The XX ISA World Congress of Sociology is being supported by the Melbourne Convention Bureau. | | | Dear ~~first_name~~,
If you missed last week's thought provoking TASA Thursdays event with fellow members Liv Hamilton, Rob Watts, Judith Bessant & Milo Kei speaking about Climate change and climate change activism, you can catch up with the recording here.
In case you missed our email earlier this week, we are extremely happy to report that a new staff member will be starting with TASA on Monday. Working alongside Sally, Penny's main focus will be on TASA events, see below.
| Welcoming a new TASA Staff member
| Penny Toth, our newly appointed Events Manager, has a degree in public relations and has approximately 20 years of experience working in events and marketing for various public, private, and not-for-profit organisations.
Much of Penny’s work experience has involved working with internal and external stakeholders and like-minded organisations to create, manage and deliver professional development opportunities in the form of conferences, webinars, workshops, exhibitions, seminars and training programs.
| | | This year, TASA’s annual event sees a change of format due to the ISA World Congress of Sociology being held in Melbourne in June. TASA’s 2023 November event will be run as a colloquium involving 20 panel sessions (80 papers), two afternoon plenaries, social events, and TASA’s AGM and awards presentation. Details about the event can be accessed here.
Panel submissions will be open until this coming Monday May 29th. You can access the submission form via the orange link below:
| We are collecting resources on the Voice. If you have something to add to the below list, please email the details (with links) to TASA Admin.
| Members' Engaging Sociology | Jae-Eun Noh (2023). Human Rights. In KOICA (Korea International Cooperation Agency) (eds). International Development Cooperation: Advanced Edition. Sungnam: KOICA ODA Education Center.
| Sociology recognised in Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide
| The following three TASA Awards are now open for nominations:
Nominations close on July 17th. | TASA Thursdays
June 15th: The Voice. Speakers: Joann Schmider (Indigenous Portfolio Leader) and others TBC.
September 21: Visual Methods of Sociology with speakers Dorinda 't Hart and Kazi Fattah.
Date TBC: Mark Carrigan (UK) presenting on AI and Chat GPT.
If you would like to be a presenter/panellist for one of our TASA Thursdays events, please contact Roger Wilkinson, our Digital Publications Editor.
| Inquiring for Life - How to build in research and evaluation systemically for (truly) living systems
Applied Sociology Thematic Group presentation
Tuesday June 6th, 1-2pm (AEST) Online
Speaker: fellow member Yoland Wadsworth
With a long career of 28 years in applied social research (1973-2001) and 20 years in academic settings (2002-2022), in this presentation Yoland will report on the most important insights derived from her work. Her questions arose initially out of the puzzle of why it is that health, community and human services want to hear from their service-users and paradoxically act repeatedly as if they don't want to hear from their users. This inquiry morphed into a PhD that asked how research and evaluation could be both methodologically sound and effectively valuable for the purposes of meeting service end-users' needs. And finally it became a question of how could the act of human inquiry per se best bring life to question-askers and serve their deepest value-driven purposes. The presentation will set out to outline a complex theory by means of a relatively simple and hopefully familiar conceptual cycle 'backbone', on which the theory's extensive implications may then be mapped. We will steer between over simplification and excessive complexity of what is really a Great Big Theory of Everything! (Although this theory hopes to escape the worst dangers of Grand Theory by being reflexive in its own terms.)
Zoom: https://macquarie.zoom.us/j/88331762536?pwd=ZFVKTHg0WmFWZ1hIRXMwelh2RHI1dz09
| TASA ISA 2023 Aligned Events
|
#HS23 Epistemic Justice for Healthy Societies
ONLINE, June 20th, 2023, Sydney. 1:00pm - 3:00pm AEST.
Associate Professor Seye Abimbola (University of Sydney, Australia) will join Professor Nelson de Barros (University of Campinas, Brazil) to deliver their perspectives on epistemic justice in global health, with an introduction by SCHS Deputy Director, Dr Katherine Kenny and a discussion led by SCHS Deputy Director, Associate Professor Nadine Ehlers.
