s). 174.9

COLLYER, Fran – No(s). 194.1, 192.14 COLOMBO, Enzo – No(s). 397.2 COLOMBO, Fabio – No(s). 239.7 COMAJOAN, Llorenc – No(s). 309.1 COMAS-D’ARGEMIR, Dolors – No(s). 130.3 COMBET, Benita – No(s). 518.4

CORTES SUAZA, Gustavo – No(s). 174.9 CORTES, Ferran – No(s). 394.2 CORTES, Soraya – No(s). 99.3, 238.2 CORTEZ, Carlos – No(s). 125.3 CORVO, Paolo – Session No(s). 625

CHUDNOVSKAYA, Irina – No(s). 311.3

COMINELLI, Luigi – No(s). 145.2, 146.3

CHUN, Jennifer – No(s). 513.3 Session No(s). 24

COMPANION, Michele – No(s). 465.1 Session No(s). 458

CHUNG, Heejung – No(s). JS-1.2

CON, Gulcin – No(s). 369.26

CHUNG, Yi-ting – No(s). 468.2

CONDE ESPEJO, Paloma – No(s). 447.1

COSTA, Andre – No(s). 246.4

CONILH DE BEYSSAC, Marie Louise – No(s). 324.3, JS-37.3

COSTA, Ivone – No(s). 328.4

CIAO, Matthew – No(s). 387.2 CIARNIELLO, Maite – No(s). 137.9 CICHOCKI, Martin – No(s). 193.9 CIESLIK, Mark – No(s). 169.4 CIGLIUTI, Katia – No(s). 384.8 CILLO, Rossana – No(s). 32.3, 509.26 CINDOGLU, Dilek – Session No(s). 12

358

COSKAN, Hande – No(s). JS-44.1 COSSU, Alberto – No(s). 541.3 COSTA DE OLIVEIRA, Ricardo – No(s). 221.1 COSTA, Hermes – No(s). 123.2, 505.6

CONNELL, Raewyn – No(s). 282.4

COSTA, Maria Izabel Sanches – No(s). 106.8, 573.1

CONNON, Irena – No(s). 461.3

COSTA, Mirian – No(s). 466.4

CONSTANCE, Douglas – No(s). 8.4, 471.2

COSTA, Renata – No(s). 154.1

CONSTANTOPOULOU, Christiana – No(s). 7.2, 173.1

COSTA, Sergio – No(s). 410.2 Session No(s). 15

www.isa-sociology.org

COSTA, Rosalina – No(s). 72.3, 85.5

Person Index

Costanzo – Delamonica

COSTANZO, Chiara – No(s). 110.4

DACERA, Maria Prisa – No(s). 533.3

DE ANGELO, Michelly – No(s). 466.4

COTTINGHAM, Marci – No(s). 495.1

DAHER, Liana Maria – No(s). 562.1 Session No(s). 554

DE BEER, Stephan – No(s). 393.3

DAHL-GJEFSEN, Mads – No(s). 26.2

DE CASTRO, Marcus – No(s). 147.1

COUTO FILHO, Paulo – No(s). 334.6 CRABU, Stefano – No(s). 285.2

DE BELER, Nathalie – No(s). JS-21.8

CRAVEIRO, Isabel – No(s). JS-26.2

DAHLBERG, Rasmus – No(s). 454.6

CREADY, Cynthia – No(s). 140.5 Session No(s). 186

DAKER-WHITE, Gavin – No(s). 677.1

DE FALCO, Ciro Clemente – No(s). 560.6

DALE, John – No(s). JS-18.3

DE JONG, Sara – No(s). 364.5, 442.1

CREMIN, Colin – No(s). 159.1, 424.4

DALLE, Pablo – No(s). 48.12

DE KROM, Michiel – No(s). JS-71.2

CREPAZ, Katharina – No(s). 226.1, 311.5

DALOZ, Jean Pascal – No(s). 251.4 DAMELANG, Andreas – No(s). 518.2

DE LA LUZ, Maria del Carmen – No(s). 57.3

CRESCENZI, Lucrezia – No(s). 680.1 CRETU, Olga – No(s). 360.4 CRINALL, Karen – No(s). JS-45.4 CROCKER, Diane – No(s). JS-36.4 CRONIN, Bruce – No(s). 31.6 CROSSOUARD, Barbara – No(s). 392.1, 392.7

DAMIAN, Elena – No(s). 256.8, 257.2 DAMYANOSKA, Mila – No(s). 245.1 DANAJ, Sonila – No(s). 512.4 DANIEL, Anna – No(s). 391.8 DANIEL, Antje – No(s). 107.5, 551.2 DANIEL-WRABETZ, Joana – No(s). 333.2, 340.2

DE LA ROSA, Mario – No(s). 483.7 DE LA TORRE, Leonardo – No(s). 358.2, JS-74.5 DE MAILLARD, Jacques – No(s). 225.1 DE MARINIS, Pablo – No(s). 405.1 DE MATTOS PIMENTA, Melissa – No(s). 334.4, 396.1

DANIELSSON, Erna – No(s). 454.5

DE MIGUEL-LUKEN, Verónica – No(s). 624.4

DAPHI, Priska – No(s). 555.1 Session No(s). 542

DE MIRANDA, Jose Alberto – No(s). 154.6

CSERHATI, Zoltan – No(s). JS-31.4

DAPPARABAIL, Vanitha – No(s). 369.23

DE MOOR, Joost – No(s). 538.6, 544.5

CSILLAG, Sara – No(s). 97.5

DARBAR, Poonam – No(s). 367.21

CUBAS, Viviane – No(s). 117.12

DARKING, Mary – No(s). 185.2, 186.4

CUBBINS, Lisa A. – No(s). 364.2

DARKU, Esther – No(s). 287.4

CUERVO, Hernan – No(s). JS-61.3 Session No(s). 393

DARKWAH, Akosua – No(s). 374.2 Session No(s). 373

CULLIFORD, David – No(s). 193.7

DARLING, Jonathan – No(s). 65.6

DE VENANZI, Augusto – No(s). 205.2 Session No(s). 332

CUNHA, Albino – No(s). 240.2

DARMAWAN, Igusti – No(s). 48.10

DE WET, Jacques – No(s). 338.1

CUNNINGHAM SEGOVIA, Jessica – No(s). 692.1

DARUSMAN, Dudung Darusman – No(s). 296.21

DE, Utpal Kumar – No(s). 298.21

CURCIC, Maja – No(s). 67.3, 348.2

DAS, Emmanuel – No(s). 473.3

CURRAN, Megan – No(s). 81.6

DAS, Jyoti – No(s). JS-62.2

CUSRIPITUCK, Patoo – No(s). 106.13

DASOG, Shamalabai B. – No(s). 298.19, 483.11

CROTHERS, Charles – No(s). 250.3 CRUZ-CASTRO, Laura – No(s). 283.1, JS-13.3 CSANADY, Marton – No(s). 273.2

DAUGHTRY, Kenny – No(s). 77.1

CVETICANIN, Predrag – No(s). 248.4

DAVESNE, Alban – No(s). JS-31.5

CYUNCZYK, Filip – No(s). 154.4

DAVID, Martin – No(s). 285.1, JS-71.1

CZARNOTA, Adam – No(s). 143.4

DAVID, Roman – No(s). 95.3

CZERANOWSKA, Olga – No(s). 346.2

DAVID-KACSO, Agnes – No(s). 43.1

D D’AVILA NETO, Maria Inacia – No(s). 324.3, JS-37.3 D’CRUZ, Premilla – No(s). JS-68.1 D’ORSI, Lorenzo – No(s). 407.3

DAVIDOVITCH, Nitza – No(s). 54.1

DE SWAAN, Abraham – No(s). 313.4 Session No(s). 314

DEACON, Bob – Session No(s). 236 DEANGELIS, Joseph – No(s). 181.2 Session No(s). 229 DEBNAR, Milos – Session No(s). JS-43 DEBONS, Jerome – No(s). 196.7 DEBSKA, Hanna – No(s). 594.4, 367.14 DECIEUX, Fabienne – No(s). 600.7, 367.17 DECIEUX, Jean Philippe – No(s). JS-47.6

DAVIDSON, Debra – No(s). 301.1 Session No(s). JS-37

DEEG, Dorly – No(s). 131.5

DAVIES, Sharyn – No(s). 704.3 Session No(s). 706

DEGAVRE, Florence – No(s). 235.4

DAVILA, Estefania – No(s). 413.1

DA CRUZ, Michael – No(s). 340.3

DAVIS, Kathy – Session No(s). 448, JS-4

DA RIMINI, Francesca – No(s). 292.6

DAVIS, Mark – No(s). 205.1

DA-SILVA-ROSA, Teresa – No(s). 466.4

DAVIS, Shannon – No(s). 81.1

DABROWSKI, Vicki – No(s). 35.1

DAWOOD, Quraisha – No(s). 594.5

DACERA, Ma. Denise – No(s). 533.3

DE ALMEIDA, Fabio – No(s). 312.5 www.isa-sociology.org

DEFORGE, Quentin – No(s). JS-68.2 DEITCH, Cynthia – No(s). JS-17.3 DEKKER, Mischa – No(s). 552.4 DEL MORAL, Lucia – No(s). 605.5 DEL RE, Emanuela C. – Session No(s). 652, JS-45 DEL ROSARIO, Teresita – No(s). 350.2 DELAMONICA, Enrique – No(s). 236.2 359

PERSON INDEX

DA COSTA, Isabel – No(s). 12.2

DAVIDOVICH, Nadav – No(s). 194.2

DE RUITER, Hans-Peter – Session No(s). 692, 695

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

CVAJNER, Martina – Session No(s). 350

DE PAULA, Liana – No(s). 396.1, 401.1

Delaunay – Drove DELAUNAY, Catarina – No(s). 314.7, 192.10 DELGADO RIVERA, Efrain – No(s). 580.2 DELGADO-MOLINA, Cecilia – No(s). 262.4 DELHEY, Jan – No(s). 625.1, 256.10 DELICADO, Ana – No(s). 292.5, 680.3 DELLA FAILLE, Dimitri – No(s). 104.1 DELLO BUONO, Ricardo – No(s). 36.4 DELMAS, Corinne – No(s). 172.3, 598.8 DEMAILLY, Lise – No(s). 175.4 DEMICHELE, Matthew – No(s). 67.6 DEMIR, Ipek – Session No(s). 408 DEMIRHISAR, Deniz Gunce – No(s). 100.4 DEMIRKOL, Esra – No(s). 88.5, 391.3 DEMIRPENCE, Mutlu Baran – No(s). 530.2 DENG, Chuan-Chung – No(s). 465.4 DENG, Delin – No(s). 314.22 DENG, Jian-Bang – No(s). JS-43.2 DENIS, Ann – No(s). 59.3 Session No(s). JS-17 DENISSENKO, Mikhail – No(s). 488.6

PERSON INDEX

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

DENT, Mike – No(s). 600.2, 682.2 Session No(s). 593 DEPELI, Gulsum – No(s). JS-22.2 Session No(s). 659 DEPLAUDE, Marc-Olivier – No(s). 600.6 DEPOY, Liz – Session No(s). 614

Person Index DEY, Deblina – No(s). 134.5

DOBBS, Erica – No(s). JS-48.3

DEYELL, Tracy – No(s). JS-66.2

DOBRATZ, Betty – No(s). 427.4, 546.1

DEZHINA, Irina – No(s). 283.3

DOBROTIC, Ivana – No(s). 154.3

DHERANI, Mukesh – No(s). JS-9.5

DOBUSCH, Laura – No(s). 201.2 Session No(s). 337

DHONDT, Steven – No(s). 317.5 DHRUVA, Shailaja – No(s). 483.8 DI BONAVENTURA, Florence – No(s). 642.2 DI GESSA, Giorgio – No(s). 129.1 DI GIAMMARIA, Loris – No(s). 387.6 DI GIUSEPPE, Silvia – No(s). 80.5 DI MARCO, Alessio – No(s). 616.3, 653.2 DI NUNZIO, Daniele – No(s). 119.4, 540.2

DOMINGUEZ-SERRANO, Monica – No(s). 605.5

DIAS, Camila – No(s). 331.5

DONEDDU, Silvia – No(s). 301.3

DIAS, Hugo – No(s). 505.5, 505.6

DONG, Weizhen – No(s). 535.1 Session No(s). 527

DIAS, Nilta – No(s). 314.24 DIAS, Sonia – No(s). 503.3 DIATLOVA, Anastasia – No(s). 350.6 DIAZ ORDAZ CASTILLEJOS, Elsa Maria – No(s). 47.9

DONMEZ, Rasim Ozgur – No(s). 425.4, 563.1 DONMEZ, Yagmur – No(s). JS-11.1 DONNELLY, Louis – No(s). 482.1

DIAZ, Capitolina – No(s). 371.3

DONNELLY, Rachel – No(s). 195.1

DICKINSON, Claire – No(s). 133.8

DONOGHUE, Jed – No(s). 298.8

DICKINSON, James – No(s). 440.1 Session No(s). 440

DONZA, Eduardo – No(s). 630.1

DIEGUEZ, Carla Regina – No(s). 346.8

DIESTCHY, Mireille – No(s). 406.1

DESIVILYA, Helena – No(s). 118.2

DIETRICH, Hans – No(s). 629.3

DESPRAT, Diane – No(s). JS-17.2

DIEZ GARCIA, Ruben – No(s). 559.7

DEUSDAD, Blanca – No(s). 130.3, 137.7

DIEZ, Julia – No(s). 447.1

DEUTSCHMANN, Anna – No(s). 547.2

DILL, Brian – No(s). 111.1

360

DOMEN, Takahiro – No(s). 118.6

DIANI, Mario – No(s). 547.1, JS-72.2 Session No(s). 540

DESALVO, Bethany – No(s). 489.3

DEVLIN, Maurice – No(s). 400.2, 401.2

DOMARADZKA, Anna – No(s). 105.3 Session No(s). 555

DOMINGUEZ, Mauricio – No(s). 466.5

DIEKMANN, Andreas – No(s). 517.1, 520.3

DEVIEUX, Jessy – No(s). 487.2

DOLEMEYER, Anne – No(s). 370.1

DI PUPPO, Lili – No(s). 260.2

DESAI, Manisha – No(s). 373.1 Session No(s). 377

DEVI, Suman – No(s). JS-40.3

DOHNERT, Susanne – No(s). 264.3

DOMINGUEZ, Jose Andres – No(s). 294.3

DIEHL, Paula – No(s). 251.3

DEVI, Sudeshna – No(s). 174.6

DOESSING, Anne – No(s). JS-21.1

DI PAOLANTONIO, Mario – No(s). 95.4

DERMAN, Ozge – No(s). JS-44.3

DEVAULT, Marjorie – No(s). 697.4 Session No(s). 690

DOERRE, Klaus – No(s). 344.1 Session No(s). 3

DOMINGUES, Jose Mauricio – No(s). 646.2

DIEHL, Claudia – No(s). 494.5

DEVASSY, Licy – No(s). 367.18

DOEHNE, Malte – No(s). 213.1

DI PADOVA, Pasquale – No(s). 515.4, 518.3

DERADO, Augustin – No(s). 397.7

DEUTSCHMANN, Emanuel – No(s). 254.1

DODSON, Jualynne – No(s). 262.1

DIJKSTRA, Jacob – No(s). 517.4 DILL, LeConte – No(s). 655.4 DILLI, Sirin – No(s). 563.1, 315.10 DIMON, Jessica – No(s). 158.5

DORADO RUBIN, Maria Jose – No(s). 137.4, 626.3 DORDONI, Annalisa – No(s). 421.4 DORIUS, Shawn – No(s). 106.3, JS-24.1 DORNELES, Edson – No(s). 315.15 DORROLL, Courtney – No(s). 553.3 DOS ANJOS, Gabriele – No(s). 385.1 DOS SANTOS, Hudson Silva – No(s). 643.1 DOUCET, Andrea – No(s). 654.4 Session No(s). 653 DOUGLAS, Karen – No(s). 214.5 DOYLE, Patrick J. – No(s). 72.4 DR ADEDOYIN ATEWOLOGUN, Adedoyin – No(s). 531.1

DIOP-CHRISTENSEN, Anna – No(s). 245.4

DRANGE, Ida – No(s). 590.2

DITTMER, Cordula – No(s). 454.3

DREHER, Jochen – No(s). 405.2

DIXON, A.L. Sinikka – No(s). JS-12.1 DIXON, Jeremy – No(s). 572.1, 573.4 DOANE, Ashley – No(s). 424.1 www.isa-sociology.org

DRECHSLER, Joerg – No(s). 388.1 DRESSE, Marcel – No(s). 245.3 DRIESSENS, Olivier – No(s). 215.1 DROVE, Tamara – No(s). JS-36.2

Person Index

Du Toit – Everatt

DU TOIT, David – No(s). 531.3 Session No(s). 529

ECKHARD, Jan – No(s). 628.1

ENOMOTO, Miyoko – No(s). 681.2

DU TOIT, Jacques – No(s). 97.2

EDDINS, Crystal – No(s). 555.2

ENRIQUEZ, Laura – No(s). 539.6

DUARTE, Aldimar – No(s). 43.5

EDELBLUTE, Heather – No(s). 570.5, JS-23.9

EPIKHINA, Yulia – No(s). JS-61.4

DUARTE, Marisa – No(s). 48.7, 50.8

EDER, Anja – No(s). 499.2

DUBROW, Joshua – Session No(s). 110

EDER, Renate – No(s). 456.5

ERBE, Birgit – No(s). 372.1

DUCU, Viorela – No(s). 608.2, 133.11

EDEWOR, Patrick – No(s). 476.1, JS-36.1

DUDEL, Christian – No(s). 486.3

EDLING, Christofer – No(s). 292.4

DUDINA, Victoria – No(s). 387.1, 193.14

EDMUNDS, Laurel – No(s). JS-26.6

DUELMER, Hermann – No(s). 494.3

EFFERSON, Charles – No(s). 107.2

DUENAS I CID, David – No(s). JS-32.4 DUMITRICA, Delia – No(s). 180.3, 541.7 DUMREICHER, Heidi – No(s). JS-45.3 DUNCAN, Simon – No(s). 86.7 DUNGDUNG, Deepali – No(s). 372.6

EDTHOFER, Julia – No(s). 60.3 EGE, Moritz – No(s). 508.3 EGGERS, Thurid – No(s). 192.8, 372.8 EGGERT, Michael – No(s). 582.2 EGHAREVBA, Matthew – No(s). 376.2, 376.4

ERA, Marlon – No(s). 458.5 ERDEN, Ozgur Olgun – No(s). 263.9 ERDINC, ISIL – No(s). 509.3 EREL, Umut – No(s). JS-14.1 Session No(s). 66 EREMIA, Dana Ioana – No(s). 49.18 ERGIN, Nezihe Basak – No(s). 560.4 ERHARD, Franz – No(s). 419.3 ERICKSON, Rebecca – No(s). 495.1 ERKKILA, Tero – No(s). 311.2 ERMAKOVA, Maria – No(s). 249.8 ERMISCH, John – No(s). 81.2 ERNE, Roland – No(s). 509.16

DUNMORE, Stuart – No(s). 306.4

EGREJA, Catarina – No(s). 280.6, 49.13

DUNNE, Mairead – No(s). 392.1, 392.7

EGUAVOEN, Agatha – No(s). 376.2, 376.4

ERNSTSON, Henrik – No(s). 547.1

DUPUIS-BLANCHARD, Suzanne – No(s). 137.10

EHLERT MAIA, Joao Marcelo – No(s). 282.4

EROMONSELE, Andrew – No(s). 262.9, 376.2

DURAND, Jorge – No(s). 361.3

EHMKE, Ellen – No(s). 399.2

ESCALANTE FERRER, Ana Esther – No(s). 57.6, 47.14

DURMAZ, Nursel – No(s). 359.6

EHRLICH, Martin – No(s). 288.2

DURNOVA, Anna – No(s). 185.6, 192.4

EIFLER, Stefanie – No(s). 500.4

DURRANI, Naureen – No(s). 392.1

EISEWICHT, Paul – No(s). 391.6 EIZAGUIRRE ANGLADA, Santiago – No(s). 239.3

EROKHOVA, Natalia – No(s). 171.5

ESCALANTE LEAL, Juan C. – No(s). 277.2 ESCHE, Frederike – No(s). 161.4 ESCOBAR, Modesto – No(s). 387.5 ESCOTO, Ana – No(s). JS-63.5

DUSHI, Mimoza – No(s). 356.13

EKE, Edit – No(s). JS-31.4

ESGAIO, Ana – No(s). 137.11

DUSI, Davide – No(s). 281.11

EKSTAM, Lisa – No(s). 132.5, JS-12.4

ESHET, Yovav – No(s). 192.12

DUSSAILLANT, Francisca – No(s). 456.1, 570.2

EL HABIB DRAOUI, Brahim – No(s). 50.7, 481.3

ESPINAL MEZA, Silvia – No(s). 602.3

DUSSAULT, Gilles – No(s). JS-26.2

EL-ASHRY, Lulie – No(s). 263.10

DUTTA, Geetha Mihir – No(s). 160.4

ELITOK, Secil Pacaci – No(s). 358.3

ESPINO, ESPERANZA, Esperanza – No(s). 318.3

DWORKIN, Anthony Gary – No(s). 7.1, 49.6

ELLIOTT TILLECZEK, Elliott – No(s). 395.5

ESPINOZA RIVERA, Jerry – No(s). 273.1

DWYER, Peter – No(s). 245.2

ELLIOTT, Michael – No(s). 170.4

DWYER, Tom – No(s). 207.3, 398.3

ELLWARDT, Lea – No(s). 136.1, 136.4

ESPINOZA, Vicente – No(s). 628.2, 262.17

DZMITRYIEVA, Aryna – No(s). 155.1

ELMEZENY, Ahmed – No(s). 162.2

E EARL, Catherine – No(s). 702.1 Session No(s). 703 EASTWOOD, Lauren – No(s). 697.4 EATON, Adrienne – No(s). 503.1 EBERT, Norbert – No(s). 214.3 ECHAVARREN, Jose – No(s). 297.4 ECHEVERRIA CUBELLO, Gabriel – No(s). 361.4, 576.3 ECKERT, Judith – No(s). 676.2

ELPES, Gustavo – No(s). 617.1 ELROY, Irit – No(s). JS-73.1 ELUMALAI, tamil Selvan – No(s). 228.2

ESTANQUE, Elísio – No(s). 505.6, 540.12 ESTEINOU, Rosario – No(s). 78.6, 519.3 ESTEVES, Ana Margarida – No(s). 91.10 ESTIVALET, Anelise – No(s). 369.28

EMANUELSON, Pamela – No(s). 515.1

ESTRADA, Ivett – No(s). 280.4, 282.5

EMBRICK, David – No(s). 422.1

ETOZ, Zeliha – No(s). JS-11.1

ENGARTNER, Tim – No(s). 501.2

ETTE, Andreas – No(s). JS-43.5

ENGEL, Thomas – No(s). 288.2

EULE, Tobias – No(s). 153.4, 355.7

ENGELMANN, Wilson – No(s). 467.1

EVANS, Peter – No(s). 510.1, JS-72.3

ENGIN, Ceylan – No(s). 488.5

EVEN CHOREV, Nadav – No(s). 674.2

ENGUIX, Begonya – No(s). 562.2

EVERATT, David – No(s). 398.2

www.isa-sociology.org

361

PERSON INDEX

EBENSPERGER, Sabine – No(s). 518.2

ELOD, Zoltan – No(s). 362.5

ESPINAR-RUIZ, Eva – No(s). 381.4

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

DURUZ, Jean – No(s). 699.1 Session No(s). 698

EISENBACH, Yael – No(s). 46.3

ERNST, Stefanie – No(s). 246.3

Everhardt – Foley EVERHARDT, Sharon – Session No(s). 532, 533

FARROW, Alex – No(s). 399.2

FICA PIRAS, Pablo – No(s). 47.1

EVETTS, Julia – Session No(s). 599

FARTHING, Rys – No(s). 399.9 FASENFEST, David – Session No(s). 31, JS-49

FIEDLSCHUSTER, Micha – No(s). 118.4 Session No(s). 552

EVRARD, Barbara – No(s). 162.6 EVSEEVA, Yaroslava – No(s). 135.11, JS-12.2 EXNER, Andreas – No(s). 219.4 EYDAL, Gudny – No(s). 454.6, JS-1.6 EZAWA, Aya – No(s). 446.1 EZDI, Sehar – No(s). 489.2

F FABIANSSON, Charlotte – No(s). 10.3, 681.1 FABIEN, Jean – No(s). 22.2 FABIO, Aiello – No(s). 47.13 FABREGAT CABRERA, Maria Elena – No(s). 281.15 FABROS, Alinaya Sybilla – No(s). 39.1, 338.2

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

FASSIO, Adriana – No(s). 137.1 FAST, Janet – No(s). 193.16, JS-12.10 FATTORE, Tobia – No(s). 605.4, 609.1 FAURE WALKER, Rob – No(s). 262.14 FAYET SALLAS, Ana Luisa – No(s). 650.2, 652.3 FAYOMI, Oluyemi – No(s). 671.4, JS-36.1 FAZLI, Ronak – No(s). 49.12 FEBBRAJO, Alberto – No(s). 154.5 FEDER-BUBIS, Paula – No(s). 188.6, JS-33.1 FEDOROVA, Kapitolina – No(s). 307.6 FEE, Molly – No(s). JS-60.3 FEGTER, Susann – No(s). 605.4 FEHR, Ernst – No(s). 107.2 FEISCHMIDT, Margit – No(s). 362.3

FACHELLI, Sandra – No(s). 499.1

FELT, Ulrike – No(s). 1.1

FACHINETTO, Rochele – No(s). 334.4, 380.1

FENG, Qiushi – No(s). 489.4, 256.12

FACUSE, Marisol – No(s). 430.1

FEO, Francesca – No(s). 223.3

FADAEE, Simin – No(s). 551.1

FERGUSSON, Ross – No(s). 39.3, 397.6

FAGGIANO, Maria Paola – No(s). 387.6

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

FENG, Tien-Yu – No(s). 681.4

FERNANDES, Lidia – No(s). 505.5

FAGHIH KHORASANI, Abbas – No(s). 164.6, 177.6

FERNANDEZ ESQUINAS, Manuel – No(s). JS-10.3

FAINGOLD, Eduardo – No(s). 306.5 Session No(s). 314

FERNÁNDEZ MELIÁN, María Clara – No(s). 630.3

FAIRBROTHER, Malcolm – No(s). 297.2

FERNANDEZ, Karina – No(s). 402.4, 570.3

FAKO, Thabo . – No(s). 574.3

FERNANDEZ, Miguel Angel – No(s). 391.1

FALCAO, Denise – No(s). 162.5 FALCON, Laia – No(s). 429.1 FALLIN, Mallory – No(s). 615.4 FAN, Jessie – No(s). 528.2 FAN, Xiaoguang – No(s). 106.12 FANELLI, Lydia Nicole – No(s). 382.8, 706.2 FANG, Lianquan – No(s). 137.2

FERNANDEZ, Rosario – No(s). 63.4, 372.2

FIGOLS, Florence – No(s). 703.3 Session No(s). 701 FIGUEIREDO, Juliana de Paula – No(s). 158.5 FIGUERAS, Monica – No(s). 182.3 FIGUEROA-DREHER, Silvana – Session No(s). 405 FILC, Dani – No(s). 192.9, 194.2 FILCAK, Richard – No(s). 298.25 FILGUEIRA DE ALMEIDA, Dulce – No(s). JS-73.6 Session No(s). 613 FILIPPOV, Alexander – No(s). 656.1 FINE, Gary – No(s). 495.4 FINEDER, Martina – No(s). 654.3 FINGER, Claudia – No(s). 43.4, 494.6 FINGER, Jonas D. – No(s). 193.19 FINK, Elisabeth – No(s). 510.2 FINKELDEY, Jasper – No(s). 514.2 FINLEY, Katelyn – No(s). 109.3 FIROUZJAEIAN, Ali Ashgar – No(s). 74.4 FISCHER, Julia – No(s). 185.5 FISCHER, Karin – No(s). 31.1, JS-2.3 FISCHER-KOWALSKI, Marina – No(s). 302.1 FISHMAN, Robert M. – No(s). 14.3 FITTIPALDI, Edoardo – No(s). 145.1, 149.1 FLACHE, Andreas – No(s). 517.3, 517.4 FLAHERTY, Ian – No(s). 192.14 FLAM, Helena – No(s). 16.1, 62.2 FLECKENSTEIN, Timo – No(s). 234.3

FERNANDEZ-ALONSO, Mercedes – No(s). JS-9.10

FLECKER, Joerg – No(s). 39.4, 342.1

FERRAGINA, Emanuele – No(s). 32.1

FLESKEN, Anaid – No(s). 219.2

FERREIRA DA SILVA, Joao – No(s). 195.5, JS-54.4

FLICKER, Eva – No(s). 658.1

FLEISCHER, Michael – No(s). 529.2

FLIPO, Fabrice – No(s). 538.4

FANTECHI, Federico – No(s). 640.5

FERREIRA DE ALMEIDA, Joao – No(s). 80.3

FARES, Phoenicia – No(s). 496.2

FERREIRA, Fernanda – No(s). 367.5

FARINA, Fatima – No(s). 52.5, 377.4

FERREIRA, Manuela – No(s). 50.2

FARINI, Federico – Session No(s). 315

FERREÑO, Laura – Session No(s). 689

FARINOSI, Manuela – No(s). 582.3

FEVRE, Ralph – No(s). 58.2, 639.4

FARQUHARSON, Karen – No(s). 70.2

FIALA, Valentin – No(s). 469.3

FARRER, James – No(s). 366.3

FIALHO, Carlos – No(s). 333.3, 347.5

FARRO, Antimo Luigi – No(s). 539.5, 549.4

FOLAMI, Olkunle Michael – Session No(s). 370

FIALKOVA, Larisa – No(s). 175.1, 307.5

FOLDES, Ionut – No(s). 490.5

362

www.isa-sociology.org

FLORES, Dorismilda – No(s). 91.1 Session No(s). 540 FLORES, Mariana – No(s). 240.5 FLORIANO RIBEIRO, Pedro J. – No(s). 222.3 FLYTZANIS, Ioannis – No(s). 123.5 FOKAS, Nikos – No(s). 362.5

