Department of Sociology Podcasts
Un pódcast de Oxford University
Categorías:
54 Episodo
-
Peer effects, mobility, and innovation: evidence from the superstars of modern art
Publicado: 6/12/2011 -
Individual notions of distributive justice and relative economic status
Publicado: 10/11/2011 -
Ethnic, socioeconomic, linguistic, and political sources of ideational cleavage: history wars in contemporary Estonia.
Publicado: 10/11/2011 -
Regional integration and welfare-state convergence in Europe
Publicado: 8/6/2011 -
Crossnational similarity and difference in the changing distribution of household income
Publicado: 30/5/2011 -
The gender revolution: uneven and stalled
Publicado: 27/5/2011 -
Ethnic stratification in Chinas labor markets- the case of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region
Publicado: 27/5/2011 -
The Effect of Maternal Stress on Birth Outcomes: Exploiting a Natural Experiment
Publicado: 20/8/2010 -
School Racial Composition and Racial Preferences for Friends among Adolescents
Publicado: 20/8/2010 -
Gendered Divisions of Labour and the Intergenerational Transmission of Inequality
Publicado: 20/8/2010 -
Public Attitudes to Poverty, Inequality and Welfare: What are the Implications for Social Policy?
Publicado: 20/8/2010 -
Prenatal Health, Educational Attainment and Intergenerational Inequality
Publicado: 20/8/2010 -
How Much Does Family Matter? A Cross-Cultural Study of the Impact of Kin on Birth and Death Rates
Publicado: 20/8/2010 -
Is IQ a "Fundamental Cause" of Health? Cognitive Ability, Gender, and Survival
Publicado: 20/8/2010
Podcasts from The Department of Sociology. Sociology in Oxford is concerned with real-world issues with policy relevance, such as social inequality, organised crime, the social basis of political conflict and mobilization, and changes in family relationships and gender roles. Our research is empirical, analytical, and comparative in nature, reaching far beyond British society, to encompass systematic cross-national comparison as well as the detailed study of Asian, European, Latin American and North American societies.