For the full details, and to register, read on...
| | |
Disrupted plans, digital modalities, and undecided futures
June 22nd, 2023, Melbourne
Plenary Speakers: Professor Crystal Abidin (Curtin University), Dr Joshua Kalemba (Flinders University), Dr Brendan Churchill (University of Melbourne), and Dr Jacqueline Menager (Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet).
| | |
Transformative social science: a dialogue between evidence, policy and practice
June 23rd, 2023, Melbourne
Panellists: A/Prof Catherine Robinson, UTAS (sociologist), Anna Adcock (sociologist & Māori scholar), Research Fellow in the Centre for Women's Health Research, Victoria University of Wellington, Professor Jan Marie Fritz, University of Cincinnati (sociologist), Dr Simone Casey, Senior Policy Advisor ACOSS (social policy), and Prof Barry Judd, University of Melbourne (Indigenous studies)
For the full details, read on...
| | |
Single parenting, co-parenting, and post-separation families: Challenges and opportunities in times of crisis
June 23rd, 2023, Melbourne
Keynotes: Dr Moeata Keil (University of Auckland), Professor Kathryn Edin (Princeton University), and Professor Kay Cook (Swinburne University).
For the full details, read on...
| | | Amazon Effects & Logistical Labour: New markets, new technologies, new workplaces?
June 23rd, 2023, Melbourne
Keynote: Professor Valeria Pulignano
For the full details, read on... | | | ‘Mobile Transitions’: A Symposium on Global Youth, Transnational Mobilities and Transitions to Adulthood.
Transnational Mobilities and Youth Transitions
June 23rd, 2023, Melbourne, 9:30am - 5:00pm
Keynote: Associate Professor Valentina Cuzzocrea (Università degli studi di Cagliari)
For the full details, and to register, read on...
| | |
Reimaging social security in Australia to rebuild our social safety net
June 22nd, Melbourne, 5:30pm
Speakers include: Dr China Mills, a leading scholarly civil society advocate (University of London) Professor Kay Cook, Swinburne University, Associate Professor Elise Klein, ANU, Dr Dina Bowman, Brotherhood of St. Laurence, Nerita Waight, the CEO of Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service, Chabel Khan, University of Melbourne, Natasha Thomson, disability self-advocate, Terese Edwards, Executive Director, Council for Single Mothers and their Children, Professor Karen Soldatic, University of Western Sydney
| Decentering knowledge in researching migration of the Global South
Hybrid event, June 24th, 2023, Melbourne
Keynote speakers: Xiaoying Qi, Associate Professor of Sociology, Australian Catholic University; Lan Anh Hoang, Associate Professor in Development Studies, the School of Social and Political Sciences, the University of Melbourne; and Irudayja Rajan, Professor at the International Institute for Migration and Development (IIMAD), Kerela, India.
Registration closes June 15th. You can register here.
| | |
Place Economies
July 5th and 6th- Adelaide. The first afternoon/evening (i.e., the 5th) will be at UniSA City West; the second full day (i.e., the 6th) will be at Flinders Victoria Square Campus.
Keynote: Professor Ian Woodward, Southern Denmark University
For further details, read on...
| | | Social Sciences Week (SSW) 2023
4th to the 10th of September.
In case you are not aware, SSW is an annual event that celebrates and showcases the diverse range of social sciences disciplines and research in Australia.
For details, and to register events, visit the SSW website here.
| Journal of Sociology - Volume: 59, Number: 1 (March 2023) has been published. You can access the Table of Contents here.
| Health Sociology Review - Volume: 32, Number: 1 (2023) has been published. It is a special issue on Sociological Aspects of Knowledge Translation. You can access the Table of Contents here. Note, most of the articles are available on open access.
|
New: Two Level A/B Research Fellow positions
Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies (SCHS), The University of Sydney (full-time, fixed term 2 years with possibility of extension)
One role is focused on health and one focused on the environment and food systems. Have a look at the Centre’s Research Themes to get a sense of the work they do, which spans many areas of the humanities and social sciences, and in conversation with STEM scholars (in this case the Charles Perkins Centre). Relevant areas of expertise for applicants include: sociology, anthropology, public health, qualitative research, science and technology studies or related fields.
For a casual chat about the role and/or the team, please feel free to contact fellow member Alex Broom or anyone else from the team (e.g. Katie Kenny, Michelle Peterie, Leah Williams Veazey, Jianni Tien, Roberta Pala and Imogen Harper.
Application deadline: 18 June.
