Dear ~~first_name~~,
It's the final countdown! We are just days away from the start of TASA 2024, which is very exciting:-) If you are going to the conference and you haven't had a chance to upload your presentations slides, please do so as soon as possible via this link.
If you missed last week's TASA Thursdays session on Conference Crafting, you can catch up with the recording here. This session focused on how to make the most of your conference experience.
Please note that next week our newsletter will be sent out on Friday morning, featuring news about our 2024 Award recipients!
| We extend our warm congratulations to fellow member Rana Dadpour who has been awarded the 2024 Planning Institute of Australia Queensland Awards for Planning Excellence, for their research on urban liveability in tropical region.
| | | We also extend our warm congratulations to fellow members Alexandra Ridgway, Philippa Collins, Kyllie Cripps, Stefani Vasil & Jacob Prehn who are some of this year's recipients of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia Workshop Program grants. You can read about the announcement, and access additional details, here.
| | Fellow member Dan Woodman (centre) with Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia (ASSA) President Richard Holden and Governor-General Samantha Mostyn. Dan was officially inaugurated as an ASSA Fellow during their annual dinner earlier this week. | | The 2024 ASSA fellows, all of whom were officially inaugurated earlier this week. | | |
We welcome Paul Bowell who has joined fellow members to co-convene the Sport & Leisure Thematic Group. | Paul is a lecturer at Swinburne University of Technology working within the Sport
Innovation Research Group. Paul works across projects specialising in sociology,
organisational practice, sport sociology and sport management. Paul has completed a
Bachelor of Arts (Honours) specialising in sociology at the Australian National University and a PhD focusing upon sport sociology and management at Swinburne University of Technology. Read on...
| | | We encourage you to support fellow sociologists by sharing details of your latest publications with them via our weekly 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 email through details of your latest publication/s (fully referenced & with a link, where possible), events, job adverts etc. for the next newsletter, to Sally in TASA Admin. The newsletter is disseminated every Thursday morning.
| Uekusa, S., Nguyen-Trung, K., Lorenz, D. F., Michael, S., & Karki, J. (2024). Bourdieu and early career researchers (ECRs) in disaster research: A collaborative autoethnography (CAE). International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 104969.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212420924007313?via%3Dihub [Open Access]
Manning, N and Stefanovic, D. ‘Beyond Angry White Men: A Progressive Sociological Imagination as an Alternative to Aggrieved Entitlement', Journal of Youth Studies DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/13676261.2024.2370280 [Open Access]
| Hayden, L., Newton, G., Carah, N., Tran, Brownbill, A., D. K., Obeid, A., Irving, R. (2024). How Alcohol and Gambling Companies Target People Most at Risk with Marketing for Addictive Products on Facebook. Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education: Canberra. https://fare.org.au/facebook-alcohol-and-gambling-companies-target-ads-at-australians-most-at-risk-of-harm/
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The Conversation, November 20th.
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ON NEXT FRIDAY
For the full details, and to register for the Journal of Sociology Special Issue launch, read on... | | | ‘Healthy’ Food Practices: Going beyond Structure versus Agency - call for abstracts
| A 2026 Health Sociology Review Special Issue Guest edited by fellow member Natalie Jovanovski and, colleague, Bhavna Middha. | Our interactions with food are critical to physical health, psychological health, social health, spiritual health, environmental health, among many others. How we grow food, produce and manufacture it, how it is provisioned, and how we consume and digest it, celebrate and mourn over it, play with and feel anxious about it, as well as discard it, indicates complex relationships between self and society. Despite being inextricably connected, most discussions about food within sociology are siloed, focusing either on the structural factors that shape our food practices, or our personal choices and their consequences. This has limited how we understand the role of food practices – or the bridging of or going beyond structure and agency – in shaping people’s health and wellbeing.
This special issue advances a holistic focus on food in health sociology, using a theoretical lens that goes beyond structure versus agency in explaining food practices.
Abstract submission deadline: 23rd November. Read on... | Global Healthcare Systems and Violence Against Women and Girls
Special Issue
Health Sociology Review, Volume 33, Issue 2 (2024)
To access all articles of the special issue, read on...