FOLEY, Benjamin – No(s). JS-70.5

Person Index

Folgueiras – Gatzeva

FOLGUEIRAS, Pilar – No(s). 394.2

FRIED, Gabriela – No(s). 407.1

GALIC, Marko – No(s). 67.3, 348.2

FOLLONI, Andre – No(s). 589.1

FRIEDMAN, Eli – No(s). 508.2, 510.6

GALINDO, Jorge – No(s). 199.5, 383.3

FOLMAR, Steven – No(s). 459.2

GALLEGO, Liliana – No(s). 653.4

FONSECA BAUTISTA, Cesar Dario – No(s). 57.6

FRISINA, Annalisa – Session No(s). 651 FRITSCH, Nina-Sophie – No(s). 256.4

FONSECA, Felipe – No(s). 277.3

FRITZ, Jan Marie – No(s). 526.1, 532.1

GALLELLI, Andrea – No(s). 232.4

FONSECA, Susana – No(s). 680.3

FRITZ, Livia – No(s). 285.3

FONTES, Breno – No(s). 574.5

FRITZ, Mareike – No(s). 390.3

FOOKEN, Insa – No(s). 140.4

FRITZ, Martin – No(s). 241.5, 245.3

GALLON, Luciano – No(s). 578.2, 584.5

FORASTER, MAR – No(s). 285.5

FRUHWIRTH, Angelika – No(s). 364.3

GALUSZKA, Damian – No(s). 159.4

FORD, Cassandra – No(s). 136.2

FU, Yang-chih – No(s). 366.6

GALVEZ, Lina – No(s). 161.6

FORMANKOVA, Lenka – No(s). 192.4

FUCHS, Daniel – No(s). 509.17

GAMBETTA, Diego – No(s). 502.4

FORNOS KLEIN, Stefan – No(s). 411.4, 415.1

FUCHS, Walter – No(s). 144.4

GAMBOA ESTEVES, Abril – No(s). 580.1

GALLEGOS, Luz – No(s). JS-67.4 GALLI, Francesca – No(s). 468.3 GALLISTL, Vera – No(s). 131.6, 133.12

FORSTER, Rudolf – No(s). 185.4

FUCHSLEHNER, Norbert – No(s). 263.13, 263.20

FORSTER, Sarah – No(s). 218.8

FUENTES, Sebastian – No(s). 47.25

GANDA, Abhas – No(s). 181.4

FORTES, Pedro – No(s). 147.2

FUJIMOTO, Masayo – No(s). 593.5

GANDOLFO, Luisa – No(s). JS-22.1

FOSSATI, Flavia – No(s). 245.5

FUJIYOSHI, Keiji – No(s). 317.3

GANGNEUX, Justine – No(s). 395.2

FOSTER, Sue – No(s). 314.12

FUKS, Mario – No(s). 250.1

GANSBERGEN, Anna – No(s). 362.1

FOVERSKOV, Lea – No(s). 596.2

FULDA, Barbara – No(s). 81.3

FOX, Nicole – No(s). 95.1

FULLER, Martin – No(s). 437.3

GANTZIAS, George – No(s). 320.1, 321.5

FOX-HODESS, Caitlin – No(s). 505.4, 510.4

FULLER, Steve – No(s). 18.1

FRAGA, Eugenia – No(s). 405.4

FUNAHASHI, Kenta – No(s). 561.5

FRANCESCHELLI, Michela – No(s). 392.2 FRANCHINA, Loreley – No(s). JS-73.5 FRANCK, Georg – No(s). 215.2, 281.4 FRANCOIS, Karen – No(s). 616.2 Session No(s). 619 FRANÇOIS, Sébastien – No(s). 604.5 FRANCZAK, Karol – No(s). 177.2 FRANGIONI, Tommaso – No(s). 560.7, 653.2 FRANK, Denis – No(s). JS-43.6 FRATSEA, Loukia-Maria – No(s). JS42.7, JS-74.6 FREGIDOU-MALAMA, Maria – No(s). 117.2 Session No(s). JS-25 FREHILL, Lisa – No(s). 282.2, JS-5.3 FREI, Sabina – No(s). 593.4 FREIDIN, Betina – No(s). 196.4 FREIRE, Juliana – No(s). 613.1 FREITAS, Monica – No(s). 194.5, 576.2 FREY, Rosemary – No(s). 314.12

FURTADO, Andre – No(s). JS-10.4 FURUYA, Shota – No(s). 291.3 FUSCO, Antonio – No(s). 525.4 FUSULIER, Bernard – No(s). 346.7 FUSZARA, Malgorzata – No(s). 146.5

GARAIZAR, Jone – No(s). 306.2 GARB, Maja – No(s). 21.1 GARCIA ANDRADE, Adriana – No(s). 383.2 GARCÍA CASTRO, Jorge – No(s). 583.2 GARCIA CHIANG, Armando – No(s). 25.6, JS-20.1 GARCIA DOS SANTOS, Yumi – No(s). 369.27

FUTRELL, Robert – No(s). 334.1

GARCIA MACIAS, Karla Marisol – No(s). 51.5

G

GARCIA MIRON, Rolando – No(s). 147.2

GABALDON-ESTEVAN, Daniel – No(s). 278.5, 281.14

GARCIA ROS, Rafael – No(s). 47.11

GABE, Jonathan – No(s). 192.14 GAGLIARDI, Cristina – No(s). JS-9.3 GAHAN, Luke – No(s). 86.12 GAITSCH, Myriam – No(s). 590.5 GAL-EZER, Miri – No(s). 563.3 Session No(s). 425 GALAN-GUEVARA, Carla Patricia – No(s). 305.3, 580.4 GALANTINO, Maria Grazia – No(s). 377.4 GALCANOVA, Lucie – No(s). 139.3, 303.6

GARCÍA SOMOZA, Mari Sol – No(s). 269.3 GARCIA, Manuel Magno – No(s). 297.4 GARCIA-FAROLDI, Livia – No(s). 77.2, 80.6 GARFINKLE, Irwin – No(s). 482.1 GARITA BONILLA, Nora – No(s). 2.5 GARRAFA TORRES, Olivia – No(s). 119.3 GARRETT, Daniel – No(s). 652.4, 659.2 GARRIDO, Guillermo – No(s). 310.4

FREYER, Bernhard – No(s). 469.3

GALE, Nicola – No(s). 595.2 Session No(s). 196

GARTENLAUB, Andrea – No(s). 225.2

FREYTES FREY, Ada – No(s). 393.2 Session No(s). 397

GALE, Peter – No(s). 69.2

GASPAR, Tamas – No(s). 97.5

FREZZO, Mark – Session No(s). 670, 709

GALENKAMP, Henrike – No(s). 131.5

GASPERSZ, Jeff – No(s). 317.5

GALESI, Davide – No(s). 196.5

GATZEVA, Mariana – No(s). 116.2

www.isa-sociology.org

GASPAR, Sofia – No(s). 356.6, 363.3

363

PERSON INDEX

FREMONT, Allen – No(s). 188.5

FUNKE, Peter – No(s). 545.2

GARABIGE, Alexandra – No(s). 239.8

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

FRANCO, Manuel – No(s). 447.1

FULLER, Trevon – No(s). 298.7

GAMEIRO, Mariana – No(s). 471.5

Gaube – Gordt GAUBE, Veronika – No(s). 305.1

GIBSON, Grant – No(s). 133.8, 140.1

GOISAUF, Melanie – No(s). 185.6

GAUDIO, Giuseppe – No(s). 467.2

GIGLIETTO, Fabio – No(s). 581.5

GOKALP, Deniz – No(s). 230.1, 367.12

GAUDITZ, Leslie – No(s). 91.15

GIGLIOTTI, Angela – No(s). 656.3

GOKBAYRAK, Senay – No(s). 232.5

GAVRILYUK, Tatiana – No(s). 162.3

GIL MCCAWLEY, Diego – No(s). 147.2

GAYET, Cecilia – No(s). 350.1

GILBERT, Leah – No(s). 133.10, JS-26.5

GOLCZYNSKA-GRONDAS, Agnieszka – No(s). 446.5

GAYO, Modesto – No(s). 248.3 GAZIT, Nir – No(s). 447.4 GEARY, John – No(s). 505.7 GEIER, Boris – No(s). 392.11 GEIMER, Alexander – No(s). JS-3.1 GELLERT, Paul – No(s). 25.3 GEMINI, Laura – No(s). 581.5 GENOV, Nikolai – No(s). 103.9 Session No(s). 106 GEORGE CRUZ, Alejandro – No(s). 580.1 GEORGE, Tayo – No(s). 376.4 GEORGIEVA-STANKOVA, Nadezhda – No(s). JS-67.3 GERBAUDO, Paolo – No(s). 11.1, 542.2 GEREKE, Marika – No(s). 91.5, 668.1 GERHARDT, Uta – No(s). 204.2 Session No(s). 210 GERHARZ, Eva – No(s). JS-18.2 GERING, Zsuzsanna – No(s). 97.5 GERLINGER, Thomas – No(s). JS-31.5 GERMANO, Ivo Stefano – No(s). 589.3 List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

GERO, Marton – No(s). 559.8, JS-53.5

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

GERSTENBERG, Susanne – No(s). 345.4 GERUM, Magdalena – No(s). 77.10 GETZ, Shlomo – No(s). 122.3 GEVA, Dorit – No(s). 263.14 GHAFFARY, Gholamreza – No(s). 165.5 GHAZANJANI, Mehri – No(s). 23.2 GHEONDEA ELADI, Alexandra – No(s). 523.5 GHODSI, Setareh – No(s). 49.12 GHOLAMI, Reza – No(s). 50.4 GHOSH, Bhola – No(s). 369.24

GILINSKIY, Yakov – No(s). 333.6

GOLDRING, Luin – No(s). 361.1

GILL, Bernhard – No(s). 303.2

GOLOB, Tea – No(s). 103.2

GILLEARD, Chris – No(s). 128.1, JS-54.5

GOLOMOZ, Cristina – Session No(s). 147

GILLIERON, Gwendolyn – No(s). 443.3

GOLOVKO, Evgeny – No(s). 306.1

GILLIS, Kristien – No(s). 40.1 GILLS, Barry – No(s). 36.3

GOMES, Carlos Andre – No(s). 48.7, 50.8

GILSON, Stephen – Session No(s). 619

GOMES, Christianne – No(s). 167.2 Session No(s). 160

GINSBURG, Ruthie – No(s). 652.2, JS-41.4

GOMES, Iris – No(s). 328.4

GIORDAN, Giuseppe – No(s). 274.7 Session No(s). 264 GIORGETTI, Daniel – No(s). 396.4 GIORGI, Maria Cristina – No(s). 312.5

GOMEZ COLLADO, Martha – No(s). 47.2 GOMEZ QUINTERO, Juan David – No(s). 580.3

GIRASEK, Edmond – No(s). JS-31.4

GONCALVES, Carlos Manuel – No(s). 596.1

GIRAUD, Olivier – No(s). 590.1 GIROLETTI, Toa – No(s). JS-10.7 GISI MARTINS DE ALMEIDA, Bruna – No(s). 317.1 GISLASON, Ingolfur – No(s). 78.8, 559.6 GITLIN, Todd – No(s). 6.4 GIUFFREDI, Rita – No(s). 118.1 GIULLARI, Barbara – No(s). 122.2 GIVATI, Assaf – No(s). 196.3, 597.5

GONÇALVES, Ana – No(s). 435.5

GONZALEZ CHAVEZ, Jaime – No(s). 580.2 GONZALEZ FIDALGO, Eduardo – No(s). 625.4 GONZALEZ HERNANDO, Marcos – No(s). 209.1 GONZALEZ MIGUEL, Fernando – No(s). 583.3 Session No(s). 581

GJERNES, Trude – No(s). JS-12.5

GONZÁLEZ MONROY, Blanca – No(s). 584.3

GKIOUZEPAS, Georgios – No(s). 298.15

GONZALEZ PEREZ, Guillermo – No(s). 482.4, 483.12

GLAS, Marjorie – No(s). 432.4, JS-58.8

GONZALEZ, Lydia – No(s). 371.3

GLASER, Karen – No(s). 129.1

GONZALEZ-RABAGO, Yolanda – No(s). 191.2

GLISCH-SANCHEZ, David – No(s). 495.2

GHOSH, Suchandra – No(s). 697.1

GOCER AKDER, Derya – No(s). 546.3

GIANOLLA, Cristiano – No(s). 117.9, 425.2

GOMES, Silvia – No(s). 329.2, JS-50.6

GOMEZ, Manuel – No(s). 146.1

GOBEL, Hanna – No(s). 614.1

GIANNOPOULOU, Ioanna – No(s). 320.2

GOMES FERREIRA, Jose – No(s). 293.4

GIORGINO, Vincenzo – No(s). 190.1, 289.6

GHOSH, Sreyashi – No(s). 376.5, JS-36.8 GIANEZINI, Kelly – No(s). 43.6

GOLDANI, Ana – No(s). 83.2

GOBEY, Laura – No(s). JS-22.4 GODAZGAR, Hossein – No(s). 274.2 GODENAU, Dirk – No(s). 355.6 GOEL, Shrey – No(s). 193.12 GOERG, Christoph – No(s). 298.10

GONZALEZ, Maria – No(s). 380.6

GONZALVEZ, Anaid – No(s). JS-19.5 GOODMAN, James – No(s). 25.4, 292.6 GOODWIN, Jeffrey – No(s). 550.2, JS-35.1 GORBACHYK, Andrii – No(s). 499.9 GORCIKOVA, Magdalena – No(s). JS-27.7 GORDILLO, Claudia – No(s). 652.3

GIARDULLO, Paolo – No(s). 171.2, 297.5

GOERING, John – No(s). 238.1 GOGGINS, Gary – No(s). 302.4

GORDON-RAPOPORT, Sara – No(s). 124.4

GIARELLI, Guido – No(s). 185.3

GOHN, Maria da Gloria – No(s). 124.1, 559.10

GORDT, Simon – No(s). 269.4

GIBAS, Petr – No(s). 169.7, 702.3 364

www.isa-sociology.org

Gorman – Halafoff

Person Index GORMAN, Bridget – No(s). 195.2 GORMAN, Sean – No(s). 70.2 GORSHKOV, Mikhail – No(s). 249.4, 325.5 GOSWAMI, Alimpana – No(s). 262.15 GOTO, Sayuri – No(s). 573.1 GOTT, Merryn – No(s). 314.12 GOTTFRIED, Heidi – Session No(s). 24, 28 GOTTSCHALL, Karin – No(s). 34.1 GOTTWALD, Markus – No(s). 590.3 GOUJON, Anne – No(s). 491.3 GOULD, Mark – No(s). 266.1 GOURAHA, Manu – No(s). 174.13 GOUVEIA, Lourdes – No(s). 361.2 GOUVIAS, Dionysios – No(s). 54.5 GOVENDER, Jayanathan – No(s). 100.1 GOZEL DURMAZ, Oya – No(s). 638.2 GRABALLOS JR, Edmundo – No(s). 196.2 GRACZYK, Dariusz – No(s). 455.2 GRAF, Patricia – No(s). 213.2 GRAF, Stephanie – No(s). 63.2 GRAFE, Bianca – No(s). 369.12 GRAGES, Christopher – No(s). 243.3, 372.8 GRAHAM, Nicolas – No(s). 25.2 GRAHAME, Kamini – No(s). 72.2, 77.6

GRANDO, Stefano – No(s). 468.3 GRANGEIA, Mario Luis – No(s). 255.6 GRANT, Kaitlin – No(s). 471.2 GRASSIA, Maria Gabriella – No(s). 624.2 GRAZIOSI, Mariolina – No(s). 94.1, 205.4

GÜNTHER, Elisabeth Anna – No(s). 377.5, 499.8

GROSS, Matthias – No(s). 101.1

GUPTA, Achala – No(s). 45.2, 53.3

GROSSI PORTO, Maria Stela – No(s). 328.3 Session No(s). 332

GUPTA, Deepikaa – No(s). 663.1

GROTHE-HAMMER, Michael – No(s). 211.4, 212.7 GROTTI, Raffaele – No(s). JS-64.3 GRUBER, Marika – No(s). 488.3 GRUMMELL, Bernie – No(s). 341.1 GRUTZPALK, Jonas – No(s). 384.6 GUADARRAMA, Rocio – No(s). JS-58.9 GUAJARDO, Gabriel – No(s). 610.4

GUTIERREZ CHONG, Natividad – No(s). 65.1

GUERECA TORRES, Eva Raquel – No(s). 380.2

GUTIÉRREZ, Servando – No(s). 47.31

GUERRA MEJIA, Roberto – No(s). 310.4 GUERRA, Joao – No(s). 293.4, 296.24 GUERRA, Maria – No(s). 361.7 GUERREIRO, Amanda – No(s). 430.5 GUERRERO, Maria Jose – No(s). 137.4, 626.3 GUERRERO, Pablo – No(s). 47.14 GUEVARA-ROMERO, MLourdes – No(s). JS-20.3 GUEYE, Abdoulaye – No(s). 64.1 GUIDOTTI GONZALEZ, Carolina A. – No(s). 137.5, JS-12.3 GUILHERME, Manuela – No(s). 53.2, 315.1

GUTIERREZ, Rodolfo – No(s). 309.2 GUZMAN, Eugenio – No(s). 391.1, 570.2 GVOZDEVA, Elena – No(s). 279.2 GVOZDEVA, Galina – No(s). 279.2

H HA, Jungim – No(s). 442.4 HAARICH, Silke – No(s). 283.2 HAAS, Marita – No(s). JS-59.8 Session No(s). 445 HAAS, Willi – No(s). 298.10, 298.22 HABTI, Driss – No(s). JS-74.3 HABU, Junko – No(s). 304.3 HADAR, Maya – No(s). 219.3

GUILLAUME, Olivier – No(s). JS-21.8, JS-34.8

HADJICOSTANDI, Joanna – No(s). 112.3

GUILLEMI, Silvia – No(s). 574.1

HADLER, Markus – No(s). 219.2, 297.3 Session No(s). 219

GUIMARAES, Nadya – No(s). 96.1

GRESSGARD, Randi – No(s). 61.4

GUKELBERGER, Sandrine – No(s). 105.2, 107.4 GULER, Abdurrahim – No(s). JS-60.2 GULERCE, Hakan – No(s). 262.5 GULIYEV, Rufat – No(s). 152.5 GULSHETTY, Basawaraj – No(s). 166.1

GRONOW, Antti – No(s). 292.4 Session No(s). 293

GUMBRELL-MCCORMICK, Rebecca – No(s). JS-72.1 Session No(s). 509

GROSS, Eva – No(s). 419.6

GUNEL, Ozan – No(s). 436.2 www.isa-sociology.org

HAERI MAZANDERANI, Fawzia – No(s). 399.5 HAGEN, Malfrid Irene – No(s). 434.2 HAGOEL, Lea – No(s). 188.6, JS-33.1 HAHN, Kornelia – No(s). 611.1, 617.2 HAIDAR, Victoria – No(s). 405.4 HAIKKOLA, Lotta – No(s). 390.1 HAINDORFER, Raimund – No(s). 365.1 HAJDU, Gabor – No(s). 456.2, 502.2 HAJDU, Tamas – No(s). 456.2, 626.5 HAJHOSSEINI, Tahereh – No(s). 379.6 HALAFOFF, Anna – No(s). 275.7 Session No(s). 263 365

PERSON INDEX

GRISOTTI, Marcia – No(s). 659.6

GUSTAFSSON, Karin – No(s). 304.1

GUTIERREZ, Jairo – No(s). 584.5

GUIMARAES, Sonia – No(s). 287.2

GRININ, Leonid – No(s). 640.1, 640.3

GUSEVA, Alya – No(s). 29.3, 77.8

GUTIERREZ, Filomin – No(s). 369.4

GREMIGNI, Elena – No(s). 422.2

GRININ, Anton – No(s). 640.1, 640.3

GUROVA, Olga – No(s). 439.1

GUENTHER, Julia – No(s). 228.3, 433.5

GUIMARAES, Jamile – No(s). 610.1, 610.6

GRINDEL, Elisabeth – No(s). 365.4

GURNEY, Eleanor – No(s). 50.3

GUELL, Berta – No(s). 239.6, 340.4

GREENE, Neil – No(s). 684.4

GRINBERGA, Liga – No(s). 659.1

GUPTA, Rajiv – No(s). 296.1

GUELKER, Silke – No(s). 267.3

GUIMARAES, Antonio – No(s). 100.2

GRIERA, Mar – No(s). 259.2, 272.2

GUPTA, Namita – No(s). 296.1, 670.2

GUTIERREZ RODRIGUEZ, Encarnacion – Session No(s). 372

GUEDES, Cristiane – No(s). 298.16

GREEN, JUDY, Judy – No(s). JS-64.4 GREENFIELDS, Margaret – No(s). 650.1

GUPTA, Garima – No(s). 158.6

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

GRAHAME, Peter – No(s). 72.2, 704.1 Session No(s). 705

GROSS, Martin – No(s). 494.4, JS-61.2

Halawa – Hetal HALAWA, Mateusz – No(s). 29.2 Session No(s). 654

HARTH, Jonathan – No(s). 164.2, 274.3

HEIS, Alexandra – No(s). JS-18.1

HALBRITTER, Luciana – No(s). 324.3

HARTMANN, Ivar – No(s). 143.2

HALL, John R. – No(s). 220.1

HARTNELL, Helen – No(s). 152.1

HELLAND, Haavar – No(s). 590.2

HALLER, Max – Session No(s). 4

HASEGAWA, Koichi – No(s). 294.1, 302.6

HALLEY, Jeffrey – No(s). 430.1

HASELSTEINER, Edeltraud – No(s). 305.1

HALPERIN, Dafna – No(s). 137.8 HALTON, Eugene – No(s). 270.1 HALVORSEN, Rune – No(s). 240.3, 696.3 HAM, Julie – No(s). JS-17.4 HAMA, Hideo – No(s). 406.3 HAMADA, Hiroshi – No(s). 523.3 HAMANISHI, Eiji – Session No(s). 911, 91 HAMAOKA, Hakushi – No(s). 313.6, 317.6 HAMDY, Iman – No(s). 269.1 HAMEED, Azhar – No(s). 668.2 HAMEL, Christelle – No(s). 485.1 HAMILTON, Lawrence – No(s). 297.1 HAMMER, Michael – No(s). 91.16 HAMMERSHOJ, Lars Geer – No(s). 93.1, JS-66.1 HAMMERSLEV, Ole – No(s). 143.1 HAMORI, Adam – No(s). 263.5 HAN, Sam – No(s). 199.1, 267.1 List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

HAN, Wen-Jui – No(s). 346.6, 569.3

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

HASHEMI, Zia – No(s). 51.6 HASHIMOTO, Akiko – No(s). 95.2 HASSENTEUFEL, Patrick – No(s). JS-31.5 HASSLER, Benedikt – No(s). 345.2 HATANAKA, Maki – No(s). 470.1, 471.4

HEJZLAROVA, Eva – No(s). 192.4 HELLING, Ingeborg – No(s). 210.1 HELLSTRÖM MUHLI, Ulla – No(s). 569.2, 596.7 HELMAN, Sara – No(s). 558.1 Session No(s). 553 HELVE, Helena – No(s). 49.15 Session No(s). 398 HENAWAY, Mostafa – No(s). 506.1 HENDRIKS, Martijn – No(s). 625.3, JS-60.1 Session No(s). JS-69 HENKE, Jacqueline – No(s). 427.2

HATHAZY, Paul Carlos – Session No(s). 332

HENKEL, Rudiger – No(s). JS-31.5

HATIPOGLU AYDIN, Duygu – No(s). 146.2

HENNIGAN, Brian – No(s). 259.1

HATTON, Peter – No(s). JS-45.2 HAUFE, Nadine – No(s). 296.15 HAUSKNOST, Daniel – No(s). 298.22 HAVAS, Adam – No(s). 432.3 HAVITZ, Mark – No(s). 161.5 HAWARD, Tom – No(s). 657.2 HAWTHORNE, Lesleyanne – No(s). 187.3, 191.4 HAYASHI, Naoki – No(s). 314.13 HAYES, Debra – No(s). JS-61.1

HENLE, Steven – No(s). 165.4 HENRIQUEZ, Narda – No(s). 540.9 HENSE, Andrea – No(s). 32.2 HENTGES, Gudrun – No(s). 60.1 HENWOOD, Flis – No(s). 185.2, 186.4 HEO, Nayoung – No(s). 489.6 HERAN CUBILLOS, Tamara – No(s). 111.3 HERBERT, David – No(s). 178.1 HERING, Linda – No(s). 645.7 HERMAN, Aleksandra – No(s). 367.16 HERMANE, Agnese – No(s). 117.7

HAN, Ziqiang – No(s). 465.5

HAYNES-MASLOW, Lindsey – No(s). 190.2

HANCOCK, Rosemary – No(s). 263.2, 275.4

HAZAMA, Itsuhiro – Session No(s). 612, 619

HERMANS, Maarten – No(s). 122.4

HANK, Karsten – No(s). JS-7.2

HE, Rong – No(s). 99.1

HANSEN, Janna – No(s). 178.1

HERMOVA, Ivana – No(s). 702.2

HEAD, Jenny – No(s). 129.4

HARA, Mariko – No(s). 430.4

HEALY, Amy – No(s). 224.2

HERNÁNDEZ AGUILAR, Luis – No(s). JS-65.4

HARA, Toshihiko – No(s). 483.10

HEAPHY, Brian – No(s). 86.1

HARADA, Hiroo – No(s). 620.2

HEATH, Melanie – No(s). 379.4

HARADA, Shun – No(s). 454.2

HEBBLETHWAITE, Shannon – No(s). 133.1

HARAGUS, Paul-Teodor – No(s). 43.1, 47.3

HECHT, Katharina – No(s). JS-8.2

HARBOUN, Irit – No(s). 519.1

HEDSTROM, Peter – No(s). 520.4

HARING, Sabine – No(s). 564.4

HEER, Barbara – Session No(s). JS-11

HARINGTON, Phil – No(s). 593.6, 597.4 HARMAN, Vicki – No(s). 166.6 Session No(s). 157 HARO MATAS, MariVí – No(s). JS-42.3 HARRIS, Catherine – No(s). 75.7 HARRIS, Joseph Ambrose – No(s). 237.1 HARRITS, Gitte Sommer – No(s). 597.1 HART, Caroline – No(s). 186.1

HEIDLER, Julia – No(s). 367.3 HEIKKILA, Riie – No(s). 247.1, 635.3 HEIKKINEN, Mervi – No(s). 381.5 HEIKKINEN, Satu – No(s). JS-54.3 HEIL, Reinhard – No(s). 289.4 HEIMANN, Thorsten – No(s). 461.2 HEIMGARTNER, Arno – No(s). 400.9 HEINHOLD, Chris – No(s). 392.12 HEINRICHS, Harald – No(s). 298.13 HEINZ, Jana – No(s). 45.1

366

www.isa-sociology.org

HERMANN, Christoph – No(s). 505.3 HERMO, Javier – No(s). 592.2, JS-68.5

HERNANDEZ ARENCIBIA, Raynier – No(s). JS-9.9 HERNANDEZ CASAS, David – No(s). 586.4 HERNANDEZ DOBON, Francesc Jesus – No(s). 47.11 HERNANDEZ GOMEZ, Carlos Manuel – No(s). 310.4 HERNANDEZ REYES, Nancy – No(s). 47.9 HERNANDEZ-LEON, Ruben – No(s). 352.2 HERRERO, Marta – No(s). 218.2, 431.2 HERTRICH, Veronique – No(s). 485.4 HESS, Andreas – No(s). 204.3 HESSEL, Philipp – No(s). JS-64.1 HETAL, Ramani – No(s). 369.21, 594.10

Heuberger – Ike

Person Index HEUBERGER, Richard – No(s). 388.3

HOGE, Thomas – No(s). 120.2

HEYBERGER, Dominique – No(s). 449.2

HOGERBRUGGE, Martijn – No(s). 117.3

HEYNE, Stefanie – No(s). JS-5.2

HOGG, Robert – No(s). 574.1

HUANG, Jia-Li – No(s). 42.2

HEYSE, Liesbet – No(s). 218.3, 516.2

HOGSBRO, Kjeld – No(s). 568.3, 696.2

HUANG, Shih-Kai – No(s). 455.4

HOHMANN, Marco – No(s). 214.2

HUDELIST, Andreas – No(s). 180.4

HICKMAN, Mary – No(s). 645.6 HIDIR, Naz – No(s). 78.1 HIELSCHER, Sabine – No(s). 303.3 HIETANEN, Joel – No(s). 252.4 HIGGS, Paul – No(s). 128.1, JS-54.5 HIGLEY, John – No(s). 255.2 HIGUCHI, Kumiko – No(s). 50.9 HIGUCHI, Mari – No(s). 314.19 HILBERG, Eva – No(s). 186.2 HILBRECHT, Margo – No(s). 160.2, 161.3 HILL, Lloyd – No(s). 308.5 HILL, Nicholas – No(s). 186.1 HILLMAN, Alexandra – No(s). 684.5 HINRICHSEN, Hendrik – No(s). 445.3 HINZ, Thomas – No(s). 494.5 HIPP, Lena – Session No(s). 79 HIRAFUJI, Kikuko – No(s). 276.2 HIRANO, Yuko – No(s). 187.6, 187.7 HIRAOKA, Koichi – No(s). 243.2, JS-9.2 HIRATA, Helena – No(s). 96.1 HIRAYAMA, Maki – No(s). 640.6 HISANO, Shuji – No(s). 470.5 HITOMI, Yasuhiro – No(s). 359.2 HJELHOLT, Morten – No(s). 582.1 HLEBEC, Valentina – No(s). JS-9.7 HO, Joy Qi Yi – No(s). 653.3 HO, Season – No(s). 157.9 HO, Wai-Chung – No(s). 47.4 HOBDEN, Claire – No(s). 503.2 HOCHMAN, Oshrat – No(s). 48.20 HODGE, Carel – No(s). 240.4 HOEBEL, Jens – No(s). 193.19 HOELSCHER, Michael – No(s). JS-47.4

