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Date: 9/28/2022
Subject: TASA members newsletter: September 29
From: TASA



ISA 2023
Dear ~~first_name~~,  
 
Tere are two very important deadlines today and tomorrow:
  1. FINAL CALL - TASA 2022 early bird registrations close TODAY Thursday September 29th. If your submission was accepted then you need to register by September 29th to be included in the programFor registration details, read on... 
  2. FINAL CALL - ISA World Congress of Sociology submission deadline is TOMORROW Friday September 30th. We strongly encourage you to submit as it will likely be decades before the World Congress of Sociology will be this close to home again! It's a perfect, and rare, opportunity for you to share your research among an international audience and there is a plethora of sessions (1000+) to choose from. Read on... Note, there are 5 different TASA bursaries available to help support members to attend ISA 2023 (for details, see further down the newsletter). 
We hope you can join us for our next TASA Thursdays Postgraduate & Early Career Researcher session: How to Navigate Conferences: Effective Presentation Strategies hosted by Bernardo Dewey– 6th of October 12:30pm - 1:30pm AEST. 
 
The week after, on October 13th, we have fellow member Elspeth McInnes booked in for our TASA Thursdays event on Developing Wellbeing Cultures in Schools. You can register for that event here.

TASA 2022- Call for Volunteers
New: TASA members can apply to volunteer for our conference in November. We have slots available on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. For each day you are present for volunteering, you get a day's registration, gratis.
 
 
TASA 2022 Program
TASA 2022 Conference program overview is now available. The deadline for author registrations is this Thursday 29th September 2022. Following this date, the detailed TASA program including author details and paper details will be finalised and made available by October 14, 2022. You can view an overview of the program below. For a more detailed version for each day, please click here.
TASA 2022 Postgraduate Day - Call for Mentors
This year's Postgraduate Day will include a Mentoring Session. The postgraduate sub-committee are looking for senior sociologists that would like to be part of the Mentoring Session that will take place during TASA 2022 on Tuesday 29th of November from 1.30pm to 2.30pm. The purpose of this session is for senior sociologists and postgraduate students to exchange and discuss some of the main challenges and opportunities that they face during their PhD journey. The mentors will offer advice, share knowledge, talk about their own past experience, and help the students come up with a ideas for moving forward. If you are interested in being a mentor, please email postgraduates@tasa.org.au and include MENTORING SESSION in the subject line.
 
Gary Bouma Memorial Workshop Program
At the start of 2021, TASA introduced a new initiative, 'The Australian Sociological Association’s Workshop Program', which was subsequently renamed the Gary Bouma Memorial Workshop Program. While we appreciate the pandemic may continue to thwart scheduled events, we will continue to support and promote sociology where we can. Applications are currently open for 2 x $5,000 funded workshops to be held in 2023. 
Apply by October 31st. Read on...
 
ISA 2023

TASA Funded ISA 2023 Bursaries

for Members

Several TASA Bursaries are available to support TASA members' attendance at the ISA 2023 World Congress. They are: 
The application deadline for all bursaries is January 16th, 2023. 
 

TASA Funded ISA 2023 Bursaries

for HDRs and ECRs from Category C & B Countries

TASA’s 2023 ISA Bursary seeks to support the attendance of higher degree research students (HDR) and early career researchers (ECR) from Category B and Category C countries in the Asia-Pacific Region (see below) at the 2023 International Sociological Association (ISA) World Congress of Sociology in Melbourne, June 25 - July 1, 2023. 
ISA 2023 bursary tile
Category B countries: China; Fiji; Malaysia; Maldives; Marshall Is.; Peru; Russian Fed.; Thailand; Tonga; Tuvalu.

Category C countries: Bangladesh; Cambodia; India; Indonesia; Kiribati; Korea, Dem. Rep; Lao PDR; Micronesia; Mongolia; Nepal; Pakistan; Papua New Guinea; Philippines; Samoa; Solomon Is.; Sri Lanka; Timor-Leste; Vanuatu; Vietnam.
 
We welcome and encourage you to share this opportunity amongst your relevant networks. The full details, and application form, are on TASAweb here.

ISA Research Committees

Call for Submissions

RC05: ‘Race, Racism and Anti-Racism in Australia: Knowledge for Action Beyond Epistemological Divisions’
Australia is a society structured by race/ism. Founded on the fiction of terra nullius, or no-one’s land, the First Nations of the land were dispossessed and denied personhood by settler colonists. Once Australia became a nation, it further entrenched racial hierarchy by limiting migration to Anglo-Celtic people through the Immigration Restriction Act 1901, colloquially known as the White Australia Policy. Racial hierarchies continue to structure Australian society yet race and racism are largely invisible in public discourse, and anti-racism is sparse.
For the full details about the call, read on...
 
