All Stories

  1. Multi-species sociology of the body
  2. Nonhuman Animal Suffering
  3. “What Have Animals to Do With Social Work?” A Sociological Reflection on Species and Social Work
  4. An Insufferable Business: Ethics, Nonhuman Animals and Biomedical Experiments
  5. The ‘Animal-Advocacy Agenda’: Exploring Sociology for Non-Human Animals
  6. Observation Methods
  7. Transgenic Animals, Biomedical Experiments, and "Progress"
  8. Animals and Sociology
  9. Animal Experiments and Animal Rights
  10. Town and Country: Animals, Space and Place
  11. Animals, Social Inequalities and Oppression
  12. Animals and Biology as Destiny
  13. Animals, Leisure and Culture
  14. Sociology and Animals
  15. Consumption of the Animal
  16. Conclusions: Sociology for Other Animals
  17. Animals, Crime and Abuse
  18. Human Primacy Identity Politics, Nonhuman Animal Experiments and the Oppression of Nonhuman Animals
  19. Nonhuman Animal Experiments in the European Community: Human Values and Rational Choice
  20. Nonhuman Animal Experiments in the European Community: Human Values and Rational Choice*
  21. A Hostile World for Nonhuman Animals: Human Identification and the Oppression of Nonhuman Animals for Human Good
  22. The Social Constructionist Challenge to Primacy Identity and the Emancipation of Oppressed Groups: Human Primacy Identity Politics and the Human/'Animal' Dualism
  23. Identity and Repartnering after Separation
  24. Introduction
  25. Methods and Methodology
  26. ‘Risk’, Emotions and Choice in the Lives of Formerly Partnered Men and Women
  27. The Formerly Partnered and Repartnering in Contemporary Britain
  28. Past, Present and Future — Orientations towards Repartnering
  29. Theorizing Contemporary Intimate Couple Relationships and Relationship Histories
  30. The Formerly Married and Former Cohabitees: Their Lives, Characteristics and Repartnering Behaviour
  31. Identity and Intimacy in the Lives of Formerly Partnered Men and Women
  32. Cynthia M. Duncan, Worlds Apart: why poverty exists in rural America, Yale University Press, 2000, xvii+235 pp., £18,95, £11.00 pbk.
  33. Which Pension?: Women, Risk and Pension Choice
  34. Repartnering: the relevance of parenthood and gender to cohabitation and remarriage among the formerly married
  35. Human Primacy Identity Politics, Nonhuman Animal Experiments and the Oppression of Nonhuman Animals
  36. Change, Pensions and Ageing in Europe: Discourses of Risk and Security