HOLLER, Ekaterina – No(s). JS-62.3 HOLLERAN, Max – No(s). 109.5, 435.1 HOLLIDAY, Adrian – No(s). 307.1

HUGHES, Tracey – No(s). 52.2

HUISMAN, Martijn – No(s). 136.4

HOLMWOOD, John – No(s). 408.2 Session No(s). 11, 711

HUMPHREY, Michael – No(s). 105.4

HOLST, Elke – No(s). 369.2

HUNEFELD, Lena – No(s). 345.4, 568.6

HOLTGREWE, Ursula – No(s). 4.2

HUNGER, Ina – No(s). 610.3

HOLTMANN, Catherine – No(s). 381.2, 262.13

HUNNER-KREISEL, Christine – No(s). 609.4

HOLZHACKER, Ronald – No(s). 193.8

HURD CLARKE, Laura – No(s). 140.7

HOMMERICH, Carola – No(s). 523.4

HUSSAIN, Javed – No(s). 20.3, 20.5

HONEYWILL, Evelyn – No(s). 88.6, 174.11

HUSSAIN, Jawad – No(s). 20.3, 20.5

HONJI, Yukichi – No(s). 210.2 HONMA, Mari – No(s). 528.3

HUTTER, Michael – No(s). 280.8, 432.2

HONWANA, Alcinda – No(s). 4.1

HVINDEN, Bjorn – No(s). 240.3, 454.6

HOOR, Dorottya – No(s). 570.4

HYDE, Martin – No(s). 117.3, 129.3

HOPPE, Trevor – No(s). 686.1

HYGGEN, Christer – No(s). 397.3

HORA, Ondrej – No(s). 397.11

HYLMÖ, Anders – No(s). 281.10

HORII, Mitsutoshi – Session No(s). 267

HYMAN, Richard – No(s). 506.5 Session No(s). 505

HORIKAWA, Saburo – No(s). 300.4 HORNE, John – No(s). 11.4 HORNUNG, Bernd – No(s). 586.2 Session No(s). 586 HORST, Heather – No(s). 30.3

HUTTER, Hans-Peter – No(s). 456.5

I IANNI, Aurea – No(s). 106.8 IANOS, Adelina – No(s). 306.3

HORTALE, Virginia – No(s). JS-26.2

IBANEZ, Francisco – No(s). 281.15

HOSHINO, Kayo – No(s). 125.2

IBARRA URIBE, Luz Marina – No(s). 47.14, 47.29

HOSOGAYA, Nobuko – No(s). 345.3 HOSOKAWA, Fumiko – No(s). 128.5 HOSSAIN, Mashrur – No(s). 431.3, 705.3

HOVERMANN, Andreas – No(s). 419.6

HOFFMANN, Roman – No(s). 386.2, JS-31.3

HOWARD, Sarah – No(s). 384.7, 387.2 HOWARD-WAGNER, Deirdre – No(s). 67.1, JS-25.1 HSIAO, Wei-Hsin – No(s). 581.1 HSU, Eric – No(s). 464.3, 616.1 HSUNG, Ray-May – No(s). 515.5 HU, Shu – No(s). 76.4 www.isa-sociology.org

IBRAGIMOVA, Dilyara – No(s). 77.8 IBRAHIM, Suleman – No(s). 86.4 IDO, Satoshi – No(s). 103.7 IDOWU, Adenike – No(s). JS-36.1, JS-66.6 IERVESE, Vittorio – No(s). 603.4 IGBANOI, Leo – No(s). JS-38.4 IGLESIAS, Katia – No(s). 624.1 IGNAZI, Piero – No(s). 223.3 IGNJATOVIC, Suzana – No(s). 520.5, 367.19 II, Takayuki – No(s). 457.3 IJAZ, Nadine – No(s). 598.10 IKE, Shuichirou – No(s). 478.2 367

PERSON INDEX

HOULE, France – No(s). 598.11

HOFSTAETTER, Lukas – No(s). 214.1

HUDSON, Marc – No(s). 544.4

HOLLOWAY, Becky – No(s). 397.13

HOFFMANN, Rasmus – No(s). 136.5, JS-57.1

HOFMÄNNER, Alexandra – Session No(s). 416

HUDSON, Chris – No(s). 382.3

HUGHEY, Matthew – No(s). 66.5, 419.4

HOF, Helena – No(s). JS-43.1

HOFMANN, Julia – No(s). 226.2, 505.1

HUANG, Yan – No(s). 509.23

HOLLINSHEAD, Graham – No(s). 38.3

HOSSEINI FARADONBEH, Seyed A. – No(s). 36.3, 493.5

HOFKIRCHNER, Wolfgang – No(s). 577.2

HUALDE, Alfredo – No(s). 340.3

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

HIRATA, Tomohisa – No(s). 359.11

HOLDSWORTH, Clare – No(s). 397.1

HUAITA ALFARO, Ana Maria – No(s). 699.3

Ilaria – Juozeliuniene ILARIA, Beretta – No(s). JS-71.4

IWAI, Noriko – No(s). 297.7

JERNE, Christina – No(s). 541.1

ILERI, Esin – No(s). 551.3, 559.14 Session No(s). 538

IWASAKI, Yoshitaka – No(s). 157.2

JETZKOWITZ, Jens – No(s). 295.2

ILIE, Simona – No(s). 49.18

IYER, Krishna Gopal – No(s). 662.1 IZAGUIRRE, Lorena – No(s). 441.3

JEVTIC, Miroljub – Session No(s). 262

ILIEVA-TRICHKOVA, Petya – No(s). 52.6, 58.1 ILIN, Vladimir – No(s). 9.5, 326.2

IZQUIERDO, Santiago – No(s). 314.16

JEZIERSKA, Katarzyna – No(s). JS-47.2 JIANG, Jin – No(s). 46.6 JIMENEZ DELGADO, Maria – No(s). 50.7, 481.3

INFANTINO, Federica – No(s). 355.4

J

INGHAM, Valerie – No(s). 454.1

JABAR, Melvin – No(s). 568.5, 571.4

JIMENEZ GUAMAN, Richard – No(s). 162.1 Session No(s). 162

INGLE, Arpana – No(s). 271.1

JACOB, W. James – No(s). 42.5

INK, Marion – No(s). JS-3.2

JACOBS, Anna – No(s). 537.1

INOUE, Ema – No(s). 400.10

JACOBSEN, Heike – No(s). 213.2

INOUE, Hiroko – No(s). 257.4, 256.13 Session No(s). 33

JACQMIN, Arianna – No(s). 146.6

INAGAKI, Yusuke – No(s). 502.1

INOUYE, Keika – No(s). 195.5, JS-54.4 INOWLOCKI, Lena – No(s). JS-28.1 Session No(s). 448 IONASCU, Alexandra – No(s). 222.5 IORIO, Gennaro – No(s). 232.4 IOVINO, Rossella – No(s). 317.2

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

IZARRA, Douglas – No(s). 57.4 IZUHARA, Misa – No(s). 72.7

IMHONOPI, David – No(s). 397.15

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

JADHAV, Vikas – No(s). 154.8 JAGER, Justin – No(s). JS-19.4 JAHAN, Israt – No(s). 481.2 JAHAN, Mehraj – No(s). 112.2 JAIME-CASTILLO, Antonio M. – No(s). 522.2, JS-9.10

IOVU, Mihai – No(s). 47.3

JAIN, Rashmi – No(s). 170.2 Session No(s). 161

IRIZARRY, Yasmiyn – No(s). 46.2

JAIN, Seema – No(s). 174.2

IRUONAGBE, Charles – No(s). 476.1

JAMALI, Syed – No(s). 49.11

ISAAC, Larry – No(s). 507.1, 537.1

JANG, Hyojin – No(s). 243.1

ISAKSEN, Lise Widding – No(s). 75.1 ISENGARD, Bettina – No(s). 88.3

JANSEN, Giedo – No(s). 224.4 Session No(s). 224

ISHAIRZAY, Sunil – No(s). JS-18.3

JANSEN, Till – No(s). 208.1, 577.4

ISHIDA, Atsushi – No(s). 523.2

JANSEN, Zanetta – No(s). 176.3, JS-20.2

ISHIDA, Hiroshi – No(s). 82.3 ISHIDA, Saori – No(s). 157.5 ISHIGAKI, Takashi – No(s). 427.5 ISHIJIMA, Kentaro – No(s). 531.4 ISHIZAKA, Shinya – No(s). 561.3 ISLAM, Mohammad – No(s). 481.2 ISMAIL, Abdirashid – No(s). JS-69.5 ISMAILOV, Orkhan – No(s). 456.4 ITANI, Bayan – No(s). 260.6 ITO, Kenichi – No(s). 395.8 ITO, Ruri – No(s). 96.3 ITO, Takehiko – No(s). 528.3 ITOH, Mayuko – No(s). 70.3 ITURRIAGA, Eugenia – No(s). 63.1 IUGULESCU LESTRADE, Raluca – No(s). JS-26.8 IVAN, Loredana – No(s). 133.1 IVANCHEVA, Mariya – No(s). 373.5 IVANOV, Dmitry – No(s). 108.5, 424.5 IVANOVA, Elena – No(s). 593.7 IVANOVA, Elena A. – No(s). 281.7 IVERSEN, Clara – No(s). 683.4 368

JAQUES, Nathalie – No(s). 506.4 JARDIM, Luciane – No(s). 574.5

JIMENEZ GUZMAN, Jaime – No(s). 277.2 JIMENEZ ROGER, Beatriz – No(s). 135.10 JIMENEZ VASQUEZ, Mariela – No(s). 47.17 JIMENEZ, Alvaro – No(s). JS-66.3 JIMENEZ-SOLOMON, Oscar – No(s). 571.5 JING-SCHMIDT, Zhuo – No(s). JS-50.5 JOAS, Hans – No(s). 265.3 JOHANSSON, Richard – No(s). 596.7 JOHNSON, Eleanor – No(s). JS-34.5 JOHNSTON ATA’ATA, Kate – No(s). 186.1 JOKELA-PANSINI, Maaret – No(s). 377.1 JONES, Chantal – No(s). 49.5 JONES, Hannah – No(s). 65.3 JONES, Helen – No(s). 400.3 JONES, Ian – No(s). 117.3 JONES, Ian Rees – No(s). JS-54.5 JONES, Jaye – No(s). 373.8

JARENO-RUIZ, Diana – No(s). 50.7

JONES, Katy – No(s). 245.2

JARMOUNI, Rachid – No(s). 392.8, 263.12

JONGERDEN, Joost – No(s). 470.5 JORDAN, Jamie – No(s). 505.2

JASILIONIS, Domantas – No(s). 486.2

JORG, Ton – No(s). 589.5

JASINSKI, Mikolaj – No(s). 521.4

JORGENSON, Andrew – No(s). 109.1

JASNY, Lorien – No(s). 547.1

JOSHI, Madhura – No(s). 434.3

JASSO, Guillermina – No(s). 383.7, 494.1 Session No(s). 17

JOVEN, Keith Aaron – No(s). 403.3

JAUK, Daniela – No(s). 532.3, 367.10 JAVADI YEGANEH, Mohammad Reza – No(s). 177.6 JDERU, Gabriel – No(s). 611.4 JEAN-GILLES, Michele – No(s). 487.2 JEANES, Ruth – No(s). 70.2 JEDLIKOWSKA, Dorota – No(s). 93.2 JENA, Manoj – No(s). JS-32.1 JENSEN, Tim – No(s). 268.2 JEPPESEN, Sandra – No(s). 545.3 JEPSON, Allan – No(s). 158.1 www.isa-sociology.org

JUAN, Hsiao-Mei – No(s). 576.5, 585.5 JUBANY, Olga – No(s). 239.6 JUDGES, Rebecca – No(s). 133.3 JUKKALA, Tanya – No(s). 418.2 JUMNIANPOL, Surangrut – No(s). 399.4 JUNG, Chungse – No(s). 565.4 JUNG, Sungwoong – No(s). 470.5 JUNIOR, Gilberto – No(s). 367.23 JUNQUEIRA, Luis – No(s). 280.5 JUOZELIUNIENE, Irena – No(s). 72.5, 86.3

Person Index

Jurca – Kim

JURCA, Ricardo de Lima – No(s). 106.8, 573.1

KARAKAYALI, Serhat – No(s). 543.1

KELES, Janroj Yilmaz – No(s). 358.4, 263.11

JURCZYK, Karin – No(s). 77.10

KARAMI, Nasser – No(s). 291.4 KARAPEHLIVAN, Funda – No(s). 390.16

KELLER, Reiner – No(s). 12.3 KELLNER, Christiane – No(s). 337.5

KARASZ, Daniele – No(s). 314.8

KELLY, Brian C. – No(s). 188.2

KARDOV, Kruno – No(s). 512.5

KELLY, Christine – No(s). 218.7

KARKLINA, Ieva – No(s). 48.13

KELMAN, Ilan – No(s). 576.2

KARLSSON, Bjorn – No(s). 541.6

KEMP, Candace – No(s). 72.4

KARNER, Christian – No(s). JS-67.1 KARNER, Tracy Xavia – No(s). 215.4

KEMP, Stephen – No(s). 208.2 Session No(s). 199

KARSCH, Fabian – No(s). 337.2 Session No(s). 201

KENIG, Ofer – No(s). 222.4 KENNEDY, Erin – No(s). 241.4

KARSTEN, Andreas – No(s). 399.2, 400.1

KENNY, Bridget – No(s). 509.9 Session No(s). 513

KASEARU, Kairi – No(s). 77.13

KENT SERNA, Rollin – No(s). 278.1, JS-13.4

JUUL, Soeren – No(s). 568.3

K K. B, Chandrika – No(s). 298.19 KAASCH, Alexandra – No(s). 236.3, 244.1 KABBANJI, Lama – No(s). 362.4 KADI, Selma – No(s). 133.14 KADOBAYASHI, Michiko – No(s). 528.3 KADOWAKI, Joy – No(s). 188.2 KADRI, Michele – No(s). 574.4 KAHANCOVA, Marta – No(s). 512.1 KAHLE, Lena – No(s). 445.6 KAIDA, Lisa – No(s). JS-17.1 KAISER, Nicole – No(s). 47.19 KALA, Lukas – No(s). 303.6 KALASHNIKOVA, Margarita – No(s). 519.5, 530.3 KALBERG, Stephen – Session No(s). 266 KALBFLEISCH, Lindsay – No(s). 160.2

KASHANIPOUR, Jasmin – No(s). 615.3 KASSIR, Alexandra – No(s). JS-56.2 KASTNER, Fatima – No(s). 144.3 KASUMU, Taiwo – No(s). 397.15

KERIVEL, Aude – No(s). 610.5, 499.10 KERPEN, Daniel – No(s). 280.7, 582.2 KERR, Thomas – No(s). 574.1

KATAMBWE, Jo – No(s). 177.4

KESHET, Yael – No(s). 70.1

KATCHANOV, Yurij – No(s). 277.4, 590.4

KESICI, Ozgecan – No(s). 638.1 KESTER, Gerard – No(s). 126.1

KATERNY, Ilya – No(s). 203.4

KETTE, Sven – No(s). 211.5, 218.1

KATO, Gentaro – No(s). 314.21

KEUZENKAMP, Saskia – No(s). 231.1, JS-28.6

KATTAKAYAM, Jacob – No(s). 137.6

KEVKHISHVILI, Marina – No(s). 532.4

KATZ, Stephen – No(s). 133.4 Session No(s). 128

KHAIRNAR, Dilip – No(s). 166.8, 472.1 KHAZAEI, Faten – No(s). 68.6

KAUFMAN, Gayle – No(s). 87.1, 77.12

KHAZAIE, Razieh – No(s). 291.4

KALFA TOPATES, Aslican – No(s). 359.6

KAUR, Ramandeep – No(s). 481.1

KHODZHAEVA, Ekaterina – No(s). 143.3

KALL, Kairit – No(s). 509.5 KALLMAN, Meghan – No(s). 104.4

KAURANEN, Ilkka – No(s). 277.1, JS-10.1

KAMANO, Saori – No(s). JS-7.3

KAUSHAL, Chandan – No(s). 303.4

KAMERADE, Daiga – No(s). 346.5

KAVACIK, Zuhal – No(s). 439.2, JS-3.1

KAMGANG, Serge – No(s). 298.7

KAVADA, Anastasia – No(s). 542.3

KAMIYAMA, Hideki – No(s). 489.1

KAWABATA, Tomoko – No(s). 367.20

KHUNOU, Grace – No(s). 493.1

KAMMERER, Marlene – No(s). 298.17

KAWAGUCHI, Yoshichika – No(s). 187.5

KIBRIA, Nazli – No(s). 67.5, 608.1 KIEHNE, Elizabeth – No(s). JS-69.1

KAWASAKI, Kenichi – No(s). 431.1

KIERSZTYN, Anna – No(s). 58.3, 676.5

KALERANTE, Evaggelia – No(s). 397.14

KANAI, Masayuki – No(s). 522.4 KANASZ, Tatiana – No(s). 500.5 KANDORI, Michihiro – No(s). 519.4 KANEKO, Masahiko – No(s). JS-31.8 KANKONDE, Peter – No(s). 190.3 KANTAR, Sally – No(s). 393.4 KANTARA, Argyro – No(s). 327.3 KANTASALMI, Kari – No(s). 212.3 KAO, Shu-Fen – No(s). 300.1, 298.14 KARABCHUK, Tatiana – No(s). 347.3 KARADE, Jagan – No(s). 483.9, 492.2 KARADE, Sujata – No(s). 490.4 KARAKAYA, Oguzcan – No(s). JS-36.7

KAWASHIMA, Kumiko – No(s). 342.2 KAYA, Hamiyet – No(s). 245.4 KAYHAN, Gulin – No(s). 194.7 KAZEPOV, Yuri – No(s). 11.3, 297.5 KAZIBONI, Anthony – No(s). 527.4 Session No(s). 526 KAZUN, Anastasiia – No(s). 327.2 KAZUN, Anton – No(s). 325.1 KEATING, Kathryn – No(s). 373.5 KEDRA, Joanna – No(s). 657.3 KEE, Pookong – No(s). 70.3 KEENAN, Colman – No(s). 678.1 www.isa-sociology.org

KHONDKER, Habibul – No(s). 112.2 Session No(s). 18 KHOO, Su-ming – No(s). 110.4 KHOR, Diana – No(s). JS-7.3 KHOURY, Stefanie – No(s). 151.1

KIJONKA, Justyna – No(s). 365.2 KIKUZAWA, Saeko – No(s). 192.7 KILIAN, Reinhold – No(s). 569.4, 570.6 KILIC, Aykut – No(s). 506.3 KILIC, Zeynep – No(s). 608.3 KILKEY, Majella – No(s). 75.9

PERSON INDEX

KANTER, Heike – No(s). 654.5

KAUR, Swarnjit – No(s). 663.1

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

KATZ, Ruth – No(s). 137.8

KALEKIN-FISHMAN, Devorah – No(s). 419.1

KIM, Ann – No(s). 356.8, 360.1 KIM, Elena – No(s). 695.3 KIM, Eunyeong – No(s). 315.9 KIM, Hannah – No(s). JS-55.4 KIM, Jeehun – No(s). JS-69.4 369

Kim – Krell KIM, Jung-Eun – No(s). 58.4 KIM, Kyungju – No(s). 353.3 KIM, Minzee – No(s). 671.3 KIM, Tae-Sik – No(s). 635.2 KIM, Yang-Sook – No(s). JS-49.2 KIMURA, Eriko – No(s). 391.10 KIMURA, Kunihiro – No(s). 518.5 KING, Neal – No(s). 140.6 KINK, Susanne – No(s). JS-5.1 KINOSHITA, Shu – No(s). JS-12.7 KIPGEN, Ngamjahao – No(s). 228.1, 298.1 KIRALY, Gabor – No(s). 97.5 KIRCHHOFF, Maren – No(s). 543.3 KIRCHHOFF, Nicole – No(s). 78.9, 385.4 KIRCHNER, Babette – No(s). 178.3, 391.4 KIRILINA, Nadezda – No(s). 398.4 KIRILINA, Tatiana – No(s). 398.4 KIRITANI, Mami – No(s). 192.7 KIRKPATRICK, Ian – No(s). JS-34.1 KIRSCHBAUM, Charles – No(s). 56.4, 554.2

PERSON INDEX

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

KIRSCHNER, Heiko – No(s). 683.5

Person Index KNOEBL, Wolfgang – No(s). 411.1, 646.3 Session No(s). 15 KNUTAGARD, Marcus – No(s). 239.4 KOBAYASHI, Jun – No(s). 518.1, 523.4 KOBAYASHI, Tazuko – No(s). 444.5 KOBLBAUER, Christina – No(s). 397.10 KOCHBERG, Searle – No(s). 650.1 KOECK, Verena – No(s). 384.3 KOEHLER, Gabriele – No(s). 236.3 KOENIG, Oliver – No(s). 117.5 KOESZEGI, Sabine T. – No(s). 377.5 KOETTIG, Michaela – Session No(s). 449, 453 KÖHL, Margarita – No(s). JS-4.4 KOHLER, Sina-Mareen – No(s). 384.9 KOHN, Ayelet – No(s). 654.1, JS-4.1 KOIKE, Yasushi – No(s). 276.5 KOIVULA, Aki – No(s). 165.1, JS-63.1 KOJIMA, Hiroshi – No(s). 356.4, JS-42.6 KOJIMA, Shinji – No(s). 348.3, 509.14 KOKA, Showkat – No(s). 174.13 KOKANOVIC, Renata – No(s). 186.1

KISEMBE DARKWAH, Everlyn – No(s). 307.4 Session No(s). 315

KOLAHI, Mohammad Reza – No(s). 263.22

KITTEL, Bernhard – No(s). 386.2, 390.12

KOLCZYNSKA, Marta – No(s). 388.4

KITTELSEN ROBERG, Karl Ingar – No(s). 590.8 KITZLER, Martin – No(s). JS-18.1 KIVISTO, Peter – No(s). 359.1, 364.4 KIVIVUORI, Janne – No(s). 336.1 KJELLMAN, Arne – No(s). 585.1 KJÆMPENES, Wenche – No(s). 596.3

KOLB, Bettina – No(s). JS-45.3 KOLLAND, Franz – No(s). 131.6, 133.12 KOLTAI, Julia – No(s). 502.2

KOPPER, Akos – No(s). 559.8, JS-53.5 KORBER, Stefan – No(s). JS-34.6 KORBIEL, Izabela – No(s). 171.4 KORDASIEWICZ, Anna – No(s). 75.5 KORNELAKIS, Andreas – No(s). 599.4 KOROLEVA, Ilze – No(s). 48.13 KOROTAYEV, Andrey – No(s). 640.2 KORS, Jillis – No(s). JS-25.2 KORTENDIEK, Philipp – No(s). 501.2 KORZENIEWICZ, Roberto P – No(s). 643.3 KOSKELA, Vesa – No(s). 318.2 KOSKINEN, Raija – No(s). 578.4 KOSMINSKY, Ethel – No(s). 607.4 Session No(s). 608 KOSTIUCHENKO, Tetiana – No(s). JS-63.3 KOSYGINA, Larisa – No(s). 361.6 KOTHARI, Catherine – No(s). 188.7 KOTOV, Vladislav – No(s). 315.3 KOTZE, Paul – No(s). 208.3 KOUBEK, Martin – No(s). 559.13 KOUKIADAKI, Aristea – No(s). 512.1 KOVACHEVA, Siyka – No(s). 390.7, 393.1 KOVACS, Eszter – No(s). JS-31.4 KOVACS, Reka – No(s). JS-31.4 KOVES, Alexandra – No(s). 97.5 KOWALCZYK, Beata – No(s). JS-58.4 KOWALEWSKI, Maciej – No(s). JS-53.2

KOMBAROV, Vyacheslav – No(s). 409.3

KOZHANOV, Andrey – No(s). 52.8 KOZHISSERI, Deepa – No(s). 476.4

KOMENDANT-BRODOWSKA, Agata – No(s). 50.5, 521.1

KOZLAREK, Oliver – No(s). 411.2

KOMP, Kathrin – No(s). 90.1, 130.2

KLIMCZUK, Andrzej – No(s). 130.5, JS-9.1

KOMULAINEN, Sirkka – No(s). 86.4 KONEFAL, Jason – No(s). 471.2, 471.4

KLIN, Anat – No(s). 192.12

KONG, Ju – No(s). 37.6

KLINGENBERG, Darja – No(s). 447.2

KONIECZNA-SALAMATIN, Joanna – No(s). 221.2 KONIETZKA, Dirk – No(s). 82.6

KLOHA, Johannes – No(s). 444.7

KONIG, Ronny – No(s). 88.3

KLUGER, Elisa – No(s). 181.6

KONNO, Minako – No(s). 201.4

KNAN, Shaan Rathgeber – No(s). 650.1

KONO, Shintaro – No(s). 166.4 Session No(s). 158

KNECHT, Alban – No(s). 402.2

KONRAD, Kornelia – No(s). 289.1

KNEIDINGER-MÜLLER, Bernadette – No(s). 88.2, 653.1

KONSTANTINOVSKIY, David – No(s). 43.3

KNIES, Gundi – No(s). 388.5

KONTOS, Maria – No(s). 368.1, 444.4 KONZEN, Lucas – No(s). 151.3 KOO, Anita – No(s). 48.11

370

KÖPPE, Stephan – No(s). 72.7, 234.5

KOMATSU, Hiroshi – No(s). 300.5

KLEIN, Peter – No(s). JS-24.3

KLOC-NOWAK, Weronika – No(s). 75.5

KOO, Yoojin – No(s). 125.2, 546.4

www.isa-sociology.org

KOZLOVA, Maria – No(s). 420.5 KRABEL, Jens – No(s). 599.6 KRAJIC, Karl – No(s). 193.9 KRAMARCZYK, Justyna – No(s). 406.1 KRAMER, Hannes – No(s). 90.5 KRAMER, Ronald – No(s). 367.6 KRATOCHVILA, Michal – No(s). 333.7 KRAUSE, Mercedes – No(s). 405.3 KRAUSOVA, Anna – No(s). 540.7 KRAVCHENKO, Sergey – No(s). 475.2 KRAVCHENKO, Zhanna – No(s). 249.3 KRAWATZEK, Felix – No(s). JS-56.5, JS-65.2 KREIMER, Pablo – No(s). 283.1 KREKULA, Clary – No(s). 129.5 KRELL, Olga – No(s). 155.2

Person Index KRETSCHMANN, Andrea – No(s). 330.2, 367.22 KRINGS, Bettina – No(s). 288.1 KRINSKY, John – No(s). 565.2 Session No(s). 537 KRISTBERGSDOTTIR, Hlin – No(s). 336.3 KRISTIANSEN, Arne – No(s). 239.4 KRISTOF, Luca – No(s). 502.2 KRIVONOS, Daria – No(s). 390.1 KRIWY, Peter – Session No(s). 193 KRIZSÁN, Attila – No(s). 311.2, JS-27.6

KUNKL, Andrea – No(s). 659.4

LAN, Pei-Chia – No(s). 74.5, 86.10

KUPKA, Peter – No(s). JS-47.5

LANDOLT, Patricia – No(s). 361.1

KUPOVYKH, Maxim – No(s). 205.5, 367.4

LANG, Natalie – No(s). 275.3

KUPPER, Barbara – No(s). JS-31.5

LANGA, Patricio – No(s). 89.1

KURCZEWSKI, Jacek – No(s). 146.5 KURIEN, Prema – No(s). 260.1, 359.5 KURTENBACH, Sebastian – No(s). 333.1 KUSCHE, Isabel – No(s). 251.1, 577.3 KUSEIN, Isaev – Session No(s). 635

KROEGER, Rhiannon – No(s). 195.1

KUSHNIROVICH, Nonna – No(s). 355.2

KROHER, Martina – No(s). 517.2

KUSHWAHA, Arun – No(s). 60.4

KROISMAYR, Sigrid – No(s). 488.4

KUTALEK, Ruth – No(s). 456.5

KROLL, Lars E. – No(s). 193.19

KUTEYNIKOV, Alexander – No(s). 226.3, JS-41.5

KRONER, Evander Eloi – No(s). JS-42.2

KUTSAR, Dagmar – No(s). 626.4

KROO, Judit – No(s). 315.9

KUZMINA, Elena – No(s). 604.4

KROPP, Cordula – No(s). 469.1 KRUCKEN, Georg – No(s). 212.5

KWANSAH-AIDOO, Kwamena – No(s). 70.5

KRUGER, Daniela – No(s). 459.3, 680.2

KWON, Huck-Ju – No(s). 243.1 KYRYLIUK, Nataliia – No(s). 152.6

KRUMM, Silvia – No(s). 572.2

KYSELOVA, Tatiana – No(s). 146.7

KRZAKLEWSKA, Ewa – No(s). 134.3, 369.20

Kretschmann – Lazmey

LANG, Volker – No(s). 494.4 LANGE, Benjamin P. – No(s). 314.17 LANGE, Matthew – No(s). 639.5 LANGEMEYER, Ines – No(s). 595.4, 599.2 LANGER, Phil C. – No(s). 446.4 Session No(s). 448 LANGMAN, Lauren – No(s). 13.4, 419.1 LANGNER, Laura – No(s). 81.2 LANTI, Alessandra – No(s). 166.7 LANZENI, Débora – No(s). 102.3, 284.4 LAPA, Tiago – No(s). 603.1 LAPRESTA-REY, Cecilio – No(s). 306.3 LARA CARMONA, Vanessa Lizbeth – No(s). 330.3 LARA PINA, Fernando – No(s). 47.9 LARA-ROSANO, Felipe – No(s). 588.1 LAROCHELLE, Laurence – No(s). 173.1 LARRONDO, Ainara – No(s). 183.5