RC44 Research Committee on Labour Movements is encouraging academics and practitioners, including and especially early-career researchers, to submit abstracts for RC44 sessions at the ISA World Congress of Sociology in Melbourne, 2023. RC44 is holding sessions on multiple topics. If you want to give a paper that does not fit into one of these sessions, you can apply to join one of our two roundtables, each of which accommodates up to 25 papers. Please be aware that due to the nature of the roundtable sessions, only in-person contributions can be considered.
For the full details about the call, read on...
 
Where Next for Sociological Alcohol Research?
RC15 Sociology of Health
Sociological research into alcohol use has burgeoned over the past few decades. During this period, young people in many high income countries have, on average, begun drinking less than previous generations. This encourages us to look to new populations at risk from heavy drinking. From an earlier focus on carnivalesque drinking by young people in the night time economy, we are seeing an emerging interest in more mundane drinking practices such as home alcohol consumption and drinking in middle age.
For the full details about the call, read on...
 
Call for papers for a special joint session RC31 & RC34 on youth mobilities
ISA Session: Conceptualising Transnational Youth Mobilities and Transitions amidst Social
Challenges

International Sociological Association World Congress, Melbourne June 25 - July 1, 2023
 
Youth people aged between 18 - 30 represent the most mobile cohort across the globe. RC
31 (Migration) and RC 34 (Youth) are hosting a special joint session which invites papers that
examine transnational youth mobilities and transitions amidst the social challenges of our
contemporary world. Drawing on this year’s ISA Congress theme, we examine a range of
issues including if and how the global rise of authoritarianism, populism, xenophobia and
racism impacts young people’s mobility decisions and trajectories. What are the similarities
and differences in the experiences of young people on the move from the global north and
the global south? How has the recent pandemic impacted their mobility aspirations and
pathways? How does mobility shape new possibilities for adulthood in a changing world? In
exploring these and other questions, we welcome papers that feature the methodological
and conceptual developments needed to better understand this generation making a life on
the move.
 
Note: This is a special invited session and does not appear on the ISA Congress sessions page. If you would like to submit an abstract, please email your abstract directly to the session organisers by 28th September 2022. Abstracts are to be no more than 300 words. Please also include title, up to 4 keywords, author/s & institution/s, and email contact details. To submit an abstract or for further details, please contact Professor Loretta Baldassar: l.baldassar@ecu.edu.au Professor Anita Harris: anita.harris@deakin.edu.au
Members' Engaging Sociology

Books

Alexandra Coleman (2022) Class, Place, and Higher Education: Experiences of Homely Mobility. Bloomsbury

Class, Place and Higher Education
Higher education is seen to be a means to “the” good life and is a dominant way societies distribute hope for social mobility. But does higher education deliver on its promise? This book attends to the hopes, experiences, and trajectories of working-class students and graduates from Western Sydney – an area that is imagined, from the outside, to be a place of lack and stagnation, the “other” Sydney. This book challenges the myth that participation in higher education necessarily leads to upward social mobility and traces how the rewards of higher education are unevenly distributed. 
 
It considers how visions of a good life are class differentiated and makes an argument for the significance of place when examining experiences of higher education. Rather than focus on university as a means to becoming middle class, Class, Place, and Higher Education examines how university becomes a means to “a” good life, not “the” good life, a good life that is embedded in place, in working-class places like Western Sydney, and one that becomes more complex and ambivalent through the process of going to university. Read on...

Book Chapters

Flood, M., and S. Burrell. (2022). Engaging Men and Boys in the Primary Prevention of Sexual Violence. In Rape: Challenging Contemporary Thinking, Eds. M. Horvath and J. Brown. Routledge. URL: https://www.routledge.com/Rape-Challenging-Contemporary-Thinking-10-Years-On/Horvath-Brown/p/book/97
 

Journal Articles

Corrinne T. Sullivan, Kim Spurway, Linda Briskman, John Leha, William Trewlynn & Karen Soldatic (2022) “She’s Always Been a Fighter for Me”: Indigenous Mothers as Advocates and Defenders of Their LGBTIQSB + Children, LGBTQ+ Family: An Interdisciplinary Journal, DOI: 10.1080/27703371.2022.2124212
 
Matthew Bunn, Penny Jane Burke & Steven Threadgold (2022) Classed trajectories in higher education and the graduate labour market: affective affinities in a ‘meritocracy’, British Journal of Sociology of Education, DOI: 10.1080/01425692.2022.2122936
 