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Postdoctoral Fellow / Research Associate
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
The Gender Research Centre, Hong Kong Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies is currently looking for a full-time Research Associate / Postdoctoral Fellow, who will contribute to various research projects and activities carried out by the Centre, with a specific focus on advancing knowledge and understanding on technology, gender, and youth.
For details, read on...
| Young People & Disasters
Victoria University's Youth and Community Research Group & Youth Affairs Council Victoria
The PhD research must focus on disasters in Australian context but can target specific aspects of young people's experience.
Work with fellow member Fiona McDonald
| Other Events, News & Opportunities | New: Future Science Talks: Comedy Edition in PERTH! (WA Comedy Week)
Fellow member Dan Woodman did a short 15 minute comedy spot as part of a research based comedy show in the Melbourne Comedy Festival this year and he has been invited to reprise it during WA Comedy Week.
Wednesday 27th of November
Scitech - Sutherland Street West Perth, (in the CBD / 18 minutes by car from our TASA 2024 venue)
| | | New: Thesis Eleven Annual Lecture: Who is afraid of decoloniality? Knowledge, Language and Culture as India’s new battlegrounds
Thursday, December 5 · 5:30 - 7:30pm AEDT
Melbourne CBD
Speaker: Ira Raja, an academic and researcher specialising in contemporary Indian literature and cultural theory.
| | | Exploring Vulnerability: A Yarning Circle of Autoethnographic Narratives in Research
Curtin University
Tuesday November 26th, 1pm - 4pm AWST
| Music and Mediation
9-10 June 2025
Conference at the Elder Conservatorium of Music, University of Adelaide
Keynote speaker: Naomi Sunderland, Director, Creative Arts Research Institute, Griffith University
Mediation, in all its senses, from transmission to conflict resolution, is particularly relevant in times of technological innovation, sustainability challenges, forced displacement and struggles for equality or survival. This conference, generously supported by the Musicological Society of Australia (MSA), is concerned with the ways music and the study of music may contribute to the many theories and practices around mediation.
Abstract submission deadline: 16 December. Read on....
| The Academic Balancing Act: Unpacking the Dynamics of Workload Pressure and Burnout
SHAPE Futures
28th November 2024, 1pm - 5pm, AWST.
For the full details, see the image below and Read on...
| CHASS Future Leaders
The CHASS Future Leaders Writing Prize aims to recognise and reward young Australian writers (35 and under). The theme for 2024 is 'open'. The winner will receive $2000. Please email your submissions to helen@futureleaders.com.au by the extended deadline of November 30th, 2024 and cc CHASS Admin (membership@chass.org.au).
Sorrento Creative Writing Prize
The Prize celebrates the annual Sorrento Writers Festival and its mission to bring writers and readers together. The winner will receive $5,000 and their writing featured at the 2025 Sorrento Writers Festival and at www.writing.org.au.
| Routledge Studies in Gender and the Criminal Legal System
Edited by fellow member Annette Bromdal et al.
This exciting new book series has been established to create and enable a body of research that will inform debates and policy surrounding gender within and around the criminal legal system.
| Special Issues - Call for Submissions
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Algorithms in Health and Medicine: Sociological Inquiries into Current Disruptions and Future Imaginaries
Sociology of Health & Illness
This special issue aims to expand the sociological theorising of digital transformations in health care and medicine, focusing specifically on algorithmic (including AI and data-driven) technologies. Papers are sought that will address increasingly important, and yet still emergent, matters of concern in the provision of healthcare and medicine and imaginaries of their futures.
Abstract submission deadline: 6 January, 2025. Read on...
Multiplicities in Qualitative Research
Methods in Psychology
Note, Methods in Psychology is an Open Access publication, but Article Processing Charges will be waived for all articles accepted for this Special Issue.