KU, Inhoe – No(s). 58.4

L

KUBALA, Petr – No(s). 172.4, 175.6

LABRECQUE, Lisandre – No(s). 307.2

KUBEKA, Alvina – No(s). 493.2

LACERDA, Gustavo – No(s). 343.4

KUCINSKAS, Jaime – No(s). 537.1

LAERMANS, Rudi – No(s). 199.2

LARUFFA, Francesco – No(s). 241.3, 346.3

KUDO, Haruka – No(s). 233.4

LAFORTUNE, Louise – No(s). JS-9.5

LATENDRESSE, Anne – No(s). 560.1

KUENEMUND, Harald – No(s). 489.2

LAGESON, Sarah – No(s). 172.1

KUGLER, Joseph – No(s). 140.7

LAI, Chia-ling – No(s). 90.3

LATONI, Alfonso – Session No(s). 36

KUHLMANN, Ellen – No(s). 15.1, 598.3

LAI, Gina – No(s). 48.17

LATRECHE, Abdelkader – No(s). 363.4

LAI, Shu-chuan – No(s). 369.22

LAUBE, Heather – No(s). 367.7, 378.1

KUHNKE, Yvonne – No(s). 201.6

LAI, Yuen Shan – No(s). JS-7.5

LAUBE, Wolfram – No(s). 103.5

KUIPER, Marlot – No(s). 595.3 KUKKONEN, Anna – No(s). 293.1

LAINE, Sofia – No(s). 392.3, 541.4 Session No(s). 91

LAURENCE, James – No(s). 70.4, 568.2

KULCZYCKI, Andrzej – No(s). 484.2

LAITINEN, Hanna – No(s). 218.5

LAURO, Carlo Natale – No(s). 624.2

KULESHOVA, Anna – No(s). 249.7

LAKE, Anda – No(s). 659.1

KULIS, Stephen – No(s). 533.2, JS-19.4

LAKRA, Neelima Rashmi – No(s). 661.3

LAURONEN, Tina – No(s). 247.1, 635.3 LAUX, Silke – No(s). 443.2, JS-3.5

KUMAR, Awkash – No(s). 354.2

LAKSHMAN, Iresha – No(s). 366.7

LAUX, Thomas – No(s). 247.2, JS-47.4

KUMAR, Munesh – No(s). 49.1

LALIBERTE, Andre – No(s). 235.3

LAVIZZARI, Anna – No(s). 537.4

KUMAR, Sunil – No(s). 369.6

LAMARRE, Andrea – No(s). 615.6

LAVRINENKO, Olga – No(s). 493.4

KUMARI, Anchal – No(s). 110.3

LAMBRINOS, Elena – No(s). 384.7

LAW, Alex – No(s). 645.3

KUMKAR, Nils C. – No(s). 418.4 Session No(s). 565

LAMEI, Nadja – No(s). 388.3

LAWRENCE, Andrew – No(s). 509.13

LAMPERT, Thomas – No(s). 193.19

LAY, Tonatiuh – No(s). 121.3

KUMNIG, Sarah – No(s). 219.4

LAMPIS, Andrea – No(s). 18.3

LAZAR, Florin – No(s). 574.8, JS-21.5

KUMSA, Alemayehu – No(s). 20.6, 22.5

LAMPRIANOU, Iasonas – No(s). 43.2

LAZAREVIC, Patrick – No(s). JS-57.2

LAMURA, Giovanni – No(s). 137.3, JS-9.3

LAZMEY, Augustus Julian – Session No(s). 479

LARSSON, Stefan – No(s). 17.2

371

PERSON INDEX

www.isa-sociology.org

LARSSON, Ernils – No(s). 267.2 List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

KUMSWA, Sahmicit – No(s). 72.8

LARSEN, Lars Thorup – No(s). 599.3

le Grand – Lombardo LE GRAND, Elias – No(s). 94.2, 157.4

LEONARDI, Laura – No(s). 636.1

LE MOIGNE, Philippe – No(s). 567.1 Session No(s). 184

LEONE, Giovanna – No(s). 581.4

LE, Tho – No(s). 255.3

LEONTOWITSCH, Miranda – No(s). 140.4

LEAO, Thiago Marques – No(s). 106.8, 573.1 LECCARDI, Carmen – No(s). 399.1 Session No(s). JS-56 LECOMTE, Aude – No(s). JS-31.5 LECUONA, Daliana – No(s). 158.5 LEE, Byoung-Hoon – No(s). 343.8, JS-55.4 LEE, Byung Sung – No(s). 160.7 LEE, Chang Won – No(s). 359.9 LEE, Chun-Yi – No(s). 509.23 Session No(s). 509 LEE, Feng-Jihu – No(s). 42.7 LEE, FuHsing – No(s). 465.2 LEE, Hyerim – No(s). 58.4 LEE, KoFan – No(s). 169.5 LEE, Min-Ah – No(s). 192.11 LEE, SangJi – No(s). 259.6, 359.9 LEE, Siyoon – No(s). 276.4 LEE, Soohyun Christine – No(s). 234.3 LEE, Susan – No(s). 392.4 LEE, Yong Jay – No(s). 169.2 LEE, Young Hee – No(s). 298.5 List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

LEEMEIJER, Aukje – No(s). 596.5

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

LEONINI, Luisa – No(s). 397.2

LESER, Julia – No(s). 370.1 LESSENICH, Stephan – No(s). 2.4 LETAMENDIA, Arkaitz – No(s). 537.2 LEUNG, Terry – No(s). 122.1 LEVAIN, Alix – No(s). 298.20 LEVIDOW, Les – No(s). 471.1, JS-71.3 LEVITT, Peggy – No(s). JS-48.3 LEVY, Charmain – No(s). 560.1 LEVY, Yagil – No(s). 20.1 LEW, Ilan – Session No(s). 564 LEWANDOWSKI, Jakub – No(s). 294.4, 329.3 LEWIS, Jamie – No(s). 684.5 LEWIS, Ruth – No(s). 176.2 LEWIS, Sophie – No(s). 192.14 LI, Cheng – No(s). 339.2, JS-52.6 LI, Chunyun – No(s). 509.11 LI, Jianghong – No(s). 602.5, JS-1.3 LI, Jie – No(s). 83.4 LI, Kelin – No(s). 527.2, 528.2 LI, Yuan Zheng – No(s). JS-71.7 LI, ZhiYing – No(s). 182.5

LEGEWIE, Nicolas – No(s). 82.2

LIANG, Guowei – No(s). JS-52.5

LEGRIS REVEL, Martine – No(s). 125.1, 304.4

LIANG, Li-Fang – No(s). 692.4 LIAO, Pei-Ru – No(s). 271.4, 695.1

LEHDONVIRTA, Vili – No(s). 39.2

LIAO, Wenjie – No(s). 146.8

LEHNERER, Melodye – No(s). 529.1 Session No(s). 534

LICHTENSTEIN, Bronwen – No(s). 574.2

LEIBER, Simone – No(s). 37.2

LIDSKOG, Rolf – No(s). 296.12

LEIBETSEDER, Bettina – No(s). 232.1

LIDZ, Victor – No(s). 270.2

LEISERING, Lutz – No(s). 236.4

LIEBIG, Brigitte – Session No(s). 372

LEITE, Teresa Gabriela Marques – No(s). 597.8

LIEBIG, Steffen – No(s). 540.6

LEITNER, Michaela – No(s). 303.3

LIFANG, Zhang – No(s). 165.2

LEKVE, Isak – No(s). 509.7

LIFSHITZ, Rinat – No(s). 133.2, 676.1

LELIEVRE, Eva – No(s). 485.5

LIM, Francis – No(s). 269.2, 276.3

LEMANCZYK, Magdalena – No(s). 308.3

LIMA NETO, Fernando – No(s). 117.4

LEMKE, Thomas – No(s). 202.1 LEMM, Jacqueline – No(s). 280.7

LIMONCELLI, Stephanie – No(s). 552.5, JS-72.7

LENGAUER, Monika – No(s). 599.5

LIN, Chun-wen – No(s). 42.3

LENGERSDORF, Diana – No(s). 87.5, 367.3

LIN, Ijung – No(s). 172.2

LENZ, Ilse – No(s). 34.4 LEON, Francisco – No(s). 415.2, 586.3 LEONARDI, Emanuele – No(s). 199.3, 504.3 372

LIMA, Jacob – No(s). 342.3

LIN, Liang-Wen – No(s). 395.6 LIN, Mei-Ling – No(s). 52.4 LIN, WenHsu – No(s). 76.5

LINARES RODRIGUEZ, Virginia – No(s). 183.1 LINDELL, Michael – No(s). 455.4 LINDIO MCGOVERN, Ligaya – No(s). 36.2, 369.18 LINN, James – No(s). 574.3 LIPPAI, Laszlo Lajos – No(s). 158.3 LIPPERT, Ingmar – No(s). 202.4 Session No(s). 208 LISHOMWA, Lileko – No(s). JS-42.5 LISITSYN, Pavel – No(s). 249.1 LITS, Gregoire – No(s). 284.3, 304.2 LITTIG, Beate – Session No(s). 3 LITTLE, Daniel – No(s). 520.1 LIU, Hwa-Jen – No(s). 504.5 LIU, Jing – No(s). 83.4 LIU, Meihui – No(s). 49.9 LIU, Yu-cheng – No(s). 208.6, 281.5 LIU-FARRER, Gracia – No(s). 355.1 LIZAMA, Scott – No(s). JS-22.3 LIZARDO, Omar – No(s). 256.5 LIZE, Wenceslas – No(s). 439.4 LLANOS HERNANDEZ, Luis – No(s). 474.3 LLEWELLYN, Cheryl – No(s). 376.1 LLURDA, Enric – No(s). 315.7 LO VERDE, Fabio Massimo – No(s). 164.3 LOBATO, Roberto – No(s). 312.6 LOBO, Francis – No(s). 161.1, 169.1 LOBO, Peter – No(s). 484.2 LOCATELLI, Luis – No(s). 222.3 LOCKIE, Stewart – No(s). 9.2, 295.5 LOCONTO, Allison – No(s). 469.2 LODDO, Olimpia – No(s). 145.4 LODI RIZZINI, Chiara – No(s). 40.4 LODIGIANI, Rosangela – No(s). 390.14 LOEBACH, Peter – No(s). 464.2 LOECKENHOFF, Helmut K. – No(s). 579.2 LOEZA REYES, Laura – No(s). 124.2 LOGUE, Danielle – No(s). 211.1 LOGUNOVA, Olga – No(s). 180.5 LOHRER, Mario – No(s). 280.7 LOKTIEVA, Iryna – No(s). 499.9 LOMAZZI, Vera – No(s). 256.9 LOMBARD, Nancy – No(s). 610.2 LOMBARDI, Lia – No(s). 78.5, 191.6 LOMBARDINILO, Andrea – No(s). 102.4 LOMBARDO, Carmelo – No(s). 515.4

www.isa-sociology.org

Person Index LOMBI, Linda – No(s). 135.8, 196.5 LOMSKY-FEDER, Edna – No(s). 558.2 LONDOÑO, Gloria – No(s). 580.5 LONG, Yan – No(s). 552.2 LONGO, Maria Eugenia – No(s). 347.2 LOPES JR, Orivaldo – Session No(s). 269 LOPES, Noemia – No(s). 596.1 LOPES, Paul – No(s). 435.3 LOPES, Tacyana – No(s). 331.2 LOPEZ COSTA, Marta – No(s). 680.1 LOPEZ FLORES, Pabel – No(s). 539.1 LOPEZ JUAREZ, Wendy – No(s). 583.1 LOPEZ REGALADO, Francisca – No(s). 119.3 LOPEZ, Jordi – No(s). 256.5, 391.7 LOPEZ-CALVA, Juan – No(s). 57.3

LUI, Wing Shek Adrian – No(s). 103.1, 250.2

MACIEL, Maria Lucia – No(s). 277.3

LUIMPOCK, Sabrina – No(s). 443.4

MACKENZIE, Caitlyn – No(s). 70.2

LUKE, Timothy W. – No(s). 9.3 Session No(s). 556 LUKEN, Paul – Session No(s). 690 LUKUSLU, Demet – No(s). 541.2, 555.3 LUNA MIRANDA, Ana – No(s). 47.17 LUNA, Claudia – No(s). 580.4 LUNA, Matilde – No(s). 31.2 LUNDSTROM, Ragnar – No(s). 504.1 LUNEAU, Aymeric – No(s). 281.9, 304.5 LUSHER, Dean – No(s). 70.2 LUSNICH, Cecilia – No(s). JS-68.5

LOPEZ-ROLDAN, Pedro – No(s). 256.6

LUTZ, Wolfgang – No(s). 491.4, 296.30

LOPEZ-SALA, Ana – No(s). 355.6

LUY, Marc – No(s). 491.2

LORENCE, Jon – No(s). 49.6

LUZ, Cicero – No(s). 148.3

LORENZ, Daniel F. – No(s). 454.3

LYBECK, Eric Royal – No(s). 645.2

LORENZ, Stephan – No(s). 295.1

LYCHKOVSKA, Oksana – No(s). 173.2

LORENZO, Pauline Joy – No(s). 318.3

LYNCH, Andrew – No(s). 263.1

LORINI, Giuseppe – No(s). 145.5

LYNCH, Kathleen – No(s). 341.1, 373.5

LOS, Bart – No(s). 193.8 LOSCH, Andreas – No(s). 289.4 LOT, Nicolas – No(s). JS-21.8 LOTTHOLZ, Philipp – No(s). 109.2 LOUNDOU, Paul – No(s). 298.7 LOURENCO REIS, Filipa – No(s). 53.2 LOVAT, Alessandro – No(s). 48.10

LYNG, Stephen – No(s). 679.3 LYON, Dawn – No(s). JS-45.2 LYRA, Ana Paula – No(s). 466.4 LYTKINA, Ekaterina – No(s). 660.3, JS-53.3

MACLENNAN, Alexis – No(s). 684.4 MACRI, Maria Raquel – No(s). 602.1 MACRO, David – No(s). 499.3, 281.16 MACZKA, Krzysztof – No(s). 125.4 MADDALONI, Domenico – No(s). 359.3 MADDEN, Mary – No(s). 132.2 MADER, Renato – No(s). 180.6, 633.2 MADERO-CABIB, Ignacio – No(s). 131.2 MAEDA, Tadahiko – No(s). 314.13 MAESTRI, Gaja – No(s). 325.2, 559.12 MAESTRIPIERI, Lara – No(s). JS-10.7 Session No(s). JS-21 MAGALHAES LOPES, Maira – No(s). 252.4 MAGAUDDA, Paolo – No(s). 285.2 MAGEE, Jonathan – No(s). 70.2 MAGGINO, Filomena – Session No(s). 624 MAGNANI, Natalia – No(s). 296.3 MAGNIN, Chantal – No(s). 219.5 MAHDAVI MAZINANI, Zahra – No(s). 77.9 MAHIEU, Christian – No(s). JS-58.1 MAHUTGA, Matthew C – No(s). 106.2, 109.1 MAIA, Cristiano – No(s). 151.4 MAIELLO, Antonella – No(s). 101.5

M

MAIER, Tobias – No(s). 359.10

LOW, Jacqueline – No(s). 137.10 Session No(s). 615

MA, Jun – No(s). 387.2

LOW, Kelvin – No(s). 10.4, 699.2 Session No(s). 710, 712

MAASS, Elisa Margarita – No(s). 584.4

LOWENSTEIN, Ariela – No(s). 137.8

MACK, Kathy – No(s). 155.5

MA, Xinrong – No(s). JS-52.3

MAINO, Claudio – No(s). 568.4 MAIRHUBER, Ingrid – No(s). 372.4 MAIULLO, Raffaella – No(s). 653.2 MAJUMDAR ADUR, Shweta – Session No(s). JS-41

LOWTON, Karen – No(s). JS-12.6

MAC-CLURE, Oscar – No(s). 643.2, JS-30.2

LU, Jing-Chein – No(s). 465.4

MACALUSO, Marilena – No(s). 325.4

MAKINEN, Juha – No(s). 21.5

LU, Ke-Wei – No(s). 515.5

MACAMO, Elisio – No(s). 416.1 Session No(s). JS-24

MAKINO, Mitsutaku – No(s). 296.18

LU, Peng – No(s). 89.2, 106.12 LUCA, Adrian – No(s). 574.8 LUCCHINI, Fabio – No(s). 193.13 LUCINI, Barbara – No(s). 462.2 LUCKA, Daria – No(s). 205.3

LUCKETT, Thembi – No(s). 509.22 LUDVIGSEN, Kari – No(s). JS-26.4 LUECK, Detlev – No(s). 72.1 LUECKING, Stefan – Session No(s). 119, 122

MACCULLOCH, Angus – No(s). 686.2

MAKITA, Hiromi – No(s). 553.2, JS-41.3

MACDONALD, Robert – No(s). 559.2

MALAMIDIS, Haris – No(s). 542.1

MACGREGOR, Casimir – No(s). 684.3

MALDONADO, Karina – No(s). 47.6

MACHADO DES JOHANSSON, Nora – No(s). 576.2, 263.21

MALICK, Mira – No(s). 157.6 Session No(s). 162

MACHADO, Jorge – No(s). 423.3

MALIK, Bibhuti – No(s). 321.2, 476.2

MACHUCA, Diana – No(s). 22.4

MALIK, Swati – No(s). 370.5

MACHURA, Stefan – No(s). 155.4, 310.1

MALISKA, Marcos – No(s). 152.6

MACIEJEWSKA, Malgorzata – No(s). 509.5

MALLICK, Sambit – No(s). 281.8

MACIEL, Diana – No(s). 80.3, 48.18 www.isa-sociology.org

MALLAGH, Christopher – No(s). 281.1 MALO, Miguel – No(s). 206.5 373

PERSON INDEX

LUCKENBACH, Caspar – No(s). JS-31.5

MAKAROVIC, Matej – No(s). 103.2

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

LOUGHREY, Joan – No(s). JS-34.1

Lombi – Malo

Man – Maunganidze MAN, Guida – No(s). 75.2 MANALILI, Debbie Mariz – No(s). 403.3

MARENT, Benjamin – No(s). 185.2, 186.4

MARTINEZ-IGLESIAS, Maria – No(s). 75.6, 314.11

MARG, Oskar – No(s). 464.4

MARTINO, Simone – No(s). 260.4

MANANDHAR, Nisha – No(s). 193.3

MARGOLIS, Rachel – No(s). 486.4

MARTINOVSKI, Bilyana – No(s). 574.6

MANCILLA, Roberto – No(s). 581.3 Session No(s). 578

MARIANO, Gustavo – No(s). 367.5

MARTINS, Jo. M. – No(s). 484.3

MANCINI, Letizia – No(s). 142.1, 314.5

MARIN, Renato – No(s). 469.4, 623.2 MARINACHE, Ramona – No(s). 611.4

MARTINS, Paulo Henrique – Session No(s). 11

MANDL, Sylvia – No(s). 303.3, 296.11 MANFROI, Miraira Noal – No(s). 158.5 MANGA, Mireille – No(s). 174.3 MANKKI, Laura – No(s). JS-59.2 MANOLOVA, Polina – No(s). 109.2, JS-74.1 MANSO, Bruno Paes – No(s). 334.5 MANSUR, Saba – No(s). 244.5 MANSUROV, Valery – No(s). 590.7, 596.6 MANTOVAN, Claudia – No(s). 353.4 MANUEL, Sandra – No(s). 89.1 MANUSHI, Ku – No(s). 287.6 MANZANILLA, Duane – No(s). 318.3 MANZANO, Guillermo – No(s). 630.2 MANZENREITER, Wolfram – No(s). 11.4, 169.8 MANZO, Cecilia – No(s). 283.4 MANZONI, Patrik – No(s). 336.2

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

MAPADIMENG, Mokong Simon – No(s). 100.1, 207.1

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

MAPEDZAHAMA, Virginia – No(s). 70.5 MARA, Liviu Catalin – No(s). JS-55.5 MARAMBIO-TAPIA, Alejandro – No(s). 29.1

MARINHO, Alcyane – No(s). 158.5 MARINO, Marina – No(s). 624.2 MARINS, Mani – No(s). 664.2 MARKANTONATOU, Maria – Session No(s). 3 MARKEY, Ray – No(s). 504.4, 504.6 MARKHAM, Chris – No(s). 597.5 MARKOFF, John – No(s). 220.2 MARKUSSON, Nils – No(s). 26.2 MARONTATE, Jan – No(s). 432.1 MARQUART-PYATT, Sandra – No(s). 108.1, 297.6 MARQUES, Maria – No(s). JS-68.3 MARQUEZ-REITER, Rosina – No(s). 314.10 MARSIGLIA, Flavio – No(s). 535.3, JS-19.5 MARTIKAINEN, Pekka – No(s). JS-57.1 MARTIN PALOMO, Maria Teresa – No(s). 372.7, 599.6

MARCIANTE, Lucia – No(s). 296.8 MARCON, Frank Nilton – Session No(s). 396 MARCU, Oana – No(s). 377.3 MARCUELLO-SERVOS, Chaime – No(s). 583.1 Session No(s). 585 MARDER, Nancy – No(s). 153.1 MAREE, Claire – No(s). 312.2, 315.2 MAREMONT, Rachel – No(s). JS-38.3

374

MARX, Paul – No(s). 224.1 MARY, Aurelie – No(s). 400.7 MASEIDE, Per – No(s). JS-12.5 MASHAYAMOMBE, John – No(s). 514.1 MASLAUSKAITE, Ausra – No(s). 87.7 MASLOVSKIY, Mikhail – No(s). 639.2 MASLOWSKI, Nicolas – No(s). 639.6 MASSARI, Monica – No(s). 452.3 MASSEY, Douglas – No(s). 361.3, 482.1 MAST, Jelle – No(s). JS-16.1 MATEO DIAZ, Mercedes – No(s). 115.1 MATEVSKA, Dushka – No(s). 262.2 MATIAS, Ana Raquel – No(s). 314.1

MARTIN, Eloisa – No(s). 282.3 Session No(s). 708, 712

MATIC, Davorka – No(s). 197.1

MARTIN, Jodie – No(s). 384.7

MATOBA, Tomoko – No(s). 192.7

MARTIN, Unai – No(s). 191.2 MARTIN, Wendy – No(s). 128.3, 133.7

MARTIN-MATTHEWS, Anne – No(s). 133.6

MARCHEZINI, Victor – No(s). 458.2

MARUYAMA, Yasushi – No(s). 291.3

MARTIN, Daryl – No(s). 593.1

MARCHANT, Alexandre – No(s). 701.1 Session No(s). 700

MARCHETTI-MERCER, Maria – No(s). JS-54.2

MARUTHAKUTTI, R. – Session No(s). 479

MATEVSKI, Zoran – No(s). 262.2

MARTIN-LAGOS LOPEZ, Maria Dolores – No(s). 626.6

MARCHETTI, Sabrina – No(s). JS-49.1

MARTIRE, Gabriel – No(s). 343.4

MARTIN, Claude – No(s). 80.1

MARASIGAN, Sherry – No(s). 181.3, 474.2

MARCHENKO, Alla – No(s). 494.2

MARTINS, Pedro – No(s). 314.1

MARTINELLI, Alberto – Session No(s). 16 MARTINEZ GUZMAN, Francisco Antar – No(s). 495.5, 315.14 MARTINEZ LOPEZ, Miguel Angel – No(s). 118.7 MARTINEZ LOPEZ, Norma Angelica – No(s). 580.1 MARTINEZ QUINTANA, Violante – No(s). 183.6 MARTINEZ, Ana Yesica – No(s). 580.4 MARTINEZ, Carlos – No(s). 562.5 MARTINEZ, Luis – No(s). 387.5

MATO, Javier – No(s). 309.2 MATON, Karl – No(s). 384.7, 387.2 MATOS ALMEIDA, Marlise – No(s). 369.27 MATOS DE OLIVEIRA, Ana Luiza – No(s). 49.7 MATOS, Ana Raquel – No(s). 192.2 MATSUDA, Ryozo – No(s). 194.6 MATSUSHITA, Keita – No(s). 342.4 MATSUTANI, Minori – No(s). 355.9 MATSUTANI, Mitsuru – No(s). 456.3 MATTHEWMAN, Steve – No(s). 463.5, 466.3 MATTHIESEN, Anna – No(s). 108.4 MATTOCKS, Calum – No(s). JS-9.5 MATTONI, Alice – No(s). 545.3 MATYSIAK, Anna – No(s). 491.1 MATYSIAK, Ilona – No(s). 321.4, 49.14

MARTINEZ, Mario – No(s). 78.2

MAUERER, Gerlinde – No(s). 83.5, JS-1.5

MARTINEZ-ARINO, Julia – No(s). 259.2 Session No(s). 272

MAUNGANIDZE, Farai – No(s). JS-34.3

www.isa-sociology.org

Person Index

Mauri – Mirzaie

MAURI, Marcel – No(s). 182.3

MEIL, Gerardo – No(s). 80.2

MEULEMANN, Heiner – No(s). 274.5

MAURYA, Manjula – No(s). JS-14.6

MEISTER, Martin – No(s). 289.5

MEYER, Katinka – No(s). 451.4

MAWATARI, Reo – No(s). 421.8

MEJIA CARRASCO, Evelyn – No(s). 637.2

MEYER, Renate E. – No(s). 212.4

MEJIA REYES, Carlos – No(s). 343.7

MEYNERT, Mariam – No(s). 607.1

MAWER, Kim – No(s). JS-36.5 MAY, Tristan – No(s). 215.3

MEYER, Uli – No(s). 211.3, 212.6

MAYER, Andreas – No(s). 295.3

MEJIA, Juan F. – No(s). 584.5

MAYRHOFER-DEAK, Marietta – No(s). 48.6

MELE, Christopher – No(s). 61.1 MELER, Tal – No(s). 382.7, 666.1

MAYRHUBER, Elisabeth – No(s). 456.5

MELLO E SILVA, Leonardo – No(s). 510.3

MAZUY, Magali – No(s). 485.1

MELLO, Marcelo – No(s). 150.1

MCALPINE, Donna – No(s). 566.3

MELLOR, Philip – No(s). 51.1, 674.3

MCCALLUM, David – No(s). 150.4

MELONI, Francesca – No(s). JS-69.2

MICHETTI, Miqueli – No(s). 218.6, JS-15.2

MCCARTHY, Jane – No(s). 86.6

MENDES, Jose – No(s). 458.1

MIERINA, Inta – No(s). 421.1

MCCARVILLE, Ron – No(s). 164.1

MENDEZ, Maria-Luisa – No(s). 248.3, 252.2

MIGUEL, Luis – No(s). 117.1

MENDEZ-BUSTOS, Pablo – No(s). 571.5

MIJIC, Ana – No(s). 364.3

MCCOY, Liza – Session No(s). 690, 693 MCDANIEL, Susan – No(s). 138.3 MCDONALD, Kevin – No(s). JS-35.2, JS-39.2

MENDONCA, Luciana – No(s). 430.3

MCDONOUGH, Peggy – No(s). 129.2

MENDONCA, Marina – No(s). 397.1

MCGHEE, Derek – No(s). 219.7

MENESES, Carmen – No(s). 354.1, JS-19.3

MCGOVERN, Pauline – No(s). JS-29.1 MCGRATH, Allison – No(s). 537.1 MCGRATH, Georgia – No(s). 70.2 MCGREGOR, Glenda – No(s). JS-61.1 MCGUIRE, Meredith – No(s). 261.2 Session No(s). 276 MCIVOR, Joseph – No(s). 504.6 MCKOY, Hope – No(s). 249.1 MCLACHLAN, Julian – No(s). 147.4 MCLANAHAN, Sara – No(s). 482.1 MCLAUGHLIN, Heather – No(s). 388.2 MCMUNN, Anne – No(s). 129.2 MCNALLY, Lisa – No(s). 597.2 MCNEELY, Connie L – No(s). 624.3, JS-5.3 MEADOWS, Robert – No(s). 131.1 MEAGHER, Gabrielle – No(s). 232.2 MEARDI, Guglielmo – No(s). 506.2 MEARS, Robert – No(s). 308.4 MECKEL, Andrea – No(s). 245.3 MEDERO, Gema – No(s). 123.1, 183.3

MEHARI, Habtom – No(s). 447.4 MEHLKOP, Guido – No(s). 296.28 MEHTA, Jagdish – No(s). 354.4 MEI, Xiao – No(s). 97.3 MEICHSNER, Sylvia – No(s). 259.8 MEIER, Frank – No(s). 211.3

MICHAEL, Maureen – No(s). 651.2 Session No(s). 650 MICHAELS, Laurie – No(s). 509.19 MICHAUD, Jacinthe – No(s). JS-14.5

MIHARTI, Suwatin – No(s). 193.8 MIKAMI, Koichi – No(s). 192.17 MIKHAYLOVA, Natalia – No(s). 654.6 MIKHEYEV, Igor – No(s). 530.3 MIKL-HORKE, Gertraude – No(s). 5.3 MILIUCHIKHINA, Olga – No(s). 277.5

