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What makes entrepreneurs more or less resilient to adversity? This illuminating case study brings together resilience, adaptation and crisis management evidence to offer invaluable lessons and interventions for entrepreneurs, managers and other stakeholders.
How is memory in China curated in the digital era? This pioneering volume investigates the transformation of collective memory in China amid rapid technological change. It offers a vital resource for understanding the dynamic interplay between memory, media and power in contemporary China - and beyond.
How can Public Policy scholarship contribute to transformational societal change? In this collection of essays, previously published in Policy & Politics, the authors explore different avenues towards more transformational Public Policy research. The chapters address issues such as crises, democracy, participation, disasters, and paradigm change.
Created to support course developers, this reader offers essential guidance for designing interdisciplinary higher education courses. It offers foundational extracts and practical advice to save time, gain expert insights and create impactful courses that meet today's challenges.
What if doubt, hesitation and ambivalence weren't barriers to activism but powerful tools for change? This bold collection reveals how activists harness complex emotions to drive movements in anti-racism, climate justice and beyond.
This book outlines a comprehensive framework for the inclusion of newcomers locally, drawing on learning and examples from twelve UK cities and international partners as well as innovative research findings.
This volume provides a theoretically and experientially informed overview and discussion of resexualisation. It covers a range of sexual identities and ageing populations, blending cultural representations and current research to highlight the possible forms and practices that can lead to the creative enabling of pleasure.
This book interconnects a group of diverse, but overlapping, professional domains - futures design, mission-oriented innovation, system innovation and leadership - to encourage a new, heightened awareness of systemic change that can lead to societal transformation and a sustainable future.
Kathleen Riach draws on a ten-year study to explore how ageing is experienced at work, an area overlooked in management and organization studies. Introducing a new phenomenological theory, she examines how individuals manage age-biased workplace cultures and adapt to their evolving bodies within the context of financial capitalism.
This insightful book explores evolving perceptions of China, contrasting dominant Western narratives with Chinese perspectives. Highlighting the complexities of these discourses, the book critiques three prevailing views of China's rise: the return of geopolitics, challenges to liberal order and prospects for collaborative governance.
This groundbreaking book explores the underexamined nature and scope of Article 4 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which governs permissible restrictions on these rights. It provides recommendations for developing a legal framework that promotes the optimal protection of ESCRs during normality and crisis alike.
Challenging us to reconsider ideas about the role of masculinity in the lives of working-class boys and men, this book asks what would change if, instead of focusing on perceived individual failures, we considered the troubled relationship between working-class boys and the social and educational systems in which they reside.
Despite increasing legal recognition of animal rights, policy making remains inconsistent, and civil society's role in shaping governance is underexplored. Applying extensive research and interviews with key animal welfare organisations, this book examines the challenges, progress and future prospects of civil society activism.
The first to apply abolitionist theory from international perspectives to social work, this book explores whether social work can embrace radical change while operating within state structures.
Adopting a spatial approach to labour and social movements, this book explores how collective action shapes economic landscapes by examining the workers' movement in Spain's metal sector, one of the country's most unionised industries.
An insider perspective of how LGBTQ+ civil society organisations influenced Irish public policy between 1993, the year when homosexuality was decriminalised, and 2015, when both marriage equality and progressive gender recognition legislation were introduced.
Since publication of the first edition, awareness of, and interest in, adolescent-to-parent abuse has risen considerably. This second edition provides a comprehensive overview of the key issues and current responses to the challenges in dealing with this unique form of family abuse.
Against a backdrop of increasingly mixed economies of welfare, this book explores civil society responses to youth unemployment in a quasi-federal or devolved state post-Brexit and following COVID-19.
This book takes common themes in popular music and analyses them through a harms-based critical criminology of music. It analyses the sexism and homophobia of the music industry but also the role of music in bringing hope, whether on a personal or political level worldwide.