Qualitative research can frequently involve multiplicities in a range of ways. We collect data from multiple people, as when working with focus groups, couples, parents and children, affinity groups, and so on. We may engage in multiple data collections, using multiple interviews over time in longitudinal research, or using multiple methods to collect different forms of data. We may also involve multiple perspectives on analysis and interpretation, or in seeking data from different actors connected to an event of process. These uses of multiplicity raise issues for how we work, how they should be managed, and why they are valuable.
Submission deadline: 30 April, 2025. Read on...
"Enduring" Indigenous Voices and Perspectives Amidst Ongoing Structures of Colonialism.
Journal of Critical Race and Ethnic Studies
Calling for contributions of original research articles, reviews of works (films, books, music, art exhibits), creative pieces (stories, poems) that explore the struggles for justice expressed in the lived experiences, knowledge systems, and cultural practices of indigenous communities across the globe.
Abstract submission deadline: November 30. Read on...
Aging Out of Out-of-Home Care: New services, sustaining support and tackling system failures
Call for Papers in Child and Family Social Work
Guest Editors: fellow members Joel McGregor, Ben Lohmeyer, and colleague Alhassan Abdullah
The age at which young people age out of care, and the support offered to them post-care, varies significantly across state, national and international boundaries. Yet, there is an international momentum for extending the age of young people exiting care including in multiple states of Australia, the USA and the UK. In response to the global movements to extend care for young people in out-of-home care into their early 20s, this special issue aims to instigate an international foundation for a new research and practice agenda for improving young people’s transition out of out-of-home care and their journey towards independent living.
Submission Deadline: April 30, 2025. Read on...
Incarceration and health
Scientific Reports
Original research into incarceration and health, including studies on the health of incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals and their families and healthcare within correctional facilities are welcome.
Guest editors include fellow member Annette Bromdal.
| | The Jobs & Scholarships Board allows you to view opportunities that TASA Admin and fellow members have posted.
In 4 easy steps, you can upload job & scholarship opportunities from your member's profile screen. For instructions, visit here.
The Jobs & Scholarships Board is a public facing searchable feature of TASAweb.
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| TASA’s Executive Committee (EC) governs the Association and manages its daily business as outlined in the Constitution and by established policies. A call for nominations for the 2027 – 2028 Executive term will be disseminated on July 1, 2026.
The November 2024 - November 2026 Executive Team can be viewed on TASAweb here.
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| TASA was officially established under the name of the Sociological Association of Australia and New Zealand (SAANZ) in 1963, crystallising what was a long, and perhaps delayed process of the discipline’s development in Australia.
For the 50th anniversary celebrations in 2013, pages on TASA's history were added to TASAweb.
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| The more members TASA has, the stronger our association can be.
To help spread the word about TASA, you can quickly and easily gift a TASA membership to someone from within your TASA membership profile.
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| TASA members have free 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 online resources. |
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| TASA currently has 27 thematic groups in operation and members can join up to 4 groups. This can be done quickly, and easily via your membership profile.
Watch the very short video (1:30) to learn how to join a thematic group/s.
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| TASA's Membership Directory allows you to search for members by country and state. It also has search functions for members of a particular thematic group, and members who are available for supervision and/or mentoring.
To learn how to search the Membership Directory, watch this very short video (1 min).
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| Via your membership profile, you can update many options including adding a secondary email address, and indicating if you are available for mentoring, supervising, consulting, and/or talking to the media, for example. If you are in a Tier 2, Tier 3 & Tier 4 membership category, you can also opt in or out of receiving a hard copy of the Journal of Sociology.
All of these changes can be done quickly and easily. To learn how, watch this video (1 min). |
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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.
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| 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 email through details of your latest publication/s (fully referenced & with a link, where possible), events, job adverts etc. for the next newsletter, to TASA Admin. Usually, the newsletter is disseminated every Thursday morning. |
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| As part of the agreement with Taylor & Francis, TASA members are entitled to a 30% books discount. This discount is valid on any full priced CRC Press or Routledge book.
To access the book discount, click on the following link and then log in to TASAweb: book discount link. |
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TASA Admin (Sally): admin@tasa.org.au
TASA Events (Penny): events@tasa.org.au | |