MENEZES, Paulo – No(s). 7.3, 429.2 Session No(s). JS-22

MILKMAN, Ruth – No(s). 513.1

MENNELL, Stephen – No(s). 12.4, 645.1

MILLEFIORINI, Andrea – No(s). 322.2

MENSE-PETERMANN, Ursula – Session No(s). 38, 39 MEO, Analia – No(s). 51.7 MEOLA, Catherine – No(s). 115.2 MERCIER, Delphine – No(s). 338.4 MERGENER, Alexandra – No(s). 359.10 MERHAUT, Nina – No(s). 543.2 MERINO MALILLOS, Lucia – No(s). 395.7 Session No(s). 390 MERLA, Laura – No(s). 235.4 Session No(s). 75 MERLINI, Sara – No(s). 94.3 MERODIO, Guiomar – No(s). 315.11, JS-36.3 MERRON, James – No(s). 416.2 MERZ, Christina – No(s). 330.1 MESA, Diego – No(s). 397.12 MESANA, Virginie – No(s). JS-50.4 MESJASZ, Czeslaw – No(s). 588.3 Session No(s). 582

MILLAN, Rene – No(s). 519.3, 623.3 MILLER, DeMond – No(s). 459.5, 400.11 MILLER, Kristin – No(s). JS-16.4 MILLER, Lee – No(s). 457.2 MILLER-BELAND, Danielle – No(s). 294.5 MILLOY, M-J – No(s). 574.1 MILLS, Martin – No(s). JS-61.1 MILNE, Elisabeth-Jane – No(s). 650.1 Session No(s). 655 MILSTEIN, Denise – No(s). 102.1, JS-37.5 MILTON, Sarah – No(s). JS-64.4 MININNI, Francesca – No(s). 560.8 MIR, Saleem – No(s). 195.6, 296.4 MIRANDA, Ana – No(s). 397.5 Session No(s). 393 MIRANDA, Christian – No(s). 610.4 MIRANDA, Daniel – No(s). 219.9, JS-30.3 MIRANDA, Tatiana – No(s). 333.3, 347.5

MESNARD, Pauline – No(s). 139.1

MIRGA-KRUSZELNICKA, Anna – No(s). 308.1

MESO, Meso – No(s). 183.5

MIRSHAK, Nadim – No(s). 550.1

MESQUITA, Monica – No(s). 616.2 Session No(s). 619

MIRZAEI, Hossein – No(s). 103.8

MESSNER, Steven F. – No(s). 419.6 www.isa-sociology.org

PERSON INDEX

MEDVEDEVA, Sofia – No(s). 483.5, 492.3

MEZZACAPO, Umberto – No(s). 296.8

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

MCKEON, Nora – No(s). 468.1, 547.3

MENDONCA, Marcos – No(s). 466.4

MEZIHORAK, Petr – No(s). 213.4

MIRZAIE, Ayatollah – No(s). 64.2

375

Mirzamostafa – Murru MIRZAMOSTAFA, Seddigheh – No(s). 272.5, 650.4

MOLLER, Sebastian – No(s). 30.4

MORRELL, Robert – No(s). 282.4

MISANE, Agita – No(s). 421.3

MOLNAR, Virag – No(s). 177.1, 427.1

MORRIS, Alan – No(s). 193.15

MISCHE, Ann – No(s). 220.3

MOLZBERGER, Kaspar – No(s). JS-21.3

MORRIS, Aldon – No(s). 201.7

MISHEVA, Vessela – No(s). 420.3

MONCADA, Marie – No(s). JS-31.5

MISHRA, Niharranjan – No(s). 459.1, JS-40.3

MONDON-NAVAZO, Mathilde – No(s). 343.2, JS-58.7

MORRISON, Claudio – No(s). 509.15

MISKOLCI, Richard – No(s). 422.4

MONICA, Eder – No(s). 343.4

MISRA, Rajesh – No(s). 91.8, 594.1

MONIZ, Antonio – No(s). 288.1

MISSE, Daniel – No(s). 334.6

MONREAL-BOSCH, Pilar – No(s). 314.16

MISUMI, Kazuto – No(s). 522.1 MITCHELL, Andrew – No(s). 581.2 MITCHELL, Claudia – No(s). 10.2 MITCHELL, Colter – No(s). 482.1 MITCHELL, Rashalee – No(s). 401.3, JS-41.6 MITRA, Arpita – No(s). 334.2 Session No(s). 332 MIURA, Kota – No(s). 556.2 MIWA, Satoshi – No(s). 48.4 MIYAR, Maria – No(s). 309.2 MIYAZAKI, Tomoaki – No(s). 312.4 Session No(s). 315 MIZUKAWA, Yoshifumi – No(s). 569.5, JS-33.4

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

MKWANANZI, Sibusiso – No(s). 487.5, 483.14

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

MONROY FARIAS, Miguel – No(s). 329.5, 47.30 MONT’ALVAO, Arnaldo – No(s). 399.6 MONTAGUT, Teresa – No(s). 119.1 Session No(s). 124 MONTANARI, Arianna – No(s). 632.2 MONTANER, Julio – No(s). 574.1 MONTEFRIO, Marvin Joseph – No(s). 470.2, 474.1 MONTEIRO, Lucia – No(s). 137.5 MONTEIRO, Paulo – No(s). 184.7 MONTEIRO, Tulio Gava – No(s). 466.4 MONTENEGRO, Cristian – No(s). 571.2 MONTERO, Kerry – No(s). 400.5 MONTES DE OCA BARRERA, Laura – No(s). 689.2

MORRIS, Caroline – No(s). 695.2 MORRISON, Ian – No(s). 359.8 MORTIMER, Jeylan – No(s). 82.1, 399.6 MOSER, Evelyn – No(s). 218.4 MOSKOVICH, Yaffa – No(s). 331.1 MOSSBERG, Linda – No(s). 573.5 MOTOMORI, Eriko – No(s). 604.2 MOTTA, Roberto – No(s). 266.3 MOTTWEILER, Hannelore – No(s). 38.1 MOTYKA, Krzysztof – No(s). 149.3 MOUHANNA, Christian – No(s). 152.2, 341.3 MOULENE, Frederic – No(s). 314.15 MOURATO, Joao – No(s). 293.4 MOYA, Miguel – No(s). 312.6 MOYLE, Judith – No(s). 337.1 MOZER, Konstantin – No(s). 499.12 MROZOWICKI, Adam – No(s). 509.5 Session No(s). 512 MUCKENHUBER, Johanna – No(s). 570.3

MLOZNIAK, Iwona – No(s). 318.4, JS-15.4

MOORE, Barbara – No(s). 77.14

MLYNAR, Jakub – No(s). 383.4

MOORE, Ieva – No(s). 439.5

MUELLER, Georg – No(s). 364.1

MOCANU, Vasilica – No(s). 315.7

MOORE, Sarah – Session No(s). 674

MUENCH, Anne – No(s). 140.2 MUHLBOCK, Monika – No(s). 390.12

MORACA, Tijana – No(s). 236.5

MUHLICHEN, Michael – No(s). JS-1.4

MORAES SILVA, Graziella – No(s). JS-2.2

MUKHERJEE, Utsa – No(s). 607.3

MOCK, Steven – No(s). 160.2, 161.3 MOE FEJERSKOV, Adam – No(s). 104.2 MOE, Angela – No(s). 188.7 MOERIKE, Frauke – No(s). 212.8, 217.3 MOERNAUT, Renee – No(s). JS-16.1 MOFFA, Grazia – No(s). 359.3 MOFFATT, Suzanne – No(s). JS-64.4 MOGHADAM, Valentine – No(s). 33.1, 107.1 MOINOLMOLKI, Neda – No(s). 49.20, JS-60.5 MOISIO, Pasi – No(s). 231.2 MOKHAHLANE, Phakisho – No(s). 310.2

MORAL MARTIN, David – No(s). 183.2 MORAN-ELLIS, Jo – No(s). 602.2 MORDEN, Peter – No(s). 161.5

MUELLER, Armin – No(s). JS-48.1

MUKKILA, Susanna – No(s). 231.2 MUKTUPAVELA, Ruta – No(s). 310.5 MULLEN, Ashli – No(s). 66.4

MOREIRA, Amilcar – No(s). 131.5

MULLER-STIERLIN, Annabel – No(s). 570.6

MOREIRA, Jasmine – No(s). 157.8

MULVIHILL, Peter – No(s). 302.5

MORENO ROBLES, Sergio – No(s). 650.3

MUNOZ TERRON, Jose Maria – No(s). 372.7

MORERO BELTRÁN, Anna – No(s). 191.5, 369.25

MUNRO, Matthew – No(s). JS-66.4

MORETTI-PIRES, Rodrigo – No(s). 659.6

MURAKAMI, Luiz Carlos – No(s). 176.1 MURAYAMA, Masayuki – No(s). 457.1

MOKOENE, Kearabetswe – No(s). 493.6

MORETTO, Marcio – No(s). 423.3

MOLDES-ANAYA, Sergio – No(s). 312.6

MORGNER, Christian – No(s). 257.3

MOLGAT, Marc – No(s). 390.2

MORI, Keisuke – No(s). 553.1

MURRAY, Georgina – No(s). 31.4, 504.4

MORIARTY, Elaine – No(s). JS-43.4

MURRAY, Kristopher – No(s). 679.1

MORIGUCHI, Stella – No(s). 176.1

MURRU, Maria Francesca – No(s). 541.3

MOLITOR, Verena – No(s). 367.1, 593.2 MOLLER, Marie Ostergaard – No(s). 597.1 376

MORGAN, Jennifer Craft – No(s). 72.4

MORLA, Teresa – No(s). 600.8, 315.11 MORO, Angelo – No(s). 509.24 www.isa-sociology.org

MURGIA, Annalisa – No(s). 499.4 MURJI, Karim – No(s). 59.2

Person Index

Musleh – Noskova

MUSLEH, Abeer – No(s). 396.2, JS-56.3

NARINS, Thomas – No(s). 298.7

NG, Angie – No(s). 370.3

MUSTAFINA, Renata – No(s). 226.5

NARRO, Ana Elena – No(s). 47.22 NASCIMENTO, Maria Leticia – Session No(s). 602, 610

NGAI, Steven Sek-yum – No(s). 347.1, 390.9

MUSTATA, Aurelia – No(s). 21.4 MUSTATA, Marinel-Adi – No(s). 21.4 MUSZYNSKI, Karol – No(s). 512.6 MUSZYNSKI, Marek – No(s). 48.19 MUTIARA, Median – No(s). 607.2 MUTLU, Mehmet – No(s). 315.5 MUTTAQIN, Tatang – No(s). 48.8 MUTTARAK, Raya – No(s). 296.30 MUTTI, Cristiano – No(s). 659.4 Session No(s). 657 MUTUVERRIA, Marcos – No(s). 396.5 MUTZ, Gerd – No(s). 372.1

NASH, Meredith – No(s). 166.2 Session No(s). 159

NGUYEN, Huu Minh – No(s). 76.3 NICAISE, Ides – No(s). 234.2

NASSAR, Nadia – No(s). 133.3

NICHE TEIXEIRA, Alex – No(s). 328.5, 334.4

NASSER, Riad – No(s). 315.4

NICHOLS, Sue – No(s). 51.3, 399.8

NATAL, Ariadne – No(s). 334.5

NIEDENZU, Heinz-Jürgen – No(s). 640.8

NATALI, Lorenzo – No(s). 659.4 NATHANSOHN, Regev – No(s). 654.1 Session No(s). 653 NAVA, Celeste – No(s). 421.2 NAVA, Elena – No(s). 63.3 NAVARRO, Alejandra – No(s). 21.2

NIEDERMOSER, Kathrin – No(s). 504.8 NIEKRENZ, Yvonne – No(s). 446.3 NIERLING, Linda – No(s). 288.1 NIEROBA, Elzbieta – No(s). 440.3 NIETO MORALES, Fernando – No(s). 218.3

MUZZIN, Linda – No(s). 378.3

NAVARRO, Pablo – No(s). 579.3

MYKHALOVSKIY, Eric – No(s). 18.4 Session No(s). 697

NAVARRO, Pedro – No(s). 181.5 NAVAZA, Barbara – No(s). 535.2

MYRSKYLA, Mikko – No(s). 486.1, 486.4

NAVIA ANTEZANA, Cecilia – No(s). 57.4

MYTHEN, Gabe – No(s). 678.2 Session No(s). 680

NAYAK, Akhaya – No(s). JS-29.2

NIKOLAEVA, Uliana – No(s). 326.4, 488.6

NDLOVU, Lovemore – No(s). 262.6 Session No(s). 262

NIKULA, Ilari – No(s). 298.2

N

NECKEL, Sighard – No(s). 214.1

NADAL, Josep M. – No(s). 314.16

NEDERVEEN PIETERSE, Jan P. – No(s). 2.3

NADEZHDA, Zinovyeva – No(s). 177.5

NEFEDOVA, Tatiana – No(s). 326.1

NAGCHOUDHURI, Madhura – No(s). 81.5

NEGRI, Michele – No(s). 21.3, 319.2 NELSON, Gloria Luz – No(s). 318.3

NIKIELSKA-SEKULA, Karolina – No(s). 352.5

NIKULINA, Tatiana – No(s). 315.3 NILSEN, Ann Christin – No(s). 689.3 NILSSON, Gabriella – No(s). JS-9.8, JS-12.4 NIMROD, Galit – No(s). 133.2, 135.5 NINA-PAZARZI, Eleni – No(s). 12.2 Session No(s). 120

NELSON, Moira – No(s). 241.2

NINO MARTINEZ, Jose Javier – No(s). 330.3

NEMIROVA, Natalia – No(s). 383.6

NIRAULA, Surya Raj – No(s). 193.3

NEMOZ, Sophie – No(s). JS-71.5

NISHIDA, Yukako – No(s). 314.3

NAKAGAWA, Megumi – No(s). 473.4

NENGNEILHING, Ruth – No(s). 195.6, 369.14

NISHIKIDO, Makoto – No(s). 291.3, 454.2

NAKAMURA, Eri – No(s). 407.2

NERESINI, Federico – No(s). 171.2

NISHIMURA, Junko – No(s). 77.5

NAKAMURA, Kazuo – No(s). 569.5, JS-33.4

NERI, Lourdes – No(s). 310.4

NITSCHE, Natalie – No(s). 491.1

NAKAMURA, Shohei – No(s). 65.2

NERLI BALLATI, Enrico – No(s). 390.3, 515.4

NIUMAI, Ajailiu – No(s). 67.7

NAKAMURA, Takashi – No(s). 502.1

NESS, Immanuel – No(s). 507.4

NAKANE, Tae – No(s). 291.3

NETTLETON, Sarah – No(s). 593.1

NOBRE CAVALCANTE, Fernando – No(s). 540.1

NAKANISHI, Machiko – No(s). 588.5

NEUBERT, Dieter – No(s). 112.4, JS-24.4

NOJIMA, Natsuko – No(s). 314.19

NAKANO, Yasuto – No(s). 300.5, 516.1

NEUHAUSER, Johanna – No(s). 343.1

NOLASCO, Maria – No(s). 119.5

NEUHOLD, Petra – No(s). 688.4

NAKAO, Yukie – No(s). 337.4

NEUMANN, Robert – No(s). 516.3, 296.28

NOLLERT, Michael – No(s). 201.1, 273.3

NAHKUR, Oliver – No(s). 626.4 NAHYUN, Han – No(s). 274.6 NAIR, Manjusha – No(s). 510.6 NAKADA, MIgiwa – No(s). 528.3

NAKANISHI, Yuko – No(s). 356.12

NALDINI, Manuela – No(s). 75.3 NAQVI, Ijlal – No(s). 192.13 NARANJO BOTERO, Maria – No(s). 549.5 NARE, Lena – No(s). 390.13 Session No(s). JS-38

NOLASCO, Ma Lauren – No(s). 318.3

NOMIYA, Daishiro – Session No(s). 549 NORKUS, Zenonas – No(s). 249.2

NEVEN, Louis – No(s). 133.5

NORONHA, Ernesto – No(s). JS-68.1

NEVES, Sofia – No(s). JS-50.6

NORTH, Nicola – No(s). 361.7

NEVILLE, Patricia – No(s). 597.2

NOSKOVA, Antonina – No(s). 604.4

NEWMAN, Simeon – No(s). 539.6 www.isa-sociology.org

377

PERSON INDEX

NAM, YoungEun – No(s). 381.1

NEUMAYER, Christina – No(s). 541.6, 582.1

NIXON, Alan – No(s). 387.4

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

NAGLA, Madhu – No(s). 170.3

NELSON, Fiona – No(s). 175.2

NIKANDER, Pirjo – No(s). 135.4

Nossek – Paker NOSSEK, Hillel – No(s). 425.3 Session No(s). 563

OH, Seil – No(s). 274.6, JS-73.4

ORLANDO, Rosanna – No(s). 193.7

NOTHDURFTER, Urban – No(s). 593.4

OHIRA, Akira – No(s). 564.2

ORLETTI, Franca – No(s). 317.2

OISHI, Akiko – No(s). 345.5

ORSTAVIK, Finn – No(s). 278.3

OISHI, Nana – No(s). 70.3 OJALA, Hanna – No(s). 132.1

ORTEGA CARRILLO, Hernando – No(s). 277.2

OKULICZ-KOZARYN, Adam – No(s). 140.5

ORTEGA, Marta – No(s). JS-9.10 ORTHABER, Sara – No(s). 314.10

OKUN, Sarit – No(s). 170.8

ORTIZ, Guadalupe – No(s). 294.3

OKYEREFO, Michael – No(s). 260.3 Session No(s). 262

ORTIZ, Yaneth – No(s). 182.2

OLAFSDOTTIR, Sigrun – No(s). 188.4, JS-64.2

OSIRIM, Mary – No(s). 373.3 Session No(s). 378

NOTTBOHM, Kristina – No(s). 60.1, JS-65.4 NOTTERMAN, Daniel – No(s). 482.1 NOURBAKHSH, Younes – No(s). 262.12 NOVICK, Susana – Session No(s). 142 NOVIKOVA, Svetlana – No(s). 315.16 NOWICKA, Magdalena A. – No(s). JS-65.1 NOZAWA, Atsushi – No(s). 294.6 NTOIMO, Favour – No(s). 482.2 NUGRAHA, Susiana – No(s). 187.6 NUMERATO, Dino – No(s). 560.3 NUNES DE ALMEIDA, Ana – No(s). 680.3 NUNEZ, Lorena – No(s). 190.3 NUNGESSER, Frithjof – No(s). 564.3 NURSE, Lyudmila A. – No(s). 398.1, JS-4.2 NWAOZUZU, Daisy – No(s). 671.4, 671.5 NYKLOVA, Blanka – No(s). 378.4 NYSETH-BREHM, Hollie – No(s). 95.1

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

O

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

O RIAIN, Sean – No(s). 224.2 Session No(s). 509 O’BRIEN, John – No(s). 33.3 O’BRIEN, Margaret – No(s). 16.4 O’LOUGHLIN, Kate – No(s). 193.16, JS-12.10 OAYUZ, Kubra – No(s). 546.3 OBASHORO-JOHN, Oluwayemisi – No(s). 49.19 OBAYASHI, Shinya – No(s). 519.4 OBI, Yuko – No(s). 175.5 OCAZIONEZ, Maria Gabriela – No(s). 174.9 OCHIAI, Emiko – Session No(s). 233 OCTOBRE, Sylvie – No(s). 633.1 ODABAS, Huseyin – No(s). 170.5 ODABAS, Zuhal Yonca – No(s). 170.5 ODHAV, Kiran – No(s). 207.2 OEIJ, Peter – No(s). 317.5, 595.7 OETSCH, Silke – No(s). 91.17, JS-2.4 OGAWA, Reiko – No(s). JS-31.2 OGG, Jim – No(s). 134.1 OGUN EMRE, Perrin – No(s). 545.4 378

OLAWANDE, Tomike – No(s). JS-66.6 OLEKSIYENKO, Olena – No(s). 388.4, 256.14 OLID, Evangelina – No(s). 372.7 OLIVEIRA, Amurabi – No(s). 53.5 OLIVEIRA, Andressa Somogy de – No(s). 643.1 OLIVEIRA, Elsa – No(s). 655.3, 655.4 OLIVEIRA, Lucas – No(s). 428.4 OLIVEIRA, Marcia Cristina – No(s). 196.2 OLIVEIRA, Nuno – No(s). 308.2 OLIVEIRA, Renan Theodoro de – No(s). 605.2 OLIVEIRA, Thiago – No(s). 334.5 OLIVER, Esther – No(s). 49.16 OLIVIER, Alice – No(s). 51.2 OLIVIER, Guadalupe – No(s). JS-35.3 OLLINAHO, Ossi – No(s). 101.4, 296.16

OSAKI, Hiroko – No(s). 522.3

OSO CASAS, Laura – No(s). 75.4 OSRECKI, Fran – No(s). 599.7, 600.5 OSTBERG, Jacob – No(s). 252.4 OSTERMANN, Anne – No(s). 591.3 OSTROWSKI, Krzysztof – Session No(s). 634 OSWALD, Frank – No(s). 140.4 OTAYA, Satoshi – No(s). 400.8 OTIS, Eileen M. – No(s). 617.4 Session No(s). 217 OTTO, Danny – No(s). 91.14 OUCHI, Akiko – No(s). 345.3 OVERLAND, Gwynyth – No(s). 262.3, 525.1 OVSEIKO, Pavel – No(s). JS-26.6 OYEWOLE, Damilola – No(s). 190.7 OZAKI, Ritsuko – No(s). 303.1 OZDEMIR, Feriha – No(s). 70.6 OZEKI, Ayako – No(s). 313.5

OLOUME, Francis – No(s). 306.3

OZEN, Hayriye – No(s). 540.8, 551.4

OLSEN, Ole Johnny – No(s). 509.7

OZEN, Sukru – No(s). 551.4

OMARSDOTTIR, Ingibjorg Lilja – No(s). 454.6

OZOYA, Mercy – No(s). 476.1

ON TEIXEIRA, Mariana – No(s). 410.4 Session No(s). 407 ONAKA, Fumiya – No(s). 258.1 ONDA, Morio – No(s). 464.1 ONI, Gbolabo – No(s). 49.19 ONYIGE, Chioma Daisy – No(s). 369.15 Session No(s). 370 OOSTERLYNCK, Stijn – No(s). 239.5 OOSTERVEER, Peter – No(s). 302.3 OPP, Karl-Dieter – No(s). 520.2 OPRATKO, Benjamin – No(s). 60.2 ORCHARD, Macarena – No(s). JS-8.4 ORESHINA, Daria – No(s). 263.6 ORIOLA, Temitope – No(s). 20.4, JS-14.3 ORLANDI, Fabiana de Souza – No(s). 195.5, JS-54.4 www.isa-sociology.org

OZYEGIN, Gul – No(s). 368.2, JS-36.9

P PACE, Vincenzo – Session No(s). 273 PACEY, Fiona – No(s). 598.5 PACHER, Alice – No(s). 166.9 PADRON-INNAMORATO, Mauricio – No(s). 397.16 PAETAU, Michael – No(s). 576.4, 577.5 Session No(s). 583 PAIDAKAKI, Angeliki – No(s). 101.2 PAIVA, Angela – No(s). JS-35.4 Session No(s). 539 PAJKOVIC, Dana – No(s). 444.3 PAJU, Elina – No(s). 390.13 PAKER, Hande – No(s). 540.5

Person Index

Pakpahan – Petschick

PAKPAHAN, Eduwin – No(s). 136.5

PARKKILA, Helena – No(s). 381.5

PENEDO, Rita – No(s). 333.2

PAL, Garima – No(s). 161.2

PARRA, Henrique – No(s). 277.3

PENG, Ito – No(s). 235.1

PAL, Manoranjan – No(s). JS-57.4

PARRACHO SANT’ANNA, Sabrina – No(s). 437.1

PENHA-LOPES, Gil – No(s). 119.5

PARREIRA, Christina – No(s). 166.7

PEREIRA, Aline – No(s). 151.2

PALACIOS BUSTAMANTE, Rafael Antonio – No(s). 287.1 PALERMO, Alicia Itati – Session No(s). 17, 380

PARZER, Michael – No(s). 352.1, 698.1

PALGI, Michal – No(s). 118.2

PASCALE, Celine-Marie – No(s). 14.1, 318.1

PALMBERGER, Monika – No(s). 451.1

PASCUCCI, Elisa – No(s). 355.11

PALMGREN, Pei – No(s). 355.5

PASSET-WITTIG, Jasmin – No(s). JS-1.4

PALOMARES-MONTERO, Davinia – No(s). JS-25.3, JS-55.2

PASSIANI, Enio – No(s). 328.5

PALTRINIERI, Roberta – No(s). 296.8

PASTOR, Inma – No(s). JS-32.4

PANAGIOTAKOPOULOU, IoannaStamatina – No(s). 525.4

PATHAK, Panchi – No(s). 148.2, 462.3

PANAGIOTOPOULOU, Roy – No(s). 171.3

PATIL, Rajendra – Session No(s). 479

PANAGIOTOU, Aristeidis – No(s). 198.4 PANAHI, Mohammad Hossein – No(s). 230.3, 369.10 PANANAKHONSAB, Wilasinee – No(s). 88.7 PANCONESI, Alessandro – No(s). 581.4 PANDEY, Krishna – No(s). 69.5 PANG, Irene – No(s). JS-52.4 Session No(s). 510 PANNEWITZ, Anja – No(s). 449.1 PANOVA, Ralina – No(s). 81.4 PAPADOPOULOS, Apostolos – No(s). JS-42.7, JS-74.6 PAPAKOSTAS, Apostolis – No(s). 249.3 PAPERNI, Vladimir – No(s). 315.8 PAPI, Maryam – No(s). JS-69.3 PARADIS, Elise – No(s). 281.12 PARANAGE, Kavindra – No(s). 366.7

PATIL, Usha – No(s). 483.1 PATIL, Vrushali – No(s). 68.5 PATTANAIK, Sarmistha – No(s). 303.4 PATTNAIK, Binay Kumar – No(s). JS-29.2

PAUMIER, Romain – No(s). JS-19.2 PAUWELS, Luc – No(s). 658.3, JS-16.1 PAVARINI, Sofia Cristina – No(s). 195.5, JS-54.4 PAVEZI, Ingrid – No(s). 106.9, 117.8 PAVOLINI, Emmanuele – No(s). 682.2, JS-26.3 PAZARZI, Iliana – No(s). 118.5, 436.4 PAZARZI, Ioanna – No(s). 121.2 PAZARZIS, Michalis – No(s). 121.2

PECKIO, Tyler – No(s). 423.1, 424.2

PARELLA RUBIO, Sonia – No(s). JS48.3, JS-74.5

PEDERSEN, Inge Kryger – No(s). 595.1

PEREZ-CHIRINOS CHURRUCA, Vega – No(s). JS-55.3 PEREZ-PATRON, Maria – No(s). 489.3 PERKINS, Molly M – No(s). 72.4 PERKIO, Mikko – No(s). 237.2

PEETZ, David – No(s). 504.4 PEICHEVA, Dobrinka – No(s). 425.1 PEINE, Alexander – No(s). 133.5 PEIXOTO, Luiz – No(s). 643.1

PERLSTADT, Harry – No(s). 529.1 PERNICKA, Susanne – No(s). 226.2 PERRA, Sabrina – No(s). 507.5 PERRY, Brea L. – No(s). 569.1 PERSSON, Jesper – No(s). 675.3 PERUZZI, Gaia – No(s). JS-70.4 PERVAIZ, Shazia – No(s). 668.2 PESCOSOLIDO, Bernice – No(s). 192.7, 569.1 PETERSEN, Alan – No(s). 684.3 PETERSEN-WAGNER, Renan – No(s). 159.2 PETERSON, Kristina – Session No(s). 461 PETRAKAKI, Dimitra – No(s). 186.2, 599.4 PETRENAS, Cristina – No(s). 306.3 PETRIC, Mirko – No(s). 248.4 PETRICUSIC, Antonija – No(s). 154.3, 263.14 PETRILLI, Enrico – No(s). 705.1 Session No(s). 704

PEKKOLA, Sari – No(s). 428.3

PETROFF, Alisa – No(s). 358.2, JS-48.3

PELFINI, Pelfini – No(s). JS-2.3

PETROV, Vladimir – No(s). 279.4

PELLISSIER, Fanny – No(s). 298.20

PETROVA KAFKOVA, Marcela – No(s). 139.3

PARKER, Christine – No(s). 684.3

PELLIZZONI, Luigi – No(s). 202.2, 295.6

PARKER, Jennifer – No(s). 115.4

PENALVA, Susana – No(s). 592.1 www.isa-sociology.org

PETSCHICK, Grit – No(s). 378.2, JS-13.5 379

PERSON INDEX

PARK, Yoo Sung – No(s). 502.1

PEREZ-CASTRO, Judith – No(s). 54.6, 57.1

PERO, Davide – No(s). 509.21

PAULUS, Nelson – No(s). 521.2

PECK, Frank – No(s). 278.4

PARK, Keun-Young – No(s). JS-69.4

PEREZ-AGOTE, Jose Maria – No(s). 408.4 Session No(s). 414

PAULSEN, Michael – No(s). 579.5

PAREDES, Mariana – No(s). 137.5

PARK, Jin Woo – No(s). 262.10, 262.19

PEREZ, Patrick-Georges – No(s). 340.5

PERNA, Roberta – No(s). JS-21.2

PEARSE, Rebecca – No(s). 292.6

PARIS, Maria Dolores – No(s). 340.3

PEREZ, Alejandra – No(s). 584.3

PAULOS, Leticia Anabel – No(s). 673.2

PAREDES ACOSTA, Melina – No(s). 584.3

PARIGI, Paolo – No(s). 515.3

PEREZ QUESADA, Xinia – No(s). JS-68.8

PERKS, Matthew – No(s). 291.1

PARDO NUNEZ, Joaline – No(s). 562.3

PARIDA, Jayashree – No(s). 459.1

PEREK-BIALAS, Jolanta – No(s). 130.1

PAULINGER, Gerhard – No(s). 499.7, 628.3

PEACOCK, David – No(s). 688.1, 694.2

PARFITT, Emma – No(s). 51.4

PEREIRA, Dulce – No(s). 314.1

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

PANTE, Michael Pante – No(s). 281.6

PATIL, Bahubali – No(s). 483.2

PENNEC, Sophie – No(s). 485.3

Pettersson – Puttergill PETTERSSON, Per – No(s). 259.7 PETZOLD, Conny – No(s). 214.2 PETZOLD, Knut – No(s). 38.5, 386.3 PFAHL, Lisa – No(s). 658.2 PFAU-EFFINGER, Birgit – No(s). 13.2, 243.3 PFEFFER, Thomas – No(s). 45.3 PHILLIPS, Judith – No(s). 193.16, JS-12.10 PHILLIPSON, Chris – No(s). 129.3 PICCA, Ann-Christien – No(s). 570.6 PICCIO, Daniela R. – No(s). 223.2 PICKEL, Gert – No(s). 60.5