McKenzie, L 2022, 'Parenthood: beyond maternity and paternity', Feminist Anthropology, Early view. Open access: https://doi.org/10.1002/fea2.12105
 
Fomiatti, R., Farrugia, A., Fraser, S., Moore, D., Edwards, M., & Treloar, C. (2022). Post-crisis imaginaries in the time of direct-acting antiviral hepatitis C treatment. Time & Society, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/0961463X221128736
 
Orr, Will, Kathryn Henne, Ashlin Lee, Jenna Imad Harb, and Franz Carneiro Alphonso. 2022. Necrocapitalism in the Gig Economy: The Case of Platform Food Couriers in Australia. Antipode, online first. doi:10.1111/anti.12877 [OPEN ACCESS]

News and Analysis

For tips from fellow members on getting published in The Conversation (TC), click here. For some members' articles published in TC between 2013 & 2019, click here. To find out what can happen after publishing in TC, click here.
 
Helen Dickinson & Raelene West (2022) A disabled NDIA chair is a great first move in the NDIS reset. Here’s what should happen nextThe Conversation, September 27
 

Podcasts

Rebecca Olson (2022) Sociology for practice - the 'ology' you’ve been looking for. The Words Matter, September 27. 

Videos

 

Events

TASA Thursdays
For a full list of our TASA Thursdays events for 2022, as well as the registration links, please visit TASAweb here.
 
TASA Tea Time
Thanks to Heidi Hetz, our equity & inclusion portfolio leader, the next TASA Tea Time session will be held on next Wednesday October 5th 12:30pm - 1:30pm (Perth), 2:00pm - 3:00pm (SA/NT), 2:30pm - 3:30pm (Brisbane, Cairns) and 3:30pm - 4:30pm (Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra, Tasmania). To register for the event, click here.
 
MEM
The third event in the Sociology Out West 2022 Seminar Series will be held at ECU Joondalup on Thursday 20 October 5:30-7:00pm.

Join us for presentations from Dr Naomi Godden (ECU) and Dr Angela Leahy (Murdoch), please see the event flyer attached for abstracts and presenter bios.

The presentations and discussion will be followed by a self-funded dinner at a local restaurant. Details of where we will eat are still tbc, we'll let you know nearer the time.

This seminar will be held in blended mode so you can join us for the presentations (though sadly not the dinner!) no matter where you are based.
 
Join on your computer, mobile app or room device
Click here to join the meeting
Meeting ID: 435 310 692 003
Passcode: MxVGjv
Join with a video conferencing device
Video Conference ID: 137 073 873 0
SAVE THE DATE
2023 Social Sciences Week will be held from 4-10 September, 2023
 
Gary Bouma TASA Workshop - Alone in a crisis: Reflections on recent personal, financial, and health shifts
Call for papers
Virtual 1-day workshop
2nd November 2022
Organiser: Lara McKenzie

‘Alone in a crisis’ is a full-day, virtual workshop presenting researcher findings and practitioner experiences on single and solo living people’s personal, financial, and heath-related experiences of recent crises, government pandemic measures and lockdowns, and the implications of any resulting shifts. It will bring together postgraduate, early career researcher, and senior academic sociologists, anthropologists, and social scientists, as well as practitioners and policy experts from across the world. Workshop participants will discuss the realities, consequences, and future needs of people living alone in times of crisis.
Please email paper proposals to lara.mckenzie@uwa.edu.au by 5pm AEST on Friday 7 October 2022. 
For the full event and submission details, read on... 
Healthy Societies 2022: Infrastructures of Care - Foundations and Fractures
Free online event, Wednesday 16 November, 9:00 am – 1:00 pm AEDT
Speakers include fellow members Greg Marston, Barbara Barbosa Neeves, Karen Soldatic, Alan Petersen and Alex Broom
Profound social transformations are reshaping the ways we ‘care’ (or fail to care) for ourselves, each other, our environments and our societies. The very materialities, moralities and infrastructures of contemporary care are being radically reformed and, at times, called into question.
For the full details, and to register, read on...
 
Digitised and Datafied Animals: Emerging Technologies and Human-Animal Entanglements
Online, Wednesday 5th October, 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm AEDT
Speakers include: Deborah Lupton and Megan Rose
For the full details, and to register, read on...
 
Cultures of Wellbeing Symposium
A Cultural Sociology Thematic Group Event
10am-3pm, Wednesday, 23 November
Deakin Downtown, Deakin University
Abstract submission deadline: August 31. Read on... 
 