Associate Research Fellow
Deakin University, Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation
The Associate Research Fellow will conduct activities in the area of social change and gender specific studies and will be required to coordinate and assist research within the Australian Research Council funded project: 'Anti-women online movements: Pathways and patterns of participation'.
Professorial Research Fellow
La Trobe University
Application deadline: June 4th. Read on...
Tenure-Track faculty member
Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan
| 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.
| | | New: Australian Research Council: Discovery Grant Understanding vicarious trauma in Australian foster care
Flinders University
Supervisor: fellow member Ben Lohmeyer
| 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. | | | Other Events, News & Opportunities | New: European Sociological Association event with fellow member Raewyn Connell as one of the speakers
You can register for the event here.
| | | New: Big Questions in Work-Family
Work and Family Researchers Network Conference
June 20-22, 2024, Concordia University in Montreal Canada.
More than 500 stakeholders in the work-family field are anticipated to attend, with a dynamic program focused on meaningful exchanges.
Submissions open in August and close November 1, 2023. Read on...
| New: You can register for the event here. | | | National Library of Australia Scholarships and the Asia Study Grants
Guidelines for these scholarships and grants as well as links to the online application forms are available here.
Application deadline: 26 June. | | | 2023 Thesis Eleven Annual Lecture: How Did We Get to Here? A Conversation with Jeffrey Alexander and Peter Beilharz
Greek Centre for Contemporary Culture, Melbourne.
Wednesday June 28, 5:45pm-7:45pm
For details, and to register, read on...
Agnes Heller Lecture 2023 - Professor Michèle Lamont
La Trobe University
Tuesday June 27th, 12:30pm - 2:00pm AEST
La Trobe University City Campus
| Journals - Call for Abstracts
| Transient migrants and their information behaviours (special issue)
Transitions: Journal of Transient Migration
This Special Issue specifically looks at the information behaviours of transient migrants – groups of people who are temporarily in a country because of study, work, lifestyle or humanitarian reasons.
Special Issue Editors Shanton Chang, Dana Mckay, & Catherine Gomes
Abstract submission deadline: 1 July. For full details, read on...
| Research Workshop (and Zine)
| Affect, Knowledge and Embodiment: A Critical Feminist Arts/Research Workshop
Ash Watson, Laura Rodriguez Castro, and Sam Trayhurn.
Explore ways of practically extending critical and feminist social research with art – specifically sociological fiction and zine making.
TOMORROW May 26, 10:00am 2:00pm, AEST
Southern Cross University, Gold Coast Campus Terminal Drive Bilinga, QLD
| Gender - Sport - Society: Focus on the FIFA WWC 2023
The face of sport is changing, and this year Australia is hosting one of the world’s biggest sporting events -- but this time the focus will be on women.
July 28, Southbank, Queensland.
Speakers: Tracey Holmes, Kim Toffoletti, & Nicole Surdyka
| Transnational Belongings: Practices of Placemaking and Participation in Central America and Europe
Speakers: Noelle Brigden (Marquette University, USA) and Katia Pilati (University of Trento, Italy)
Chaired by: Leah Williams Veazey (University of Sydney)
Monday 3 Jul 2023 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM AEST, University of Sydney (Camperdown) and on zoom
| | | New: Making PrEP work: understanding drug adherence as a domestic practice
Online, Tuesday, 30 May 2023 - 1:00pm to 2:00pm
Speaker: fellow member Anthony K J Smith
| Calls for Abstracts / Chapters for Books | Family and Social Change in the Global South: A Gendered Perspective.
Book to be published by Emerald (2024)
Abstract submission deadline: May 29. Read on...
Deleuze, Guattari, and the Schizoanlaysis of Affective Labour
Schizoanalytic Applications Series, Bloomsbury Publishing
This call for chapters invites scholars, thinkers, and artists, to explore the application, potentials, and dangers, of deploying schizoanalysis and the radical free-play of desiring-production, to realms of affective labour and, more generally, to the commodification of affect.
| 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. | 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 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.
| TASA Documents and Policies | In case you are not aware, you can access details of TASA's current Executive Committee 2023 - 2024, and their respective portfolios, as well as documents and policies, including the Constitution, Values Statement, Statement on Academic Freedom, Code of Conduct, Grievance Procedures, Safe & Inclusive Events, Sustainable Events and TASA History.
| Accessing Online Materials & Resources | 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 | |