POWELL, Katie – No(s). JS-64.4

PLIAKOS, Christos – No(s). 130.4

POYNTING, Scott – No(s). 62.1

PLOWS, Vicky – No(s). 50.1 POCHET, Philippe – Session No(s). 509 POESCHE, Jurgen – No(s). 277.1, JS-10.1 POHLER, Nina – No(s). 342.5, 376.3 POHN-LAUGGAS, Maria – No(s). 246.2 Session No(s). 443 POKHAREL, Paras K – No(s). 193.3

POWERS, Ráchael – No(s). 369.7 PRADEL MIGUEL, Marc – No(s). 239.3 PRADO, Juliana – No(s). 424.3 PRANDNER, Dimitri – No(s). 229.1, JS-65.5 PRASAD, B Devi – No(s). 81.5 PRECUPETU, Iuliana – No(s). 482.3 Session No(s). 622 PREKODRAVAC, Milena – No(s). 442.2 PRELL, Christina – No(s). 298.6 PREMAZZI, Viviana – No(s). 271.5

POKROVSKY, Nikita – No(s). 9.5, 324.1

PREMI, Wairokpam – No(s). 378.5 PREN, Karen – No(s). 361.3

POLIZZI, Emanuele – No(s). 239.2 POLOPOLI, Caterina – No(s). 47.13

PREOTEASA, Ana Maria – No(s). 621.2, 622.1 PREUSS, Madlen – No(s). 499.5

PIETILA, Ilkka – No(s). 132.1

PONCE MORALES, Maria Alejandra – No(s). 580.1

PRICE, Debora – No(s). 129.1, 129.2

PIETKA-NYKAZA, Emilia – No(s). 365.3

PONCIANO SANDOVAL, Renato – No(s). 280.2

PRIES, Ludger – No(s). 37.1

PILATI, Katia – No(s). 507.5

PONGSAPITAKSANTI, Piya – No(s). 174.5

PICON VARGAS, Yamil – No(s). 330.4 PIERDANT, Alberto – No(s). 47.22 PIERIDES, Dean – No(s). 7.4

PILCHER, Katy – No(s). 128.3, 133.7 PILIPETS, Elena – No(s). 164.5 PILLAI, Vijayan – No(s). 487.4 PILLAYRE, Heloise – No(s). 457.4 PILLINGER, Jane – No(s). 235.2 PINA, Marcos Roberto – No(s). JS-58.6 List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

PLEYERS, Geoffrey – No(s). 11.1, 538.2

POKROPEK, Artur – No(s). 256.2

PICKER, Giovanni – No(s). 201.5, JS-11.2

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

PINAZO-HERNANDIS, Sacramento – No(s). 135.7 PING, Ye – No(s). 165.2 PINJANI, Pratap – No(s). 170.1 PINSKWAR, Iwona – No(s). 455.2 PINTO, Carla – No(s). 137.11 PINTO, Celi Regina – No(s). 91.4 PINTO, Paula – No(s). 240.2, 137.11 PINTO, Teresa – No(s). 240.2 PIQUERAS, Clara – No(s). 358.2, JS-74.5 PIRANI, Bianca Maria – No(s). 612.2 PIRES MARQUES, Tiago – No(s). 202.5 PIRES, Aline – No(s). 126.2, 400.12 PIRNI, Andrea – No(s). JS-56.1 PITASI, Andrea – No(s). 102.2, 589.4 Session No(s). 589 PITLUCK, Aaron – No(s). 116.1 PITT, David – No(s). 46.1 PITTELLI, Cecilia – No(s). JS-68.5 PIZZI, Alejandro – No(s). 343.9 PIZZIMENTI, Eugenio – No(s). 223.3 PLATTS, Loretta – No(s). 129.1, 129.2 PLEHWE, Dieter – No(s). 31.1 380

PONS BONALS, Leticia – No(s). 57.5 PONS-VIGNON, Nicolas – No(s). 509.18 PONTON, Paloma – No(s). JS-32.4 PONTONES, Mónica – No(s). 329.5 POOL, Robert – No(s). 535.2 POP, Cosmina Elena – No(s). 193.4, 482.3 POPE, Daniel – No(s). JS-9.5 POPKIN, Eric – No(s). 106.5, JS-38.3 POPOVA, Ekaterina – No(s). 52.3 POPOVA, Irina – No(s). 597.7 POPPER-GIVEON, Ariela – No(s). 70.1 PORCELLI, Giorgio – No(s). 589.3 PORIO, Emma – No(s). 6.3 PORTERIA, April – No(s). 463.2 PORTO PEDROSA, Leticia – No(s). 182.4 PORTOS, Martin – No(s). 565.3

PRIETL, Bianca – No(s). 582.5 PRIETO BLANCO, Patricia – No(s). JS-4.3 PRINCIPI, Andrea – No(s). 131.4, 137.3 PROBST, Johanna – No(s). 543.4 PROKOPOWICZ, Piotr – No(s). 211.2 PRUSA, Igor – No(s). 172.5 PRUTSKOVA, Elena – No(s). 263.6 PRYSHCHEPA, Kateryna – No(s). 221.2 PRZEPIORKA, Wojtek – No(s). 502.4, 517.1 PSARIKIDOU, Katerina – No(s). 305.2 Session No(s). 659 PSIHODA, Sophie – No(s). 131.6, 131.7 PUASCHUNDER, Julia – No(s). 57.9, 500.3 PUGLIESE, Enrico – No(s). 506.2 PUIG LATORRE, Gemma – No(s). 206.3, 394.2

POSLUSZNY, Lukasz – No(s). 447.3

PUIGVERT, Lidia – No(s). 49.16, JS-36.3

POSPECH, Pavel – No(s). 315.6, 333.5

PUNZIANO, Gabriella – No(s). 560.6

POSSAMAI, Adam – No(s). 274.7 Session No(s). 264

PURHONEN, Semi – No(s). 247.1, 635.3

POSSAMAI-INESEDY, Alphia – No(s). 387.4 Session No(s). 684

PURKAYASTHA, Bandana – No(s). 68.5, 374.5 Session No(s). JS-14

POSTON, Dudley – No(s). 488.5

PURSER, Gretchen – No(s). 259.1

POTANCOKOVA, Michaela – No(s). 491.3

PUSTULKA, Paula – No(s). 75.8

POWALKO, Przemyslaw – No(s). 388.4

PUTTERGILL, Charles – No(s). 526.4 Session No(s). 531

www.isa-sociology.org

PUTRA, Riski – No(s). 667.2

Qi – Ringoe

Person Index

Q

RANGA, Mukesh – No(s). 473.2, JS-25.4

REITER, Renate – No(s). JS-31.5

QI, Xiaoying – No(s). 74.3

RANI, Padma – No(s). 176.4, 174.10

QU, Yuanyuan – No(s). 556.4

RANSIEK, Anna – No(s). 445.1, 610.3

RELINQUE, Fernando – No(s). 294.3

QUACK, Sigrid – No(s). 38.4, JS-3.3

RAO, Monica – No(s). 142.3

REMEDI, Eduardo – No(s). 280.4, 282.5

QUEHENBERGER, Viktoria – No(s). 193.9

RAPELI, Merja – No(s). 454.6, 455.1

REMESCH, Alexander – No(s). 305.1

RASANEN, Pekka – No(s). 165.1, JS-63.1

REN, Julie – No(s). 437.3

RASHID, Naaz – No(s). 68.4

RENAUT, Sylvie – No(s). 134.1

QUESNEL-VALLEE, Amelie – No(s). 8.1 Session No(s). JS-57 QUILTY, Emma – No(s). 275.2 QUINSTLR, Suya – No(s). 101.5 QUINTANILLA, Carlos – No(s). 667.3

R RABE, Marlize – No(s). 393.3 RABELLO DE CASTRO, Lucia – No(s). 605.3 Session No(s). 607

RASIA, Jose Miguel – No(s). 40.3 RATCLIFFE, Peter – No(s). 69.1 RATHZEL, Nora – No(s). 504.1 RATTON, Jose Luiz – No(s). 330.5 RAU, Henrike – No(s). 302.4 RAUDSEPP, Maaris – No(s). 604.3 RAULT, Wilfried – No(s). 485.2 RAVAL, Chandrikaben – No(s). 487.3 RAVELO, Alberto – No(s). 481.1

RACKOW, Katja – No(s). JS-8.5

RAVEN, John – No(s). 586.1

RADIUKIEWICZ, Anna – No(s). 219.6

RAY, Sawmya – No(s). 370.2

RADZIWINOWICZ, Agnieszka – No(s). 75.5, 358.5

RAYCHEVA, Lilia – No(s). 425.1, 563.2

RAFFINI, Luca – No(s). JS-56.1

RAZPURKER-APFELD, Irene – No(s). 64.3

RAGANY, Karoly – No(s). JS-31.4

READ, Jen’nan – No(s). 188.1

RAHAT, Gideon – No(s). 222.4

REALE, Giuseppe – No(s). 219.10

RAHBARI, Ladan – No(s). 379.5, 381.3

REBELO DOS SANTOS, Jose – No(s). JS-68.3

RAHIMAH, Ibrahim – No(s). 76.3

REBUGHINI, Paola – No(s). 409.1, 549.3

RAHMAWATI, Rita – No(s). 296.21 RAID, Kadri – No(s). 77.13 RAIJMAN, Rebeca – No(s). 355.2 RAINFORD, Jon – No(s). 54.2, 118.8 RAIZER, Leandro – No(s). 46.5 RAJAGOPAL, Indhu – No(s). 180.1 RAJAGOPALAN, Prema – No(s). 348.4 RAJKOBAL, Praveena – No(s). 276.7, 366.7 RAMALHETE, Filipa – No(s). 616.2 RAMDEHOLL, Dianne – No(s). 373.8 RAMELLA, Francesco – No(s). 283.4 RAMIOUL, Monique – No(s). 122.4

RECALDE, Carlos Andres Libisch – No(s). JS-19.5

RENNIE, Ellie – No(s). 387.2 RENTARI, Malama – No(s). 400.11 REPETTI, Marion – No(s). 135.1 RESPI, Chiara – No(s). 386.4 RESSEL, Saida – No(s). 254.3, JS-72.5 RESTREPO, Paula – No(s). 178.5 RETHYMIOTAKI, Helen – No(s). 123.5 REVUELTA, Beatriz – No(s). JS-9.9 REY, Frederic – No(s). 590.1 REYES, Rosario – No(s). 310.6 REYNOLDS, Tracey – No(s). 66.3 REZAEI, Mohamad – No(s). 51.6 REZAEV, Andrey – No(s). 249.5, 249.6 REZAII, Ahmad – No(s). 74.4 RHEIN, Philipp – No(s). 209.2 RHOMBERG, Chris – Session No(s). 507 RIBEIRO, Damaris – No(s). 47.20, 574.7 RIBEIRO, Ludmila – No(s). 331.2 RIBEIRO, Vitor – No(s). 333.8

RECZEK, Corinne – No(s). 195.1

RIBIC, Biljana – No(s). 264.2

REDDOCK, Rhoda – No(s). 12.1

RICCIONI, Ilaria – No(s). 437.2

REDMALM, David – No(s). 311.4

RICHARDS, Wayne – No(s). 400.6

REDSHAW, Sarah – No(s). 454.1

RICHARDSON, Lindsey – No(s). 192.3, 574.1

REGINENSI, Caterine – No(s). 466.4 REGIS, Jacqueline – No(s). 684.1 REGNIER-LOILIER, Arnaud – No(s). 485.2 REGOES, Nora – No(s). JS-48.4 REIBLING, Nadine – No(s). 79.1, JS-57.3 REICHER, Dieter – No(s). 640.4

RAMIREZ LOZANO, Julianna Paola – No(s). 183.7

REID, James – No(s). 694.1

RAMIREZ PABLO, Florentino B. – No(s). 667.1

REINALDO, Hugo – No(s). 176.1

REIMER, Thordis – No(s). 87.6 REINDL, Ilona – No(s). 386.2

RICHTER, Dirk – No(s). 572.1, 573.3 RICHTER, Rudolf – No(s). 1.1, 87.4 RICUCCI, Roberta – No(s). 260.4, 271.5 RIDZI, Frank – No(s). 49.3 Session No(s). 690 RIEDER, Irene – No(s). 87.4, 698.1 RIEDERER, Bernhard – No(s). 48.9, 622.3 RIEGEL, Christine – No(s). 66.6 RIEGEL, Viviane – No(s). 351.4, 633.2 RIEKER, Patricia – No(s). 188.3 Session No(s). 188

RAMIREZ, Jorge – No(s). JS-26.1

REINPRECHT, Christoph – No(s). 365.1, JS-74.2

RAMMELT, Henry – No(s). 542.4

REIS, Elisa – No(s). JS-2.1

RIEMANN, Gerhard – Session No(s). 444

RAMOS ZINCKE, Claudio – No(s). 689.1

REISCHAUER, Georg – No(s). 283.5

RINALLO, Jenny – No(s). 384.5, 390.5

REITER, Herwig – No(s). 57.7

RAMOS, Marilia – No(s). 48.5

RINGEL, Leopold – No(s). 104.3

REITER, Jessica – No(s). 454.3

RINGOE, Pia – No(s). 568.3

www.isa-sociology.org

381

PERSON INDEX

RAMIREZ, David Francisco – No(s). 47.31

RENA, Helge – No(s). 454.4

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

RAI, Rubina – No(s). 193.3

REKER, Sarah – No(s). 337.5

Rinkevicius – Rybakova RINKEVICIUS, Leonardas – Session No(s). JS-16 RISAFI DE PONTES, Daniela – No(s). 196.9 RISMAN, Barbara – No(s). 115.2 RISO, Brigida – No(s). 184.5, 185.7 RIST, Barbara – No(s). 87.2 RIVERA FLORES, Karla Yanin – No(s). 119.3 RIVERA VOLOSKY, Ignacio – No(s). 437.5 RIVERA, Pablo – No(s). 588.4, JS-26.1 RIVERS, Damian – No(s). 307.7 RIVETTI, Paola – No(s). 394.3 RIZEK, Cibele – No(s). 219.8 ROACH ANLEU, Sharyn – No(s). 155.5 ROBERT, Jocelyne – No(s). 120.3 ROBERT, Peter – No(s). 224.3, 620.3 ROBERTI, Geraldina – No(s). 391.9 ROBERTS, Heather – No(s). 153.3 ROBERTS, Kenneth – No(s). 167.4, 392.6 ROBINEAU, Colin – No(s). 91.11 ROBINSON, Brandon – No(s). 195.1 ROBINSON, Jackie – No(s). 314.12 ROBINSON, Louise – No(s). 133.8 ROBITAILLE, Caroline – No(s). 184.2 ROBY, Catherine – No(s). 281.2

RODRIGUEZ, Patricia – No(s). 393.5 RODRIGUEZ, Paula – No(s). 161.6 ROELENS, Jonas – No(s). 350.3 ROESSEL, Joerg – No(s). 310.3 ROGERO-GARCIA, Jesus – No(s). 80.2 ROGERS, Anne – No(s). 194.3, JS-64.6 ROGERS, Kimberly – No(s). 496.1 ROGGENBUCK, Christian – No(s). 356.2 ROGLER, Christian – No(s). JS-11.3 ROGOWSKI, Ralf – No(s). 154.7 ROHDE, Friederike – No(s). 281.3 ROJAS RUIZ, Minerva – No(s). 705.2, JS-28.7 ROJAS WIESNER, Martha Luz – No(s). 361.6

ROSENTHAL, Gabriele – No(s). 13.3, 246.1 ROSS, Robert J.S. – No(s). 463.4, JS-72.4 ROSSI, Federico – No(s). 192.13 ROSSI, Luca – No(s). 541.6, 582.1 ROSSOW, Verena – No(s). 37.2 ROSTGAARD, Tine – No(s). JS-1.6 ROTH, Maria – No(s). 43.1, 47.3 ROTHENBERG, Julia – No(s). 439.3 ROUCHDY, Malak – No(s). 550.3 ROURA, Maria – No(s). 535.2 ROVAI, Mauro – No(s). 429.3 ROVENTA-FRUMUSANI, Daniela – No(s). 173.3 ROWE, Mike – No(s). 176.2

ROJAS, Cristina – No(s). 112.7

ROWLAND, Jussara – No(s). 680.3

ROJAS, Olga – No(s). 78.2

ROY CHOWDHURY, Arnab – No(s). 637.1

ROJAS, Patria – No(s). 483.7, 492.4 ROJATZ, Daniela – No(s). 185.4 ROKNI, Siavash – No(s). 379.1 ROLANDO, Dom – No(s). 82.1 ROLANDSSON, Bertil – No(s). 593.3 ROLLE, Valerie – No(s). JS-58.3 ROLO, Duarte – No(s). 421.6 ROMAO, Ana – No(s). 123.4, 362.7 ROMASHKO, Elena – No(s). 651.1

RUBY, Sophie – No(s). 372.5 RUDEL, Miriam – No(s). 47.19 RUDYJOVA, Michaela – No(s). 440.2 RUEDIN, Didier – No(s). 251.2, 543.2 RUGGUNAN, Shaun – No(s). 598.7 RUGUNANAN, Pragna – No(s). 272.4, JS-59.1 RUHSE, Viola Elisabeth – No(s). 653.5 RUIZ CALLADO, Raul – No(s). 481.3, 281.15

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

ROMERO MUNOZ, Jose Franciso – No(s). 278.1

ROZANOVA, Julia – No(s). 12.2 Session No(s). 118

ROCHA FRANCO, Sergio Henrique – No(s). 255.4

ROSA, Marcelo – No(s). 202.3

RUSH, Michael – No(s). 83.8, 87.10

ROSADO, Cesar – No(s). 509.8

RUSPINI, Elisabetta – No(s). 78.5

RODRIGUEZ, Clara – No(s). JS-70.1

ROSANO RODRIGUEZ, Rosa Esther – No(s). 541.8

RUZZEDDU, Massimiliano – No(s). 320.3, 589.2

PERSON INDEX

ROCA, Andrea – No(s). 465.3, 559.4

Person Index

RODRIGUEZ, Elena – No(s). 191.2

ROSAS, Carolina – No(s). 350.1

RYAN, Sara – No(s). 677.1

RODRIGUEZ, Evelyn – No(s). 85.1, JS-38.1

ROSEN, Robert – No(s). 264.4

RYBAKOVA, Olga – No(s). 52.8

RODRIGUEZ, Jesus – No(s). 47.22

ROSENFIELD, Cinara – No(s). 590.1

RODRIGUEZ, Jose A. – No(s). 623.2

ROSENKRANZ, Tim – No(s). 111.4, 254.2

ROCHA, Sara – No(s). 119.5 RODRIGUES, Bianca – No(s). 196.2

ROMERO, Mary – Session No(s). JS-46 ROMERO-BALSAS, Pedro – No(s). 80.2

RODRIGUES, Emmanuel H. – No(s). 315.17, JS-50.7

ROMMEL, Inken – No(s). 246.3

RODRIGUES, Eugenia – No(s). 285.4, 293.5

RONCEVIC, Borut – No(s). 278.4, JS-10.5

RODRIGUES, Herbert – No(s). 605.2 RODRIGUEZ AUDIRAC, Leticia – No(s). 584.1 RODRÍGUEZ DE LA FUENTE, José – No(s). 630.3 RODRÍGUEZ MALDONADO, Abel – No(s). 584.2 RODRIGUEZ MORATO, Arturo – No(s). 428.2 Session No(s). 7

382

RONA-TAS, Akos – No(s). 29.3

ROOKS, Ronica – No(s). 136.2 ROOTES, Christopher – No(s). 538.1 Session No(s). 544 ROS-GARRIDO, Alicia – No(s). JS-25.3 ROSA, Hartmut – Session No(s). 406

ROSENBERG, Rhonda – No(s). 487.2

www.isa-sociology.org

RUIZ ESTRAMIL, Ivana – No(s). 354.3, 362.6 RUIZ SAN ROMAN, Jose A. – No(s). 182.5 RUIZ, Luisa – No(s). 447.1 RUMMERY, Kirstein – No(s). 243.4 RUMPALA, Yannick – No(s). JS-16.3 RUOKONEN-ENGLER, MinnaKristiina – Session No(s). 441, 442 RUOTTI, Caren – No(s). 605.2 RUSER, Alexander – No(s). 176.5, JS-47.4

Person Index

S

SALES, Joao Ricardo – No(s). 263.18

SA’AD, Abdul-Mumin – Session No(s). 8

SALIS, Sergio – No(s). 131.3

SAARI, Kari – No(s). 91.7 SAARINEN, Arttu – No(s). 165.1, JS-63.1 SABARIEGO, Marta – No(s). 394.2 SABATH, Arpita – No(s). 472.2, 594.7 SABBAGH, Michael – No(s). 252.3 SABBAN, Rima – No(s). 369.13 SABIDO RAMOS, Olga Alejandra – No(s). 383.2 SABINI, Luca – No(s). 296.9 SABOURI KHOSROWSHAHI, Habib – No(s). 74.4

SALIKUTLUK, Zerrin – No(s). JS-5.2 SALMI, Jelena – No(s). 664.4 SALMINIITTY, Ritva – No(s). 635.1 SALOMA-AKPEDONU, Czarina – No(s). 281.6 SALONEN, Tapio – No(s). 454.6 SALUNKHE, Pandurang – No(s). 483.6 SALWAY, Sarah – No(s). JS-64.4 SAMAL, Kanak Lata – No(s). 160.4 SAMARSKY, Elena – No(s). 677.3, JS-43.8 SAMMET, Kornelia – No(s). 419.3 SAMPSON, Helen – No(s). 8.2, 338.4

Sa’ad – Schachtner SANZ-MENENDEZ, Luis – No(s). 283.1, JS-13.3 SAPINSKI, Jean Philippe – No(s). 26.3, 295.8 Session No(s). 25 SAPIO, Giuseppina – No(s). 85.4 SAPSFORD, Roger – No(s). 626.2 SARACINO, Barbara – No(s). JS-11.4 SARACOGLU, Pinar – No(s). 466.2 SARBU, Mihai – No(s). 25.5, 296.29 SARDADVAR, Karin – No(s). 372.4 SARDJO, Sulastri – No(s). 296.26 SARIKAKIS, Katharine – No(s). 171.4 SARMA, Pranjal – No(s). 158.4, 170.6 SARPAVAARA, Harri – No(s). 525.2

SAMSON, Melanie – No(s). 503.3

SARPILA, Outi – No(s). JS-63.1

SAMUELSON, Charles D. – No(s). 455.4

SARRIS, Nikos – No(s). 319.3 SARUIS, Tatiana – No(s). 239.7

SANAGUSTIN-FONS, Maria – No(s). 183.6

SASAJIMA, Hideaki – No(s). 440.4 SASSEN, Saskia – No(s). 2.2, JS-6.1

SAEGUSA, Mayumi – No(s). 371.2

SANCHEZ RAMOS, Maria Eugenia Sanchez Ramos – No(s). 182.1, 380.5

SAENZ, Rogelio – No(s). 478.5

SANCHEZ, Elena – No(s). JS-26.1

SAHA, Lawrence – No(s). 493.5

SANCHEZ, Esmeralda F. – No(s). 271.6

SACCA, Flaminia – No(s). 319.1, 321.3 SACCHETTI, Francesco – No(s). 273.4 SACCHETTO, Devi – No(s). 373.7, 509.15 SACKER, Amanda – No(s). 129.2 SADAT, Zahedus – No(s). 392.9

SAHARSO, Sawitri – No(s). 231.1, JS-28.6

SASANO, Misae – No(s). 489.5 SASSON-LEVY, Orna – No(s). 558.2 Session No(s). 561 SASTRE, Marta – No(s). 447.1 SATHLER, Marcelo – No(s). 466.4

SANCHEZ, Landy – No(s). JS-63.5

SATO, Mikiyo – No(s). 528.3

SAHIN, Nevin – No(s). 268.5

SANCHEZ, Tamara – No(s). 310.4

SATO, Yoshimichi – No(s). 515.2

SAHIN, Yusuf – No(s). 47.21

SANCHEZ-SANTAMARIA, Jose – No(s). JS-55.2

SATOH, Keiichi – No(s). 292.1, 292.2

SAIKIA, Uttam – No(s). 675.2 SAINI, Shashi – No(s). 369.1, 594.9

SAND, Hans Petter – No(s). 525.3, 526.2

SAUCEDO TAPIA, Alejandra – No(s). 192.16 SAUER, Lenore – No(s). JS-43.5

SANDAKER, Solve – No(s). 635.4

SAUERBORN, Elgen – No(s). 612.1

SANDERSON, Peter – No(s). 595.6 SANDIN, Maria – No(s). 447.1

SAVA, Ionel – Session No(s). 91, 91-35

SANDRI, Giulia – No(s). 222.1, 223.1

SAVAGE, Scott – No(s). 496.2

SANGGU, Lee – No(s). 356.9, 262.20

SAVALE, Sanjay – No(s). 290.5

SAKATE, Machhindra – No(s). 290.6

SANTAGATI, Mariagrazia – No(s). 390.14

SAVELA, Timo – No(s). JS-27.4

SAKATE, Pushplata – No(s). 483.6

SANTERO, Arianna – No(s). 75.3

SAKS, Michael – No(s). 598.2 Session No(s). 600

SANTIAGO GARCIA, Rosana – No(s). 47.29

SAWADOGO, Nathalie – No(s). 664.5, 483.13

SAKSHAUG, Joseph – No(s). 388.1

SANTINI, Sara – No(s). 131.4, JS-9.3

SAKSON-SZAFRANSKA, Izabela – No(s). 564.1

SAYFUTDINOVA, Leyla – No(s). 594.3

SANTORO, Monica – No(s). JS-43.10

SAZONOVA, Polina – No(s). 452.4

SANTOS, Andreia – No(s). 146.10

SCALISE, Gemma – No(s). 636.1

SANTOS, Claudia – No(s). 49.8, 234.1

SCALON, Celi – No(s). 5.4

SANTOS, Hermilio – No(s). 445.2, 449.3

SCALON, Roberto – No(s). 270.3

SAJJA, Srinivas – No(s). 117.6, 474.4 SAKA, Burcu – No(s). 509.20 SAKAGUCHI, Yusuke – No(s). 456.3 SAKANASHI, Jun – No(s). 79.5 SAKANO, Tatsuro – No(s). 522.3

SAKTANBER, Ayse – No(s). 379.2 SAKURAI, Yoshihide – No(s). 276.1 Session No(s). 262

SALAMANCA, Manuel – No(s). 506.1 SALAS-PORRAS, Alejandra – No(s). 31.5

SANTOS, Maria Joao – No(s). 194.5 SANTOS, Maria-Fátima – No(s). 329.4 SANTOS, Mario – No(s). 696.4, 193.17 SANTOS, Myrian – No(s). 100.3, 171.1

SALATA, Andre – No(s). 33.5, 89.3

SANTOS, Patrícia – No(s). 119.5

SALERNO, Rossana – No(s). 263.3

SANTOS, Rui – No(s). 194.5 www.isa-sociology.org

SAXENA, Anshul – No(s). 487.2

SCAMBOR, Elli – No(s). 367.10 SCARABOTO, Daiane – No(s). 559.3 SCARBOROUGH, William – No(s). 115.2 SCHACHTNER, Christina – No(s). 100.5

383

PERSON INDEX

SALA, Emanuela – No(s). 134.6, 386.4, 388.5

SAWA, Keiko – No(s). 153.2

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

SAHU, Dipti Ranjan – No(s). 561.2

Schadler – Severino SCHADLER, Cornelia – No(s). 577.1, JS-3.4 SCHAEFER, Andrea – No(s). 34.1, 369.2 SCHAEFER, Martina – No(s). 281.3, 303.3 SCHAEFER, Miriam – No(s). 444.1 SCHAFER, Franka – No(s). 554.5 SCHAFFAR, Wolfram – No(s). 546.2 SCHAFFARTZIK, Anke – No(s). 295.3, 302.1 SCHALKWIJK, Jair – No(s). 106.1 SCHARATHOW, Wiebke – No(s). JS-67.2 SCHAUM, Henrike – No(s). 298.18 SCHAUM, Ina – No(s). 445.5 SCHEIBELHOFER, Elisabeth – No(s). JS-48.4 SCHEIBELHOFER, Paul – No(s). JS-50.3 SCHELISCH, Lynn – No(s). 133.9 SCHERER, Stefani – No(s). JS-64.3 SCHERKE, Katharina – No(s). 1.1 SCHIEBEL, Martina – No(s). 445.4 Session No(s). 446 SCHILLING, Hannah – No(s). 346.3, 390.15 SCHINDLER, Saskja – No(s). 338.3

PERSON INDEX

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

SCHLECHTER, Maria – No(s). 683.5 SCHLEMBACH, Christopher – No(s). 210.3, 336.4 SCHMALZ, Stefan – No(s). 540.6, 509.25 SCHMIDT, Eva-Maria – No(s). 87.4 SCHMIDT, Luisa – No(s). 292.5, 293.4 SCHMIERL, Klaus – No(s). 344.1

Person Index SCHOETTLE, Sabrina – No(s). 77.7 SCHOLTZ, Hanno – No(s). 14.4 SCHOLZ, Sylka – No(s). 372.5 SCHONAUER, Annika – No(s). 342.1 SCHOR, Neia – No(s). 610.1, 610.6 SCHORCH, Maren – No(s). 138.4, 452.5