Youth and money matters: Precarity, wellbeing and digital media
A Sociology of Youth Thematic Group symposium
Keynote - Professor Lisa Adkins, FASS, University of Sydney
Panellists: A/Prof Steven Threadgold, Dr Julia Coffey, Dr Benjamin Hanckel and Dr Natalie Hendry
Monday 28 November 9am-4pm
For details, and to register, read on...

Conceptualising Youth Mobilities Amidst Social Challenges Workshop
28th November
Hybrid, Deakin Business Centre
For details, see poster
 
TASA Publications

Journal of Sociology

Journal of Sociology - Volume: 58, Number: 2 (June 2022) has been published. You can access the Table of Contents here.
 

Health Sociology Review

Call for proposals for Special Issue by Guest Editors Issue 1, 2024
The incoming editors of HSR encourage sociologists to submit proposals to develop and edit special issues exploring new ideas and the cutting edge of their field of expertise. Particularly welcome are proposals for special issues with a focus on novel empirical domains, theoretical frameworks and/or methodologies in the sociology of health and illness (for example, the intersection of health sociology and climate change). 
Expression of interest deadline: October 15. Read on...
 
Yuwinbir – this way! Going beyond meeting points between Indigenous knowledges and health sociology
Health Sociology Review special issue Volume 31, Issue 2 (2022)
Guest edited by Megan Williams and Demelza Marlin. 
All articles are on OPEN ACCESS for 90 days here.
 
Employment
New: Assistant/Associate Professor in Indigenous Policy and Politics 
The University of British Columbia
Application deadline: November 6. Read on...
 
New: Lecturer in Sociology
University of Canterbury
Application deadline: October 16. Read on...
 
Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Indigenous Environmental Studies
University of Sydney
Application deadline: TOMORROW September 30. Read on...
 
Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Climate Adaptation
University of Sydney
Application deadline: TOMORROW September 30. Read on...
 
Senior Research Fellow / Principal Research Fellow
Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health and Society, La Trobe
Application deadline: October 2nd. Read on...
 
Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Sociology
UNSW, Canberra
Application deadline: TOMORROW September 30. Read on...
 
Indigenous Postdoctoral Fellow
Australian National University
Application deadline: TOMORROW September 30. Read on...
  
The Gough Whitlam and Malcolm Fraser Visiting Professor of Australian Studies
The Committee on Australian Studies at Harvard University seeks to appoint a distinguished scholar to the Gough Whitlam and Malcolm Fraser Visiting Professor of Australian Studies for the 2024-2025 academic year.
Application deadline: October 15. Read on...
 
Professor of Sociology
Uppsala University, Sweden
Application deadline: TOMORROW September 30. Read on...
 
 

Jobs Board

The Jobs Board enables you to view current employment opportunities. As a member, you can post opportunities to the Jobs Board directly from within your membership profile screen.
Current Employment Opportunities
PhD Scholarships
New: Drugs, Gender and Sexuality (DruGS) research program
The Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health and Society, La Trobe University
For details, read on...
 
Integrating community and family care for older people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds
The University of Queensland
For details, read on...
 
Including the voices of children and young people in support services
Australian National University / Relationships Australia
This supplementary ‘top up’ scholarship is a terrific opportunity for a PhD candidate who wants to conduct research that will inform improvements in community services for Australian children, young people, and their families and/or carers.
Application deadline: 10 pm Monday 31st October. Read on...
  
Multicultural Education Aides Supporting Students from Refugee Backgrounds
This PhD scholarship is offered by the Melbourne Social Equity Institute in partnership with Foundation House University of Melbourne
Application Deadline: Monday 3 October. Read on...

Scholarships Board

The Scholarships Board enables you to view available scholarships that our members have posted. Like the Jobs Board, as a member, you can post scholarship opportunities directly from within your membership profile screen.
Current Scholarship Opportunities
Other Events, News & Opportunities

Symposium

Revitalising flyer
New: Revitalising Universities in (Post-) COVID Times Symposium
5 November, Tokyo University, 10.30-18.30 Japan Standard Time (JST). 
University of Tokyo, convened by Dr Naomi Berman.
In addition to keynote speaker award winning Professor Emeritus Raewyn Connell, the event will feature a thought-provoking range of presentations and roundtables exploring themes in relation to the social purpose of universities, academic identity, student experience (including grief), and resilience in the face of emergencies.
Program details are available 
here.
Registrations close 14 October. To register, click here.
The is a free hybrid event, so please share with your colleagues and networks. For questions or inquiries please contact Ahram Han at: ahramhan@g.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp.

