All Stories

  1. The micropolitics of behavioural interventions: a new materialist analysis
  2. Assembling Citizenship: Sexualities Education, Micropolitics and the Becoming-Citizen
  3. Editorial: Special Issue on Society, Environment and Health
  4. Sexualities education and sexual citizenship
  5. The Materiality of Memory: Affects, Remembering and Food Decisions
  6. Social structures, power and resistance in monist sociology: (New) materialist insights
  7. Mixed methods, materialism and the micropolitics of the research-assemblage
  8. Bodies, pornography and the circumscription of sexuality: A new materialist study of young people’s sexual practices
  9. Young bodies, power and resistance: a new materialist perspective
  10. Sociology, environment and health: a materialist approach
  11. Guest Editorial: Sociology, environment and public health
  12. Engaging parents with sex and relationship education: A UK primary school case study
  13. The Micropolitics of Obesity: Materialism, Markets and Food Sovereignty
  14. Health sociology from post-structuralism to the new materialisms
  15. Personal health technologies, micropolitics and resistance: a new materialist analysis
  16. Inside the Research-Assemblage: New Materialism and the Micropolitics of Social Inquiry
  17. The sexuality-assemblages of young men: A new materialist analysis
  18. Emotions, affects and the production of social life
  19. New materialist social inquiry: designs, methods and the research-assemblage
  20. The Sexuality-Assemblage: Desire, Affect, Anti-Humanism
  21. Creativity, anti-humanism and the ‘new sociology of art’
  22. Flows of Affect in the Olympic Stadium
  23. Creativity and health: An anti-humanist reflection
  24. Delivering shiatsu in a primary care setting: Benefits and challenges
  25. Boundary Objects, Social Meanings and the Success of New Technologies
  26. What are health identities and how may we study them?
  27. Pharma in the bedroom . . . and the kitchen. . . . The pharmaceuticalisation of daily life
  28. What governs governance, and how does it evolve? The sociology of governance-in-action
  29. Anaesthetists, the discourse on patient fitness and the organisation of surgery
  30. You are what you eat? Vegetarianism, health and identity
  31. Health, ethics and environment: A qualitative study of vegetarian motivations
  32. Practice-Based Evidence
  33. Changing social relationships
  34. Health identities: from expert patient to resisting consumer
  35. A Sociology of Technology Governance for the Information Age: The Case of Pharmaceuticals, Consumer Advertising and the Internet
  36. Pro-anorexia, weight-loss drugs and the internet: an 'anti-recovery' explanatory model of anorexia
  37. The birth of the e-clinic. Continuity or transformation in the UK governance of pharmaceutical consumption?
  38. Cultures of Ageing in Thailand and Australia. (What Can an Ageing Body Do?)
  39. Information management in health visitors’ public health and community development activities
  40. The ‘expert patient’: empowerment or medical dominance? The case of weight loss, pharmaceutical drugs and the Internet
  41. Practice-based Evidence
  42. Refracting ‘Health’: Deleuze, Guattari and Body-Self
  43. What a 'risky' body can do: Why people's health choices are not all based in evidence
  44. Change management in primary care: design and evaluation of an internet-delivered course
  45. Use of the Internet by medical voluntary groups in the UK
  46. Gps in Cyberspace: The Sociology of a ‘Virtual Community’
  47. The Wisdom Project: virtual education in primary care
  48. Power, control and resistance in the timing of health and care
  49. The WISDOM project: training primary care professionals in informatics in a collaborative 'virtual classroom'
  50. Wisdom: Informatics in Primary Care
  51. Postmodern Reflections: Deconstructing ‘Risk’, ‘Health’ and ‘Work’
  52. ‘RISKS’, ‘HAZARDS’ AND LIFE CHOICES: REFLECTIONS ON HEALTH AT WORK
  53. Foucault, Foucauldians and Sociology
  54. General practitioners and the Internet: modelling a 'virtual community'
  55. The contribution of children to informal care: a Delphi study
  56. Space, sterility and surgery: Circuits of hygiene in the operating theatre
  57. Empowering research: statistical power in general practice research
  58. A postgraduate course in Primary and Community Care: impact on an academic department
  59. IT culture in medical education
  60. An information technology course in the medical curriculum
  61. Professional Models of School Absence Associated with Home Responsibilities
  62. Fabricating Surgery: A Response to Collins
  63. Self-directed approaches to multidisciplinary health studies
  64. Anaesthetists, the discourse on patient fitness and the organisation of surgery.
  65. Discourse, organisation and the surgical ward round.
  66. Postmodernism, Rationality and the Evaluation of Health Care
  67. Mass communication and public health/Doctoring the media (Book).
  68. Family attachments and medical sociology: a valuable partnership for student learning
  69. Medical education and the GCSE generation—a transferable activity-skills programme in medical sociology
  70. Sociology in the British medical curriculum: a survey
  71. Scientific Theory Choice and Social Structure: The Case of Joseph Lister's Antisepsis, Humoral Theory and Asepsis
  72. Postmodern Field Relations in Health Research
  73. Postmodern reflections on ‘risk’, ‘hazards’ and life choices