SCOTT, Bernard – No(s). 16.2, 579.1 Session No(s). 579 SCOTT, John – No(s). 331.4 SCULLION, Lisa – No(s). 245.2 SCZECH, Verena – No(s). 214.2 SEBASTIAO JR, Acacio Augusto – No(s). 466.4

SCHOYEN, Mi Ah – No(s). 397.3

SEBŐK, Anna – No(s). 348.5

SCHREIBER, Dominik – No(s). 291.2, 298.24

SEDDONE, Antonella – No(s). 222.1 SEDOVA, Natalia – No(s). 52.8

SCHRÖDER, Tim – No(s). 79.2

SEEBACHER, Deniz – No(s). 114.3, 217.1

SCHROEDTER, Julia – No(s). 310.3 SCHROOTEN, Mechthild – No(s). 369.2 SCHUBERT, Johannes – No(s). 303.2 SCHUBERT, Tinka – No(s). 49.16, 315.11 SCHUELL, Elmar – No(s). 97.4 SCHUERKENS, Ulrike M.M. – No(s). 19.1, JS-62.1 SCHUETZ, Claudia – No(s). 541.5

SEEDAT KHAN, Mariam – No(s). 531.1, 534.2 SEELEIB-KAISER, Martin – No(s). JS-48.6 SEELY-GANT, Katie – No(s). 282.2, 624.3 SEEWANN, Lena – No(s). 622.3 SEGAL, Edwin – No(s). 369.9 SEGAL, Marcia – No(s). 374.3

SCHUETZE, Lea – No(s). 140.3

SEIDELSOHN, Kristina – No(s). 680.2

SCHULZ MEINEN, Haimo – No(s). 263.4, 267.4

SEIDLER, Yuki – No(s). 356.10 SEIDUMANOV, Serik – No(s). 636.3

SCHULZ, Markus S. – No(s). 2.1 Session No(s). 6

SEIFERT, Alexander – No(s). 133.13

SCHULZ-SCHAEFFER, Ingo – No(s). 37.3, 289.5

SELLAMUTHU, Gurusamy – No(s). 479.1, 490.1

SCHULZE, Katja – No(s). 454.3 SCHUMACHER, Terry – No(s). 281.13 SCHUNCK, Reinhard – No(s). 193.1 SCHURMAN, Susan – No(s). 503.1 SCHUSTER, Julia – No(s). JS-70.2 SCHUTT, Russell – No(s). 568.1 SCHUTTER, Sabina – No(s). 603.2

SEIKKULA, Minna – No(s). 62.3

SELOD, Saher – No(s). 67.5 SEMENOVA, Tatiana – No(s). 47.24 SEMENOVA, Victoria – No(s). 441.1 SEN, Rukmini – No(s). 110.1 SENDA, Yukiko – No(s). 79.4, 483.4 SENER, Gulum – No(s). 545.4 SENGUPTA, Papia – No(s). 369.7

SCHMITT, Sabrina – No(s). 372.1

SCHWAB, Eva – No(s). 451.1, 653.4

SCHNABEL, Annette – No(s). 259.4, 263.19

SCHWARTZ, Germano – No(s). 154.1 SCHWARTZ, Gregory – No(s). 512.3

SCHNECK, Andreas – No(s). 386.1

SCHWARZ, Christoph – No(s). JS-53.4

SERAJZADEH, Seyed Hossein – No(s). JS-73.3

SCHNEIDER, Christoph – No(s). 289.4

SCHWARZ-PLASCHG, Claudia – No(s). 284.1

SERAPIONI, Mauro – No(s). 192.2, JS-64.5

SCHWEITZER, Eva – No(s). 501.2

SERGI, Vittorio – No(s). 297.5

SCHWEITZER, Reinhard – No(s). 65.4

SERNA, Claudia – No(s). 481.1

SCHNEIJDERBERG, Christian – No(s). 212.5, 429.5

SCHWENKEN, Helen – No(s). 503.2, 543.3

SERRA, Fernando – No(s). 48.18, 137.11

SCHNELL, Christiane – No(s). 599.1, JS-55.1 Session No(s). 597

SCHWEYER, Francois-Xavier – No(s). JS-31.5

SERRA, Helena – No(s). 591.1

SCHWIERTZ, Helge – No(s). 361.5

SCHOBER, Anna – Session No(s). 654

SCHWITTEK, Jessica – No(s). 403.4, JS-43.11

SERRANO, Maria de los Angeles – No(s). JS-36.3

SCHOBER, Pia – No(s). 78.3 Session No(s). JS-1

SCIORTINO, Giuseppe – Session No(s). 350

SCHOENECK, Nadine – No(s). JS-30.1

SCOLLAN, Angela – No(s). JS-27.3 Session No(s). 314

SCHNEIDER, Michael – No(s). 303.2 SCHNEIDER, Stephanie – No(s). 341.5 SCHNEIDER, Volker – No(s). 292.1

SCHOERPF, Philip – No(s). 342.1 384

www.isa-sociology.org

SENKEVICS, Adriano – No(s). 53.1 SENNOTT, Christie – No(s). 77.4

SERRANO, Joane – No(s). 181.3, 474.2

SERRAT, Rodrigo – No(s). 135.6, 135.7 SETTI, Zakia – No(s). JS-10.2 SETTLER, Federico – No(s). 268.4 SEVERINO, Sergio – No(s). 47.13

Person Index SEVILLA, Ariel – No(s). 114.2 SEWARD, Rudy – No(s). 83.8 SHAHABI, Mahmood – No(s). 328.6 SHAINIDZE, Roland – No(s). 273.5

SHOJAEI BAGHINI, Nima – No(s). 230.3

SIMONAZZI, Annamaria – Session No(s). 3

SHOJI, Kokichi – No(s). 209.5

SIMONOVA, Olga – No(s). 420.5, 590.6

SHOME, Suparna – No(s). JS-57.4

SHAMOA-NIR, Lipaz – No(s). 64.3

SHOR, Eran – No(s). 229.2

SHAPIRO, Ephraim – No(s). JS-73.1 Session No(s). 263

SHORT, Stephanie – No(s). 598.5 SHRIWISE, Amanda – No(s). 244.3

SHAPKINA, Nadia – No(s). 35.3, 236.6

SHUAYB, Maha – No(s). 49.17

SHARAPOV, Kiril – No(s). 463.3

SHUKER, Zeinab – No(s). 206.2

SHARMA, Naina – No(s). 161.7, 169.3

SIBAL, Vatika – No(s). 160.4

SHARMA, Shikha – No(s). 142.2, JS-51.1

SIBIREVA, Maria – Session No(s). 604, 605

SHARMA, Sneha – No(s). 382.4

SIDORINA, Tatiana – No(s). 632.1

SHAUKENOVA, Zarema – No(s). 636.3

SIEBER, Rebekka – No(s). 622.1, 682.1

SHAW, Jacqueline – No(s). 655.2, 682.3

SIEGEL, Judith – No(s). 569.3

SHAYNE, Julie – No(s). 377.2

SIEGERS, Pascal – No(s). 256.7

SHEIKHZADEGAN, Amir – No(s). 273.3 SHELLY, Ann – No(s). 496.3 SHELLY, Robert – No(s). 494.1, 496.3 SHEN, Hsiu-hua – No(s). 74.6 SHERLOCK, Zelinda – No(s). 314.2 SHERMAN, Rachel – No(s). 500.1, 509.2 SHETTIMA, Abba Gana – No(s). JS-40.2 SHIBATA, Yasuko – No(s). JS-65.3 SHIH, Yi-Ping – No(s). 72.9, 633.3 SHIM, Jae-Mahn – No(s). 196.6 SHIMIZU, Hiroto – No(s). 567.2 SHIMOSEGAWA, Minami – No(s). 48.4 SHIN, Eunkyung – No(s). 233.3 SHIN, Jin-Wook – No(s). 549.2 SHIN, Kwang-Yeong – No(s). 37.6 SHINDE, Mahadev – No(s). 290.2 SHINOHARA, Chika – No(s). JS-26.7, JS-51.2 SHINOKI, Mikiko – No(s). 300.5 SHINOZAKI, Kyoko – No(s). 351.5, JS-46.2 SHIRAHASE, Sawako – No(s). 478.4 SHIRATORI, Yoshihiko – No(s). 205.6, 255.5 SHIRE, Karen – No(s). 34.3, 38.1 SHIROMARU, Mizue – No(s). 528.3 SHISHIDO, Kuniaki – No(s). 297.7 SHKOLNIKOV, Vladimir – No(s). 486.2 SHMATKO, Natalia – No(s). 277.4, 590.4

SIEGLIN, Veronika – No(s). 611.2

SIMONSON, Julia – No(s). 134.2 SIMPLICIO, Maria Araguacy – No(s). 466.4 SIMSA, Ruth – No(s). JS-14.2 SINGE, Ingo – No(s). 288.2 SINGH, Deepika – No(s). 609.5, JS-32.3 SINGH, Pankaj Kumar – No(s). 594.2 SINGH, Richa – No(s). 594.8 SINGH, Sucheta – No(s). 661.1 SINGH, Suman B – No(s). 193.3 SINGH, Virendra Pal – No(s). 209.4 Session No(s). 594

SIEMIENSKA, Renata – No(s). 49.14

SINHA, Vineeta – Session No(s). 263

SIENKIEWICZ, Joanna Jadwiga – No(s). JS-48.2

SINHORETTO, Jacqueline – No(s). 328.2

SIFER-RIVIÈRE, Lynda – No(s). 193.2

SINISALO-JUHA, Eeva – No(s). 52.7

SIGAREVA, Evgenia – No(s). 488.2

SIOUTA, Eleni – No(s). 569.2

SIGL, Johanna – No(s). 449.4

SIOUTI, Irini – Session No(s). 448, 453

SIINO, Marianna – No(s). 379.7, 384.2 SIK, Domonkos – No(s). 421.7, 117.10 SIKORA, Joanna – No(s). 46.1, 256.2 SILITONGA, Mala – No(s). 516.2 SILVA, Alexandre – No(s). JS-34.4 SILVA, Amelia Cristina F. da – No(s). 597.8 SILVA, Diego – No(s). JS-10.4 SILVA, Fernanda – No(s). JS-47.1 SILVA, Leticia R.T. – No(s). JS-73.6 SILVA, Manuel Carvalho – No(s). 123.2 SILVA, Nara Roberta – No(s). 565.1 SILVA, Tania – No(s). 467.1, 298.16 SILVA-BRANDAO, Roberto Rubem – No(s). 103.6, 106.8 SILVER, Daniel – No(s). 120.4 SILVERIO, Valter – No(s). 100.2 SILVERSTEIN, Merril – No(s). 135.2 SIMI, Pete – No(s). 67.6 SIMIONI, Rafael Lazzarotto – No(s). 47.20, 574.7 SIMMS, Melanie Simms – No(s). 506.2 SIMOES, Barbara – No(s). 148.3 SIMOES, Solange – No(s). 369.27 Session No(s). 371 SIMON, Karl-Heinz – No(s). 585.3 Session No(s). 576 www.isa-sociology.org

SIPKA, Danko – No(s). 307.3 SIRI, Jasmin – No(s). 577.1, JS-47.3 SIRLETO, Niccolo – No(s). 273.4, 653.2 SIRNA, Francesca – No(s). 187.4, 358.1 SIROVATKA, Tomas – No(s). 397.11 SITTEL, Johanna – No(s). 343.1 SIVOPLYASOVA, Svetlana – No(s). 488.2 SIWA, Jane – No(s). 507.6 SJOBERG, Gideon – No(s). 214.5 SKALS, Anette – No(s). JS-21.7 SKARPENES, Ove – No(s). 47.26 SKOPEK, Nora – No(s). 48.20 SKOVAJSA, Marek – No(s). 210.4 SKOVGAARD-SMITH, Irene – No(s). 217.2, 351.3 SKRIPCHENKO, Anna – No(s). 218.4 SKROBANEK, Jan – No(s). JS-43.7 SLACHEVSKY, Natalia – No(s). 47.7 SLESINGEROVA, Eva – No(s). 435.2, 613.2 SLOAN, Melissa – No(s). 495.3 SLOMCZYNSKI, Kazimierz M. – No(s). 388.4 SLOOTJES, Jasmijn – No(s). 231.1, JS-28.6 385

PERSON INDEX

SHIRSAT, Pravinkumar – No(s). 148.2

SIEGEL, Pamela – No(s). 196.8

SIMONOVITS, Bori – No(s). 502.2

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

SHILLING, Chris – No(s). 51.1, 674.3

Sevilla – Slootjes

Slusarczyk – Suenker

SOUSA, William – No(s). 334.1

STEDTFELD, Susanne – No(s). JS-43.5

SMALE, Bryan – No(s). 161.3

SOUZA, David Emmanuel – No(s). 343.4

STEFANEL, Adriana – No(s). 177.3

SMALL, Neil – No(s). 192.15

SOUZA, Maria Jose – No(s). 47.1

SMEBY, Jens-Christian – No(s). 597.3 Session No(s). 590

SOWA, Agnieszka – No(s). 131.5

STEINBACH, Anja – No(s). JS-7.2

SMETSCHKA, Barbara – No(s). 305.1

SOWA, Frank – No(s). 590.3

STEINHARDT, Isabel – No(s). 212.5, 657.6

SÖYLER, Sevgi – No(s). 442.3

STEINHILPER, Elias – No(s). 543.5

SPAAIJ, Ramon – No(s). 70.2, 160.5

STEPANOV, Alexander – No(s). 249.8

SPANNARI, Jenni – No(s). 346.4

STEPHENS, Jennie – No(s). 26.2

SPEARS, Russell – No(s). 517.3

STEPHENSON, Barry – No(s). 263.15

SPELLERBERG, Annette – No(s). 133.9

STERN, Verena – No(s). 543.3

SPENDLOVE, Zoey – No(s). 600.3

STETS, Jan – No(s). 17.3, 496.2

SPERINGER, Markus – No(s). 491.3

STEVIS, Dimitris – No(s). 504.2, 509.1

SPERONI PEREIRA DA CRUZ, Thales – No(s). 358.2, JS-23.6

STEWART, Alasdair B R – No(s). 245.2

SPICKARD, James – No(s). 13.1, 261.1

STIAWA, Maja – No(s). 569.4

SLUSARCZYK, Magdalena – No(s). 75.8

SMIT, Ria – No(s). 85.3 Session No(s). 73 SMITH, Christine – No(s). 190.2 SMITH, Cindy – No(s). 532.2 SMITH, Daniel – No(s). 248.1 SMITH, Michael – No(s). 629.1 SMITH, Thomas – No(s). 298.7 SMITH, Thomas Spence – No(s). 16.3 Session No(s). 619 SMITH, Tom W – No(s). 256.1, 257.1 SMYRL, Marc – No(s). JS-31.5

SPIER, Tim – No(s). 222.2

STEWART, Paul – No(s). 514.3 STODDART, Mark – No(s). 293.3 STOECKLE, L. M. Anabel – No(s). 86.8, 372.3

SPILLARE, Stefano – No(s). 296.8

STOESSEL, Charles – No(s). JS-34.8

SOBOLEVA, Natalya – No(s). 347.3

SPINA, Elena – No(s). JS-21.4

SOBOLEWSKI, Wojciech – No(s). 436.3

STOICULESCU, Alina Huzui – No(s). 623.5

SPINA, Nerida – No(s). 56.3, 688.3

SOARES MENEZES, Maria Zefisa – No(s). JS-40.1

SPINA, Ferdinando – No(s). 154.2

STOICULESCU, Robert – No(s). 623.5 STOLL, Florian – No(s). JS-24.4

SOBOTKA, Tomáš – No(s). 491.1

SPITZER, Denise – No(s). 369.16

SOCCI, Marco – No(s). 131.4

SPIVAK, Andrew – No(s). 166.7, 334.1

STOLZ, Erwin – No(s). 136.3, 193.20

SODER, Michael – No(s). 504.7

SPRACKLEN, Karl – No(s). 167.3 Session No(s). 165

STONER, Alex – No(s). 417.3 STORELLI, Elizangela – No(s). 81.1

SPURK, Jan – No(s). 409.4 Session No(s). 10

STORMS, Elias – No(s). 29.4

SREERUPA, Sreerupa – No(s). JS-23.5 SRIGLEY, Ron – No(s). 395.1

STRAZDINS, Lyndall – No(s). 602.5, JS-1.3

SRIKHANTA, Rangan – No(s). 387.2

STRECKER, David – No(s). 11.2, 410.3

SRINIVASAN, Amrit – No(s). 661.2

STREET, Ken – No(s). 597.5

STADLER, Raphaela – No(s). 158.1

STRIEBING, Clemens – No(s). 218.8

STAGL, Sigrid – No(s). 504.7

STRULIK, Stefanie – No(s). 392.5

STAHL, Garth – No(s). 51.3, 399.8

STUART, Susan – No(s). 128.4

SOMMERLAD, Hilary – No(s). 143.1

STAHL, Juliane – No(s). 78.3

SOMOKANTA, Thounaojam – No(s). 300.2, 378.5

STALIDIS, George – No(s). 400.11

STUBBS, Paul – Session No(s). 236

STAN, Sabina – No(s). 509.16

SON, Joonmo – No(s). 256.12 Session No(s). 628

STANOJEVIC, Miroslav – No(s). 509.5

SOEHN, Janina – No(s). 442.2 SOHN, Janina – No(s). 677.2, 685.1 List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

SPIEGEL, Anna – No(s). 351.2, JS-68.7

STEIBER, Nadia – No(s). 390.12

SPIES, Tina – No(s). 441.2

SOARE, Sorina – No(s). 222.5

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

SOLE, Carme – No(s). 135.7 SOLER GALLART, Marta – Session No(s). 708 SOLIS, Marlene – No(s). 338.5, 441.4 SOLIS, Patricio – No(s). 33.4, 48.12 SOMMER, Brandon – No(s). 509.25 SOMMER, Ilka – No(s). 694.3 SOMMER, Matthias – No(s). 420.1

SONERYD, Linda – No(s). 298.3 SONG, Ai – No(s). 559.16 SONG, Lijun – No(s). 570.1 SONG, Rira – No(s). 192.11 SORDE-MARTI, Teresa – No(s). 285.5 SORIANO-MIRAS, Rosa – No(s). 338.5, 441.4 SORJ, Bila – No(s). 96.2 SOSA ELIZAGA, Raquel – No(s). 53.4 Session No(s). 14 SOURALOVA, Adela – No(s). JS-23.4 386

STARIKOV, Valentin – No(s). 249.5 STARKBAUM, Johannes – No(s). 185.6 STARKEY, Caroline – No(s). 272.1 Session No(s). 275 STAROSTA, Pawel – Session No(s). 117, 125

STORR, Ryan – No(s). 70.2

STUCHBURY, Rachel – No(s). 129.1 STUMMVOLL, Günter – Session No(s). 332 STUMPF, Felix – No(s). 499.11 STYPINSKA, Justyna – No(s). 135.3 SU, Phi – No(s). 356.3 SU, Phung – No(s). JS-59.6 SUAREZ, Monica – No(s). 580.4

STAUBLI, Silvia – No(s). 336.1

SUAREZ-GRIMALT, Laura – No(s). 75.4

STEBBINS, Robert – No(s). 157.1, 167.1

SUBIRATS, Anna – No(s). 540.11

STECKERMEIER, Leonie – No(s). 625.1, 256.10

SUCHOVSKA, Petra – No(s). 640.9

STECKLUM, Heike – No(s). 571.3, JS-28.5 www.isa-sociology.org

SUBRT, Jiri – No(s). 197.4 SUDO, Naoki – No(s). 523.1 SUENKER, Heinz – No(s). 120.1, 602.4

Person Index

Suessbauer – Tervola

SUESSBAUER, Elisabeth – No(s). 296.25

SZAFLARSKI, Magdalena – No(s). 364.2, 570.7

TANAKA, Sigeto – No(s). 90.2

SUESSE, Nina – No(s). 693.2

SZASZ, Andrew – No(s). 26.1, 293.6

SUGAWARA, Yuka M. – No(s). 491.2

SZEBEHELY, Marta – No(s). 232.2

TANATOVA, Dina – No(s). 47.16

SUGIYAMA, Katsumi – No(s). 192.7

SZEKELY, Julia – Session No(s). 451

SUKONTAMARN, Pataporn – No(s). 76.1 SULCA, Lucia Barros – No(s). JS-19.5 SULEIMAN, Barnabas – No(s). 376.4 SULEMAN, Muhammed – No(s). 262.11 SULLIVAN, Oriel – No(s). 161.6 SULLU, Bengi – No(s). 604.1 SULZER, Sandra – No(s). 190.2 Session No(s). 495 SUMARTO, Mulyadi – No(s). 244.1 SUMBAS, Azer – No(s). 23.1 SUN, Shirley HsiaoLi – No(s). 138.2, 184.3

SZOCSKA, Miklos – No(s). JS-31.4 SZOLUCHA, Anna – No(s). 101.3, 91.18 SZPAKOWICZ, Dorota – No(s). 395.3 SZTOMPKA, Piotr – Session No(s). 660 SZYDLIK, Marc – No(s). 88.3

TANG, Chih-Chieh – No(s). 639.1 TANG, Lynn – No(s). 572.3 TANG, Wen-hui Anna – No(s). 692.2 TANGEL, Virginia – No(s). 193.6 TANIGUCHI, Hiromi – No(s). 77.12 TAO, Yi-feng – No(s). 519.2 TARAKI, Lisa – Session No(s). 709 TARIQ, Hafsa – No(s). 20.3, 20.5

SZYLAR, Anna – No(s). 431.4

TARKKALA, Heta – No(s). 289.3

T

TARTARI, Morena – No(s). 123.3

TARKO, Klara – No(s). 158.3 Session No(s). 167

TADEPALLY, Nagender – No(s). 119.2

TARUMOTO, Hideki – No(s). 363.1

TAENZLER, Dirk – No(s). 255.3

TASTSOGLOU, Evangelia – No(s). 374.1, JS-41.1

SUNG, Woncheol – No(s). 456.3

TAG, Miriam – No(s). 703.1, JS-15.1

SUNIL, Thankam – No(s). 455.3, 487.4

TAI, Hua – No(s). 468.2

SUR, Piyali – No(s). 609.6, JS-32.6

TAJIMA, Yuki – No(s). 165.6

SURDEZ, Muriel – No(s). JS-21.6

TAJMAZINANI, Ali Akbar – No(s). 399.10

SUSANSZKY, Pal – No(s). 559.8, JS-53.5

TANAKA, Yukari – No(s). 314.13

TAIPALE, Sakari – No(s). 582.3

TATEYAMA, Noriko – No(s). 74.2 TATJES, André – No(s). 82.6 TATSUMI, Mariko – No(s). 78.4, 87.8 TATSUNO, Yosuke – No(s). 538.5 TATTARINI, Giulia – No(s). JS-64.3

TAKAHASHI, Masahito – No(s). 502.3

TAVAKOL, Mohammad – No(s). 177.6

SUSEN, Simon – No(s). 197.5, 313.1

TAKAHASHI, Norihito – No(s). 276.6

SUTER, Christian – No(s). 622.1 Session No(s). 623

TAKAHASHI, Toru – No(s). 576.1

TAVARES-DOS-SANTOS, Jose Vicente – No(s). 15.3, 328.1

SUZUKI, Hiroyuki – No(s). 558.3

TAKEDA, Hiroko – No(s). 34.5

SUZUKI, Maki – No(s). 175.3 SUZUKI, Maya – No(s). 561.1

TAKENOSHITA, Hirohisa – No(s). 247.4

SVENSSON, Mans – No(s). 17.2

TAKEUCHI, Asuka – No(s). 345.3

SWAIN, Spencer – No(s). 162.4

TAKEUCHI, Michiru – No(s). 528.1

SWAMI, Meenakshi Sinha – No(s). 296.14

TAKEZAKI, Kazuma – No(s). 166.5

SWARBRICK, Margaret – No(s). 571.5

TAKITA-ISHII, Sachiko – No(s). 407.1

SWARNAKAR, Pradip – No(s). 292.3, 293.1

TALBOT, Debra – No(s). 688.2, 692.3

SWART, Ignatius – No(s). 393.3 SWARTZ, Sharlene – No(s). 17.1 SWEENEY, Kathryn – No(s). 66.1 SWIACZNY, Frank – No(s). 488.1 SWIATEK-MLYNARSKA, Paulina – No(s). 229.3

TAKIKAWA, Hiroki – No(s). 515.3

TALLARITA, Loredana – No(s). 165.3 TALLY, Margaret – No(s). 172.6, 373.8 TAMAKUWALA, Sheetal – No(s). 594.6 TAMAYO GOMEZ, Camilo – Session No(s). JS-53

SWINDLE, Jeffrey – No(s). 107.3, 387.7

TAMBE, Shruti – No(s). JS-50.1 Session No(s). 314

SYDOROV, Mykola – No(s). 494.2

TAN, Hongze – No(s). 118.7

SYMEOU, Loizos – No(s). 43.2

TAN, Jo-Pei – No(s). 76.3

SYSON, Michael – No(s). 281.6

TAN, JooEan – No(s). 74.1

SZABO, Julia – No(s). 391.2

TANAKA, Hiromi – No(s). 157.5

www.isa-sociology.org

TAYLOR, Erin – No(s). 30.3 TAYLOR, Yvette – No(s). 275.5, 655.1 TAZREITER, Claudia – No(s). 453.1, 652.1 TE RIELE, Kitty – No(s). 50.1, JS-61.1 TEIXEIRA, Alex Niche – No(s). 380.1 TEIXEIRA, Ana Lucia – No(s). 433.2 TEIXEIRA, Luiz – No(s). 40.3 TEJERINA, Benjamin – No(s). 4.4 Session No(s). JS-39 TEKIN BABUC, Zeynep – No(s). 453.2 TEMPLIN, Torsten – No(s). 309.4 TENA-SANCHEZ, Jordi – No(s). 502.5, 586.3 TENORIO CONTRERAS, Maria Del Carmen – No(s). 580.1 TEOTIA, Manoj – No(s). 111.2 TERAN, Lilia – No(s). 580.4 Session No(s). 584

PERSON INDEX

SWIDER, Sarah – No(s). 508.1, 509.4

TAMAYO, Sergio – No(s). JS-35.3 Session No(s). 540

TAVERA FENOLLOSA, Ligia – No(s). 206.5 Session No(s). 562

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

SUWADA, Katarzyna – No(s). 87.3

TAKALA-GREENISH, Lotta – No(s). 509.18

TERBORG, Roland – No(s). 310.4 TEROLLI, Erisa – No(s). 581.4 TERVOLA, Jussi – No(s). 231.2

387

Tesch-Romer – Uğur TESCH-ROMER, Clemens – No(s). 134.2

TOMESCU-DUBROW, Irina – No(s). 388.4

TRUSSON, Clive – No(s). 341.4

TESSER JR, Zeno Carlos – No(s). 659.6

TOMIC KOLUDROVIC, Inga – No(s). 248.4

TSAI, Ming-Chang – No(s). 629.4 Session No(s). 626

TESTA, Maria Rita – No(s). 491.1 TETI, Andrea – No(s). JS-24.2 TEWARI, Babita – No(s). 161.8

TOMOV, Mariyan – No(s). 563.2

TSAI, Pei-Hui – No(s). 467.3 TSAI, Po-Fang – No(s). 639.3

TEWARI, Sanjay – No(s). 157.7 THABCHUMPON, Naruemon – No(s). 546.2

TOPATES, Hakan – No(s). 359.6

TSANGARIS, Michael – No(s). 118.5, 436.4

TORODE, Daniel – No(s). 704.2

TSAPKO, Miroslava – No(s). 52.8

THAKORE, Bhoomi – No(s). 314.9

TORRES, Adolfo – No(s). 290.4

TSCHOELL, Christine – No(s). 106.7

THEINE, Hendrik – No(s). 504.7, 298.18

TORRES, Analia – No(s). 80.3, 48.18

TSE, Patricia Fuk-Ying – No(s). 509.6

TORTEROLA, Emiliano – No(s). 405.4

TSEKOURA, Maria – No(s). 399.3

THEODOROU, Eleni – No(s). 43.2

TOSCANO, Emanuele – Session No(s). 916, 91

TSENG, Chun-Ying – No(s). 56.1

THEW, Harriet – No(s). 403.2

TOTH, Alexandru-Ioan – No(s). 623.5

THOEMMES, Jens – No(s). 348.1

TOTH, Georgiana – No(s). 623.5

TSETHLIKAI, Monica – No(s). 533.2

THOLEN, Jochen – No(s). 512.2

TOTH, Gergely – No(s). 559.8, JS-53.5

THOMAS, Julian – No(s). 387.2

TOURAINE, Alain – Session No(s). 6, JS-39

THOMAS, Patricia – No(s). 487.1

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

TOMOMATSU, Ikuko – No(s). 184.4

TRUSSON, Diane – No(s). 684.2

TONARELLI, Annalisa – No(s). 599.1

THEODORE, Rachel – No(s). 501.4

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

TSENG, Sheng-Wen – No(s). 296.7 TSEVEGDORJ, Bold – No(s). 623.4 TSIOLIS, Georgios – No(s). 444.6 TSOBANOGLOU, Georgios – No(s). 320.2, 324.2