Workshops

New: Environmental Destruction: The Effects of War, Pollution & Capital
Free, online workshop hosted by (In)justice International and Liverpool Hope University
Wed, 14 December 2022, 12:00 – 16:00 GMT
Abstract submission deadline: 23rd of November. 
Read on...
 

Zines

Zine #12
So Fi Zine is a sociological fiction zine for arts-based research, creative sociology, and art inspired by social science. The zine publishes short fiction, poetry, and visual art in various forms.
Submission deadline: TOMORROW September 30Read on...
 

Conferences - Call for Papers

International Interdisciplinary Conference: “The role of Technology in the Shaping of Society”
17th Annual Int. Conference of AIS-ALBSA and Int. Partners
2nd Annual Conference of School Leadership: “Leadership and management in Education” (CSL – AADF)
University Kadri Zeka of Gjilan, KOSOVO, 11-12 November 2022

Submission deadline:
 TOMORROW 30 September. Read on...
 
 

Journals - Call for Papers

Media International Australia feature section on the topic of "Telecommunications Revolution? Enduring problems and possible futures".
Scholars whose research focuses on changes happening across the telecommunications landscape (particularly in the Asia-Pacific region) are encouraged to submit a proposal for the section.
Submission deadline: 3 October.
More information is available here.
Any enquiries, please contact Kieran Hegarty and/or James Meese
 
Visioni LatinoAmericane
Latin America between socio-environmental, health and conflict emergencies. Risks, strategic and geopolitical choices,
socio-economic repercussions, shortage of raw materials and food. Reality and perspectives
Submission deadline: October 20. Read on...
 
Adult Migrants’ Language Learning, Labour Market, and Social Inclusion
Special Issue, Social Inclusion
Deadline for Abstracts: December 15. Read on... 
 
Annual Review of the Sociology of Religion
Change and Its Discontents: Religious Organizations and Religious Life in Central and Eastern Europe
Volume 15 (Forthcoming 2024)
Edited by Olga Breskaya, University of Padova, and Siniša Zrinščak, University of Zagreb
For details, see the flyer.
 
Disabled People and the Intersectional Nature of Social Inclusion
Social Inclusion, Volume 11, Issue 4
Abstract submission deadline: November 30.  Read on...

Save the Date

Round Table Consultation Event - Understanding domestic violence and religion: Exploring how faith-based organisations can be part of the solution
This event is a national gathering to share information about initiatives and research demonstrating how churches and faith communities in Australia are working to prevent and respond to domestic and family violence.
Online or in-person (Melbourne), Friday 28 October, 
For detailsread on...
 
TASA Gift Memberships
Gift memberships, for any membership category, can now be accessed at anytime via your membership profile screen. If you would like to gift a membership, to someone new or to a current member, please follow the steps below:
 
STEP 1: Click here and log in

STEP 2: Click on the drop down menu to the right of your name in the purple bar (RH) at the top of the website (see 1st image below)
 
STEP 3: Click on Profile (see 1st image below)
 
STEP 4: Click on the Gift Memberships menu item and complete the details, see yellow highlights in 2nd image below. 
Profile Steps 2
Submitting Newsletter Items
We encourage you to support your colleagues by sharing details of your latest publications with them via this newsletter. No publication is too big or too small. Any mention of sociology is of value to our association, and to the discipline, so please do send through details of your latest publication (fully referenced & with a link, where possible) for the next newsletter, to TASA Admin. Usually, the newsletter is disseminated every Thursday morning.
Updating your Member Profile
Personal pronoun preferences can now be added to your profile. There are 9 combination options to choose from. Please let Sally in TASA Admin know if your preference/s is not on the list and we will have them added.
 
For assistance with updating your Member Profile on TASA web please see the video tutorial: Updating your Member Profile
 
TASA Documents and Policies
TASA has introduced a policy for Safe and Inclusive events and Sustainable events
 
You can access details of TASA's current Executive Committee 2021 - 2022, and their respective portfoliosas well as documents and policies, including the ConstitutionValues StatementStatement on Academic FreedomCode of Conduct, Grievance Procedures & TASA History
 
Accessing Online Materials & Resources
Menu navigation for online content

TASA members have access to over 90 peer-reviewed  Sage Sociology full-text collection online journals encompassing over 63,000 articles. The image on the left shows you where to access those journals, as well as the Sage Research Methods Collection & the Taylor and Francis Full Text Collection, when logged in to TASAweb. If needed, here is a short instructive video on how to access the journals. 

Contact TASA Admin: admin@tasa.org.au
Full list of TASA Twitter handles