THOMPSON, Beverly – No(s). 331.3

TRABUT, Loic – No(s). 134.1, 239.8

THOMPSON, Michael – No(s). 417.1, 419.2

TRACHMAN, Mathieu – No(s). 485.1 TRAJBER, Rachel – No(s). 458.2

THOMPSON, Simon – No(s). 657.2

TRAN, Hoai Anh – No(s). 108.3

TSUJI, Izumi – Session No(s). 391

THORBURN, Elise – No(s). JS-44.2

TRAN, Trinh – No(s). 50.12

TSUJI, Takashi – No(s). 458.3

THORNTON, Arland – No(s). JS-24.1

TRANTER, Bruce – No(s). 298.8

TSUKADA, Mamoru – No(s). 444.2

THORPE, Lee – No(s). 203.5

TRAPENCIERE, Ilze – No(s). 48.13

TUCCI, Ingrid – No(s). 82.2

THORPE, Rachel – No(s). 132.4

TRAPPMANN, Mark – No(s). 621.1

TUFA, Laura A. – No(s). 622.4

THROM, Megan – No(s). 694.4

TRASK, Bahira – No(s). 77.1

TIAN, Feng – No(s). 99.2

TRAUE, Boris – No(s). 658.2

TUIDER, Elisabeth – Session No(s). 246, 448

TIAN, Siyue – No(s). JS-17.1

TRAYKOV, Bozhin – No(s). 67.4

TIERNEY, Hilary – No(s). 400.2

TREGUBOVA, Natalya – No(s). 249.1, 359.7

TIIDENBERG, Katrin – No(s). 391.5 TILLECZEK, Kate – No(s). 395.1, 395.5 TILLY, Chris – No(s). 33.2 Session No(s). JS-72 TINDALL, David – No(s). 293.3 TINIMOTO, Naho – No(s). 518.1 TINSLEY, Meghan – No(s). 67.2 TIRYAKIAN, Edward A. – No(s). 261.5, 268.1 TIZIK, Miroslav – No(s). 259.5 TJARVE, Baiba – No(s). 117.7

TREIMANE, Agnese – No(s). 310.5 TREMBLAY, Diane-Gabrielle – No(s). 345.1, JS-58.2 TRERE, Emiliano – No(s). 545.3 Session No(s). 541 TREUKE, Stephan – No(s). 663.2, 664.3

TSOLIDIS, Georgina – No(s). 66.2 TSUBOTA, Kunio – No(s). 187.7

TUMMINELLI, Santa Giuseppina – No(s). 353.5 TUR SINAI, Aviad – No(s). 137.8 TURKMEN, Buket – Session No(s). JS-44 TURKYILMAZ, Ayture – No(s). 48.15 TUUNAINEN, Juha – No(s). 212.3 TWIGG, Julia – No(s). 128.2 Session No(s). 133 TYFIELD, David – No(s). 26.2

TREYVISH, Andrey – No(s). 326.1

TYURINA, Irina – No(s). 249.4, 325.5

TRIF, Aurora – No(s). 512.1

TÆKKE, Jesper – No(s). 579.5

TRINIDAD-REQUENA, Antonio – No(s). 338.5, 441.4 TRIVEDI, Mansi – No(s). 142.3

U

TOEPOEL, Vera – No(s). 387.3

TRNKA-KWIECINSKI, Aga – No(s). 395.4

UBALDE BUENAFUENTE, Josep – No(s). 309.5, 314.6

TOIKKA, Arho – No(s). 296.10

TROCHEZ, Anthony – No(s). 298.7

UBOLDI, Anna – No(s). 46.4, 432.5

TOKIC MILAKOVIC, Ana – No(s). 48.16

TROEGER, Nina – No(s). 296.27

UDA, Kazuko – No(s). 296.13

TOLEDO-JOFRE, Maria Isabel – No(s). 610.4

TROUILLE, David – No(s). 355.3

UDDIN, Main – No(s). 662.2

TOMA, Kota – No(s). 76.2, 247.4

TROVERO, Juan – No(s). 405.4

UDDIN, Nasir – No(s). 662.2

TRUJILLO, Humberto – No(s). 312.6

UEKUSA, Shinya – No(s). 461.1

TRUJILLO, Macarena – No(s). JS-59.7

UGGLA, Ylva – No(s). 298.3, 302.2

TRUJILLO-PAGAN, Nicole – No(s). 61.2

UĞUR, Zeynep – No(s). 559.15

TO, Siu-ming – No(s). 88.4 TOCANTINS, Geusiane – No(s). 614.3

TOMALIN, Emma – No(s). 272.1, 275.7 TOMASSONI, Rosella – No(s). 525.4 388

www.isa-sociology.org

Person Index UIBU, Marko – No(s). 274.1, JS-33.5 UKLEJA, Milosz – No(s). 78.7 UM, Hye Won – No(s). 562.4

VALLADARES, Clara Elena – No(s). 47.31

VELASCO, Jose – No(s). 31.2

VALLE, Trinidad – No(s). 312.3

VELAYATI, Masoumeh – No(s). 379.3

UMBERSON, Debra – No(s). 195.1, 487.1

VALLEJO, Elizabeth – No(s). 382.1

UMINO, Michio – No(s). 300.5

VAN BOCHOVE, Marianne – No(s). 600.4

UMLAUF, Rene – No(s). 416.3

Uibu – Vila

VALVERDE, Estela – No(s). 105.4

VELASQUEZ, Giselle – No(s). 33.6 VELAYATI, Shiva – No(s). 274.2 VELÁZQUEZ LEYER, Ricardo – No(s). 237.3 VELAZQUEZ, Virna – No(s). 310.4

UNCU, Baran Alp – No(s). 538.3, 540.3

VAN DER GRAAF, Anne – No(s). 683.3

UNTERRAINER, Christine – No(s). 120.2

VAN DER HORST, Mariska – No(s). JS-1.2

VELINOVA, Nelly – No(s). 563.2

UNVER, Özgün – No(s). 234.2

VAN DER MERWE, Sinteche – No(s). 531.2 Session No(s). 530

VELOSO, Diana Therese – No(s). 262.16, JS-41.2

UOZUMI, Tomohiro – No(s). 204.1, 421.5 UPADHYAY, Jyoti – No(s). 174.13 UPHAM, Paul – No(s). JS-71.3 URANO, Shigeru – No(s). 569.5, JS-33.4

VAN DER HOEK, Milou – No(s). 572.4

VAN DER WALT, Adolph – No(s). 651.3 VAN DUIJN, Marijtje – No(s). 48.8 VAN HOOREN, Franca – Session No(s). JS-46

VELIKAYA, Nataliya – No(s). 632.3 Session No(s). 634 VELOSO, Alexandre – No(s). 582.4

VELOSO, Luisa – No(s). 596.1, JS-34.4 VENGER, Olesya – No(s). 166.7 VENKOV, Nikola – No(s). 383.5 VENTER, Sanell – No(s). 97.2

VAN KOPPEN, Christianus – No(s). 199.4 Session No(s). 202

VENTURA, Juan – No(s). 625.4

URIM, Ugochukwu – No(s). 397.15

VAN OOSTROM, Madelon – No(s). JS-10.3

VERA, Antonieta – No(s). 63.4

UROZ, Jorge – No(s). 354.1, JS-19.3

VAN TILBURG, Theo – No(s). 136.1

URREA-GIRALDO, Fernando – No(s). 484.1

VAN TREECK, Till – No(s). 501.2

VERDEGUER-ARACIL, Inmaculada – No(s). JS-25.3

URTASUN, Maria – No(s). 447.1

VAN WICHELEN, Sonja – No(s). 144.2

VERDIER, Margot – No(s). 91.6, 103.4

VANA, Jan – No(s). 433.3

VERDUZCO, Gustavo – No(s). 10.1, 363.2

URGEGHE, Anna Maria – No(s). 294.3 URIBE, Hernando – No(s). 584.5 URIBE, Richard – No(s). 584.5

URUBURU GILEDE, Sonia – No(s). 182.2 URZI, Domenica – No(s). 75.9

VANDEGRIFT, Darcie – No(s). 91.2, 380.3

VENTURELLA, Mario – No(s). 273.4, 616.3 VERA, William – No(s). 192.6

VERES, Valer – No(s). 391.2, 48.14 VERMA, Misri Lal – No(s). 160.6

UYS, Tina – No(s). 17.4, 526.3

VANDERVEEN, Gabry – Session No(s). 650, 657

VERMA, Neeraj – No(s). 193.12

UZAR OZDEMIR, Figen – No(s). 391.3

VARA, Ana – No(s). 298.12

UZZELL, David – No(s). 504.1

VARGA, Monika – No(s). 650.5

VERMA, Shabnam – No(s). 559.5

V

VARGAS, Concepcion del Rocio – No(s). 57.8

VACKOVA, Barbora – No(s). 436.1

VARGAS-AGUIRRE, Monica – No(s). 560.10

VAEZZADEH, Negar – No(s). 556.3

VARISLI, Berfin – No(s). 139.4

VAJDA, Julia – Session No(s). 451

VASCONCELOS, Pedro – No(s). 566.2 VASCONCELOS-OLIVEIRA, Maria Carolina – No(s). 435.4

VALDERAS, Jose – No(s). 677.1

VASILKOVA, Valeriya – No(s). 177.5

VALDIVIEZO-ISSA, Rene – No(s). 221.3

VASSILEV, Ivaylo – No(s). 193.7, JS-64.6

VALDIVIEZO-SANDOVAL, Rene – No(s). 221.3

VAUGHAN, Suzanne – No(s). 697.2 Session No(s). 696

VALDUGA, Tatiane – No(s). 234.1

VDOVICHENKO, Larissa – No(s). 631.1

VALENCIA, Juan – No(s). 178.5

VEAREY, Jo – No(s). 655.4

VALENTA, Marko – No(s). 362.2

VEENHOVEN, Ruut – No(s). 8.3, 626.1

VALENTE, Riccardo – No(s). 680.1

VEGA LOPEZ, Maria Guadalupe – No(s). 482.4, 483.12

VALENZUELA FUENTES, Katia – No(s). 554.3 VALIAKHMETOVA, Veronica – No(s). 114.5

VEGA, Jesica – No(s). 330.4 VEIGA, Debora Piccirillo Barbosa da – No(s). 605.2 www.isa-sociology.org

VERMA, Smita – No(s). 472.3, 490.2 VERMA, Vidushi – No(s). 159.5 VEROSZTA, Zsuzsanna – No(s). 348.5 VERPRAET, Gilles – No(s). 208.4, 406.2 VERWIEBE, Roland – No(s). 256.4, 365.1 VERZELLONI, Luca – No(s). 599.8 VESIA, Danielle – No(s). 463.1 VIANELLO, Francesca Alice – No(s). 373.7 Session No(s). JS-59 VICARELLI, Maria Giovanna – No(s). JS-21.4 VIDOVICOVA, Lucie – No(s). 620.4 VIEIRA, Joice – No(s). 83.3 VIEIRA, Priscila – No(s). 343.6 VIETEN, Ulrike – No(s). 62.1 VIJAYA, Swati – No(s). JS-38.6 VIJAYKUMAR – No(s). 174.10 VILA, F.Xavier – No(s). 309.1, 314.6 389

PERSON INDEX

VALARINO, Isabel – No(s). 80.4, 83.6

VERMA, Pratima – No(s). 161.9

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

VANDERSTRAETEN, Raf – No(s). 19.3

USHIJIMA, Kayo – No(s). 456.3

Vila – Wiemann VILA, Gloria – No(s). 148.4

VRYONIDES, Marios – No(s). 7.1, 54.5

WARDANA, Amika – No(s). 263.7

VILADRICH, Anahi – No(s). 190.4, JS-48.3

VUCKOVIC JUROS, Tanja – No(s). 48.16

WARIBO, Young – No(s). 397.15

VILIRAN, Jessica – No(s). 507.6, 106.11

VUOLO, Michael – No(s). 188.2

WATANABE, Chihara – No(s). 155.3

VILLA, Paula – No(s). 352.4 VILLAR AGUILÉS, Alícia – No(s). 47.11 VILLAR, Feliciano – No(s). 135.6, 135.7

W WAAGENE, Erica – No(s). 49.14

VILLETTE, Michel – No(s). 114.1

WAECHTER, Natalia – No(s). 394.4 Session No(s). 403 WAGNER, Brandon – No(s). 482.1

VINCENTI, Alessandra – No(s). 87.9

WAGNER, Christiane – No(s). 173.5

VINSON, Alexandra – No(s). 591.2, JS-33.2

WAGNER, Claire – No(s). 97.2

VISCARDI, Adriana Aparecida da Fonseca – No(s). 158.5

WAHEED, Mariam – No(s). 612.3

VIVAS-ROMERO, Maria – No(s). JS23.3, JS-48.5 VIVES-CASES, Carmen – No(s). 381.4 VIVIANI, Lorenzo – No(s). 322.1 VLACHOPOULOU, Eirini Ioanna – No(s). 324.2, 296.18 VLASE, Ionela – No(s). 621.2 VOGEL, Claudia – No(s). 134.2 VOGELER, Azeema – No(s). 244.5, 392.10 VOGL, Janna – No(s). 560.9 VOGT, Gabriele – No(s). 187.2 VOGT, Sonja – No(s). 107.2 VOICU, Malina – No(s). 256.9, 257.2 VOLOSEVYCH, Inna – No(s). 256.11, JS-63.3 VOLTARELLI, Monique – No(s). 603.5 VON GOTTBERG, Carolin – No(s). 570.6 VON HOHENDORF, Raquel – No(s). 467.1 VON JACOBI, Nadia – No(s). JS-10.7 VON KNORRING, Mia – No(s). 598.3 VON NOSTITZ, Felix – No(s). 223.1 VON RUSCHKOWSKI, Eick – No(s). 157.8 VON WISSEL, Christian – No(s). 659.3 VORHEYER, Claudia – No(s). 351.1 VOROBYOVA, Irina – No(s). 52.8

WASSERMANN, Sandra – No(s). 301.4 WATANABE, Daisuke – No(s). JS-9.6 WATERSTRADT, Désirée – No(s). 258.2, 603.3

WADA, Takeshi – No(s). 125.2, 554.1

VITE PEREZ, Miguel Angel – No(s). 22.1

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

VYSOTSKAYA, Volha – No(s). JS-43.7

VILLARESPE, Veronica – No(s). 667.3 VINARSKY PERETZ, Hedva – No(s). 137.8

PERSON INDEX

Person Index

WAGONER, Christina – No(s). JS-33.6 WAHLBECK, Osten – No(s). 356.11 WAINWRIGHT, Hilary – Session No(s). 24 WALBY, Sylvia – No(s). 18.2 Session No(s). 28 WALDENBURGER, Lisa – No(s). 423.2 WALDNER, Lisa – No(s). 427.4, 546.1 WALKER, Alexandra – No(s). 144.1, 576.2 WALLACE, Claire – No(s). 626.2 WALLENIUS-KORKALO, Sandra – No(s). 614.2 WALLER, Vivienne – No(s). 303.5 WALLKAMM, Magdalena – No(s). 285.1, JS-71.1 WALLNER, Peter – No(s). 456.5 WALSH, Mary – No(s). 544.3 WALSH-RUSSO, Cecelia – No(s). 544.3 WALTER, Maggie – No(s). 69.3 WANG, Anne-Chie – No(s). 573.2, 573.6

WATSON, Iarfhlaith – No(s). JS-70.3 WATSON, Juliet – No(s). 367.9, 615.2 WATSON, Tobias Henry – No(s). 67.5 WATTS, Rob – No(s). 394.1, 399.9 WAYACK PAMBE, Madeleine – No(s). 664.5, 483.13 WAYLEN, Andrea – No(s). 597.2 WEBER, Ines – No(s). 303.2 WEBER, Wolfgang – No(s). 120.2 WEBSTER, Murray – No(s). 494.1 WEETING, Janine – No(s). 517.3 WEGNER-SIEGMUNDT, Christian – No(s). 491.2 WEGSCHEIDER, Angela – No(s). 240.1 WEICHSELBAUMER, Doris – No(s). JS-70.2 WEICHT, Bernhard – No(s). 139.2 WEIDENHOLZER, Josef – Session No(s). 3 WEINMANN, Nico – No(s). 343.1 WEIRICH, Anna – No(s). 314.4 WEITGRUBER, Barbara – No(s). 1.1 WELCH, Vicki – No(s). 86.11 WELLER, Anja – No(s). 652.5, 657.4 WELZ, Frank – No(s). 411.3 Session No(s). 5, 409 WEN, Ming – No(s). 527.2, 528.2 WENDT, Claus – Session No(s). JS-64 WENTEN, Klara-Aylin – No(s). 288.3 WERNY, Rafaela – No(s). 140.4

WANG, Chien-Lung – No(s). 54.7, 68.3

WERRON, Tobias – No(s). 104.3

WANG, Chih-Chieh – No(s). 38.1 WANG, Frank – No(s). 697.3

WETZEL, Dietmar – No(s). 409.2, JS-8.1

WANG, Jenn Hwan – No(s). 296.7

WETZEL, Jana – No(s). 609.4

WANG, Junxiu – No(s). 366.2

WHEELER, Joanna – No(s). 682.3 Session No(s). 655

WANG, Qian – No(s). 303.7 WANG, Shu-Yung – No(s). 233.2 WANG, Simeng – No(s). 191.1, 196.1

WESTHEUSER, Linus – No(s). 91.9

WHERRY, Frederick – No(s). 30.5 WHITMER, Jennifer – No(s). 166.7 WICKSTROM, Bengt-Arne – No(s). 309.4

VOSS, Kim – Session No(s). 509

WANG, Zhenglian – No(s). 489.4

VOSS, Martin – No(s). 459.3, 680.2

WANKA, Anna – No(s). 131.6

VOZNESENSKAYA, Yulia – No(s). 279.1

WARAT, Marta – No(s). 134.3, 369.20

WIEDENHOFER, Dominik – No(s). 305.1

VRATUSA, Vera – No(s). 126.4, 343.3

WARCZOK, Tomasz – No(s). 594.4, 695.4

WIEMANN, Anna – No(s). 91.12, 540.14

390

WANIEK, Katarzyna – No(s). 441.5

www.isa-sociology.org

WIDDOP, Paul – No(s). 271.2

Person Index WIERENGA, Ani – No(s). 403.5 WIESBOCK, Laura – No(s). 37.4, 108.2 WIESER, Matthias – No(s). 180.4 WIEVIORKA, Michel – Session No(s). 2 WIGGER, Iris – No(s). 62.4 WIGGERS, Ingrid Dittrich – No(s). 613.1, 614.3

WONG, Catherine Mei Ling – No(s). 296.6

YAMABHAI, Jitjayang – No(s). 106.13

WONGBOONSIN, Kua – No(s). 76.3

YAMADA, Nobuyuki – No(s). JS-72.6

WONGBOONSIN, Patcharawalai – No(s). 76.1, 76.3 WOOD, Evan – No(s). 574.1 WOOD, Lisa – No(s). 693.3 WORDEN, Sandy – No(s). 683.1

WIHSTUTZ, Anne – No(s). 609.3

WORM, Arne – No(s). 452.1, JS-11.5

WILINSKA, Monika – No(s). 130.1

WORTHINGTON, Lisa – No(s). 275.1

WILKINS, Keith – No(s). 684.4

WORTS, Diana – No(s). 129.2

WILLER, David – No(s). 515.1

WOTHERSPOON, Terry – No(s). 48.3

WILLERS, Susanne – No(s). JS-23.2, JS-59.5

WOYDACK, Johanna – No(s). 314.11

WILLIAMS, Anna – No(s). 284.6

WRIGHT, Chris F. – No(s). 504.6

WILLIAMS, Kate – No(s). 112.5 WILLIAMSON, John – No(s). 137.2, 482.5 WILLIS, Karen – No(s). 194.1, 192.14 WILMSEN, Brooke – No(s). 244.1 WILSON, Andrew – No(s). 651.4 WILSON, Sarah – No(s). 86.2, 654.2 WIMMER, Jeffrey – No(s). 162.2 WINCHESTER, Daniel – No(s). 615.1, 700.1 WINCZOREK, Jan – No(s). 146.11 WINKLER, Katharina – No(s). 553.3 WINKLER, Oliver – No(s). 58.5, 481.4

WINSTON, Norma – No(s). 529.2 WINTER, Franka – No(s). 396.6, JS-56.4 WIPER, Clare – No(s). 176.2

WOZNIAK, Barbara – No(s). 134.3 WRIGHT, Jared – No(s). 556.1 WRIGHT, Katie – No(s). JS-28.4 WRIGHT, Katy – No(s). 680.4 WRIGHT, Talmadge – No(s). 422.3

YAMAKI, Chikako – No(s). 192.7 YAMAMOTO, Beverley – No(s). 534.3, JS-36.5 YAMAMOTO, Mayuko – No(s). 559.9 YAMAMOTO, Satomi – No(s). 355.10 YAMAMOTO, Tatsuya – No(s). 561.4 YAMANAKA, Hiroshi – No(s). 314.19 YAMANER, Guzin – No(s). 315.13 YAMASHITA, Kaori – No(s). 106.10 YAMATO, Reiko – No(s). JS-7.4 YAMAZAKI, Toshihiko – No(s). 192.7 YAN, Philip – No(s). 140.7 YANAGIHARA, Yoshie – No(s). JS-32.7 YANEZ ROJAS, Rodrigo – No(s). 501.1 YANG, Chia-Ling – No(s). 369.5, JS-43.6

WU, Qiaobing – No(s). 608.4

YANG, Chousung – No(s). 42.6

WUKOVITSCH, Florian – No(s). 296.27

YANG, Jie – No(s). 387.2

WULANSARI, Sri – No(s). 371.5

YANG, Nai – No(s). 157.3, 169.6

WULLERT, Katherine – No(s). 482.5 WUNDERLICH, Wilfried – No(s). 283.6 WUNDRAK, Rixta – Session No(s). 443 WUSTMANN, Julia – No(s). 178.4, 391.4 WYN, Johanna – No(s). 397.4 WYSMULEK, Ilona – No(s). 109.4, 388.4

YANG, Myungji – No(s). 105.1 YANG, Philip – No(s). 353.2 YANG, Tien-Tun – No(s). 515.5 YANG, Yiyin – No(s). 366.4 YANG, Yujeong – No(s). 507.2 YANG, Yunjeong – No(s). 110.2, 134.4 YARMOHAMMADI, Saeid – No(s). 527.3 Session No(s). 535 YAROSHENKO, Sveta – No(s). 369.19 YATES, Luke – No(s). 91.13

WITTE, Matthias – No(s). 446.3 WITTE, Nicole – No(s). 385.3, 449.5

XABA, Khosi – No(s). 655.4

WITTEBORN, Saskia – No(s). 366.1

XAVIER, Izadora – No(s). 20.2

WITTEK, Rafael – No(s). 48.8, 517.3

XIA, Yan – No(s). 81.5

WOEHL, Stefanie – No(s). 34.2 Session No(s). 28

XIANG, Wei – No(s). JS-12.8

WOERN, Jonathan – No(s). 136.4

XINHUA, Zeng – No(s). 165.2

WOJNICKA, Katarzyna – No(s). JS-53.1

XU, Anqi – No(s). 81.5

WOLANIK-BOSTROM, Katarzyna – No(s). JS-31.6

YAMAGUCHI, Tomiko – No(s). 304.3

WU, Hao-Che – No(s). 455.4

X

WISSEN, Markus – No(s). 298.4

YAMADA, Mieko – No(s). 671.1

XING, Wei – No(s). 527.1

XU, Peng – No(s). 490.3

YAZAWA, Shujiro – No(s). 530.1 Session No(s). 9 YBARRA, Josep-Antoni – No(s). 278.5 YE, Min-shen – No(s). 475.1 YEANDLE, Sue – No(s). 193.16 YEARLEY, Steve – No(s). 293.5 YEATES, Nicola – No(s). 235.2, 244.2 YELENEVSKAYA, Maria – No(s). 307.5 YENDELL, Alexander – No(s). 60.5 YEPES, Lidia – No(s). 390.6

WOLF, Brian – No(s). 181.2

Y

YETKIN, Eren – No(s). 451.3

WOLF, Julian – No(s). 591.3, JS-21.3

YADAV, Gyanendra – No(s). 106.6

YI, Chin-Chun – No(s). 76.5 Session No(s). 19

WOLFF, Anna – No(s). 303.2 WOLFSON, Tod – No(s). 545.2 WON, Jaeyoun – No(s). 366.5

YAGOUBI, Amina – No(s). JS-58.2, JS-58.5 YAGUNOVA, Elena – No(s). 315.3 Session No(s). 314 YAKA, Ozge – No(s). 296.20 www.isa-sociology.org

PERSON INDEX

WOLF, Marcus – No(s). 29.5

YEUNG, Wei-Jun – No(s). 76.4, 489.4

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

WINOGRODZKA, Dominika – No(s). 347.4

Wierenga – Yilmaz Sener

YILDIRIM, Yavuz – No(s). 91.3 Session No(s). 541 YILMAZ SENER, Meltem – No(s). 358.3, JS-68.6 391

Yilmaz – Zyzik YILMAZ, Evrim – No(s). 556.3

ZAMFIR, George I. – No(s). 622.4

YIN, Jingwen – No(s). 289.2

ZAMORANO GALLEANO, Hector – No(s). 578.1 Session No(s). 580

YIP, Jeaney – No(s). 367.11 YIP, Ngai Ming – No(s). 108.3 YLA-ANTTILA, Tuomas – No(s). 292.3, 292.4 YLÄNNE, Virpi – No(s). 135.4 YLIKOSKI, Petri – No(s). 520.4 YLONEN, Marja – No(s). 295.7 YOPO DIAZ, Martina – No(s). 103.3 YOSHIDA, Naoko – No(s). 369.4, JS-34.7 YOSHIHAMA, Mieko – No(s). 459.4, JS-16.2 YOUNG, Suzanne – No(s). 504.4 YTER, Mireia – No(s). 623.2 YURCHENKO, Olesya – No(s). 590.7, 596.6 YUSUF, Farhat – No(s). 484.5 YUVAL-DAVIS, Nira – No(s). 14.2

Z ZABIROVA, Aigul – No(s). 636.3 Session No(s). 16

ZANETIC, Andre – No(s). 334.5 ZANETTE, Maria Carolina – No(s). 559.3 ZANGGER, Christoph – No(s). 50.10 ZANIDEAN, Alex – No(s). 138.3 ZANNELLA, Marina – No(s). 491.2 ZAPATA MOYA, Angel R – No(s). 193.18 ZÁRATE VÁSQUEZ, Julio – No(s). 284.2 ZARETSKY, Eugen – No(s). 314.17 ZARLENGA, Matias – No(s). 428.2 ZARTLER, Ulrike – No(s). 87.4, 605.1 Session No(s). 1 ZAVALA-PELAYO, Edgar – No(s). 259.3 ZAZAR, Kresimir – No(s). 209.3 ZEIHER, Helga – No(s). 384.1 ZELINSKY, Dominik – No(s). 651.5 ZEMBYLAS, Tasos – No(s). 428.1, 433.1 ZEMNUKHOVA, Liliia – No(s). 280.1

ZACHOU, Chrysanthi – No(s). 397.14

ZENG, Yi – No(s). 489.4

ZADKOWSKA, Magdalena – No(s). 72.6

ZENTNER, Manfred – No(s). 395.4, 402.3

ZAID, Nadia A. – No(s). 107.2

ZERLE-ELSASSER, Claudia – No(s). 77.10

ZAIDMAN, Anna Maria – No(s). JS-31.1

ZHAN, Shaohua – No(s). JS-52.1

ZHOVNOVATA, Viktoriia – No(s). 673.1 ZHU, Di – No(s). 89.4 ZICK, Andreas – No(s). 499.5 ZIEGLER, Meinrad – No(s). 346.1 ZIELINSKA, Justyna – No(s). 32.4, 347.6 ZIELINSKI, Marcin – No(s). 388.4 ZILLIG, Ute – No(s). JS-28.3 ZIMENKOVA, Tatiana – No(s). 49.4, 593.2 ZIMMERMANN, Benedicte – No(s). 38.2 ZINN, Jens – No(s). 295.4, 676.4 ZLOTNIK, Alexander – No(s). 387.5 ZOCH, Gundula – No(s). 83.7, 78.10 ZOHAR, Gal – No(s). 640.10 ZOKAEI, Mohammad – No(s). 394.5 ZOLUBIENE, Eimante – No(s). 676.3 ZONTINI, Elisabetta – No(s). 66.3 ZOTTARELLI, Lisa – No(s). 455.3, 487.4 ZRINSCAK, Sinisa – No(s). 154.3, 268.3 Session No(s). 263 ZUBIETA GARCIA, Judith – Session No(s). 282 ZUCKER, Gregory – No(s). 417.4, 418.1 ZUEV, Andrey E. – No(s). 47.5 ZUEV, Dennis – No(s). 213.3, 278.2 Session No(s). JS-22

ZAJAC, Tomasz – No(s). 50.5

ZHANG, Huanjun – No(s). 489.3

ZAJAK, Sabrina – No(s). 254.3, JS-72.5

ZHANG, Jingjing – No(s). JS-9.4 ZHANG, Kun – No(s). 49.6

ZULU, Melekias – No(s). 190.3

ZAKARIAS, Ildiko – No(s). 362.3

ZHANG, Lu – Session No(s). JS-52

ZULUETA, Johanna – No(s). 533.1 ZUPARIC-ILJIC, Drago – No(s). 362.2

ZAKOTYANSKY, Dmitry – No(s). 250.4, 478.1

ZHANG, Shaozhe – No(s). JS-12.8

ZWEIG, Michael – No(s). 509.10

ZHANG, Yingchan – No(s). JS-68.4

ZYCH, Jacek – No(s). 347.6

ZAMAN, Muhammad – No(s). JS-43.11

ZHIKHAREVICH, Dmitrii – No(s). 249.7, 359.7

ZYCZYNSKA-CIOLEK, Danuta – No(s). 135.9

ZAMANI MOGHADAM, Masoud – No(s). JS-73.3

ZHONG, Xiaohua – No(s). 279.5

ZYZIK, Radoslaw – No(s). 145.3, 149.2

ZAMBRANO, Inmaculada – No(s). 372.7

ZHOU, Shuqin – No(s). 279.5

ZAKHARCHENKO, Anna – No(s). 69.4

ZHOU, Changcheng – No(s). 475.1

PERSON INDEX

List of Authors of Papers with Session Chairs, Panelists and Discussants

Person Index

392

www.isa-sociology.org

ZULIKOWSKI, Piotr – No(s). JS-42.8