SAGE Podcast show

SAGE Podcast

Summary: Welcome to the official free Podcast from SAGE, with selected new podcasts that span a wide range of subject areas including Sociology, criminology, criminal justice, sports medicine, Psychology, Business, education, humanities, social sciences, and science, technology, medicine and AJSM. Our Podcasts are designed to act as teaching tools, providing further insight into our content through editor and author commentaries and interviews with special guests. SAGE is a leading international publisher of journals, books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets with principal offices in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, and Singapore.

Podcasts:

 "There's So Much at Stake"-Sexual Minority Youth Discuss Dating Violence | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:15:23

The purpose of this study was to explore perceptions of dating violence among a sample of sexual minority youth. Focus groups were conducted as part of a larger study that surveyed 109 sexual minority youth between the ages of 18 and 24 years. Participants identified four main themes contributing to dating violence among same-sex couples: homophobia (societal and internalized); negotiating socially prescribed gender roles; assumed female connection; and other relationship issues. Such information is essential for determining the need for and content of dating violence services, including education, safety planning, and referrals for mental and physical health services for sexual minority youth.

 Disease Politics and Medical Research Funding: Three Ways Advocacy Shapes Policy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:09:28

In the 1980s and 1990s, single-disease interest groups emerged as an influential force in U.S. politics. This article explores their effects on federal medical research priority-setting. Previous studies of advocacy organizations' political effects focused narrowly on direct benefits for constituents. Using data on 53 diseases over 19 years, I find that in addition to securing direct benefits, advocacy organizations have aggregate effects and can systemically change the culture of policy arenas. Disease advocacy reshaped funding distributions, changed the perceived beneficiaries of policies, promoted metrics for commensuration, and made cultural categories of worth increasingly relevant to policymaking.

 The Rise of the Super Rich | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:15:26

The income share of the super-rich in the United States has grown rapidly since the early 1980s after a period of postwar stability. What factors drove this change? In this study, we investigate the institutional, policy, and economic shifts that may explain rising income concentration. We use single-equation error correction models to estimate the long- and short-run effects of politics, policy, and economic factors on pretax top income shares between 1949 and 2008. We find that the rise of the super-rich is the result of rightward-shifts in Congress, the decline of labor unions, lower tax rates on high incomes, increased trade openness, and asset bubbles in stock and real estate markets.

 Religion and Sexual Behaviors: Understanding the Influence of Islamic Cultures and Religious Affiliation for Explaining Sex Outside of Marriage | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:09:56

Social scientists have long been interested in how cultural and structural characteristics shape individuals' actions. We investigate this relationship by examining how macro- and micro-level religious effects shape individuals’ reports of premarital and extramarital sex. We look at how identifying with one of the major world religions—Islam, Hinduism, Christianity, Buddhism, or Judaism—and living in a nation with a Muslim culture shape the likelihood of sex outside of marriage. Using hierarchical modeling techniques and cross-national data from the Demographic and Health Surveys, we find that ever married Hindus and Muslims are less likely to report having had premarital sex than are ever married Jews and Christians, and an earlier age at marriage does not appear to explain the relationship. Married Muslims are also less likely than affiliates of all other religions, except Buddhists, to report extramarital sex. The percentage Muslim within a nation decreases the odds of reports of premarital sex and this relationship is not explained by restrictions on women's mobility. These findings contribute to research on religion, culture, policy, and health, as well as our understanding of the macro-micro relationship.

 BERA/SAGE Research Methods series: Dr Shane Peart | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:08:08

The winner of the BERA/SAGE Research Methods Award for the research-based practice in over 18 setting in conversation about her education project on the experiences of Black males in further education

 Autism Matters podcast 6 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:10:44

This podcast features a discussion with David Mandell (Editor-in-Chief of Autism) about research on autism spectrum disorders including the latest research in the journal, Autism, specifically referring to studies on Hispanics and autism, a review on theory of mind and sheltered workshops for adults with autism.

 School Psychology International Podcast 'Cyberbullying in Schools' | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:20:47

Listen to this discussion as an accompaniment to a special issue of School Psychology International on the subject of cyberbullying, guest edited by Dr von Marees and Professor Franz Petermann, and published as volume 33 Number 5 of the journal.

 Language Testing Bytes | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:17:26

Ana Pellicer-Sanchez and Norbert Schmitt talk with Glenn Fulcher about the usefulness of yes-no vocabulary tests and the problems language testers face with scoring them.

 2nd World Wide Failure Exercise Benchmarking of triaxial failure theories for fibre-reinforced polymer composites | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:04:49

A brief introduction from the organisers of the WWFE-2 Exercise; Prof. Mike Hinton and Dr. Sam Kaddour discussing: - How the special issue on WWFE-2 came about? - What is the most exciting thing about it? - Why the special issue WWFE-2 was created? - Who would be most interested and benefit most from it?

 Boredom and Action-Experiences from Youth Confinement | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:15:22

Few studies have examined boredom as a central experience of everyday life. This article adds to the boredom-related literature by examining the role of boredom and boredom-aversion in the everyday life of young people confined in secure care for young offenders. Data are primarily drawn from an ethnographic study in a Danish secure care unit and include both participant observation and interviews with unit residents. Drawing on theories of boredom and young people's creation of action through risk-taking edgework, the article demonstrates how boredom is a key experience in daily life in secure care. Waiting is a defining aspect of the experienced boredom, and the young people spend much time "doing nothing," finding it difficult to relate to the unit’s daily routines. Analyses show that the young people deal with the experience of boredom through the generation of risk-taking action.

 Family Business Review | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:17:01

Cristina Bettinelli of the University of Bergamo discusses her study on the relationship between board composition and board processes in Italian family businesses.

 Voices of Resistance: Seeking Shelter Services in Pakistan | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:10:09

Gender violence is a global human rights issue that presents serious risk to women in Pakistan. Multiple factors make leaving violence extremely challenging. This study examines the experiences of women who escaped violence and sought shelter services in Pakistan through an ecological lens within the social, cultural, and legal realities of Pakistan. Nineteen women residing at a private shelter were interviewed. Explored were the processes leading women to take action against violence, barriers encountered, and the consequences of the decision to go to a shelter, with a focus on the women’s strengths and resilience.

 Teleneurology: Current State of the Art | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:18:12

A conversation with Bart Demaerschalk and Ben George, authors for two of the October issue articles.

 Not All Nonlabelers Are Created Equal: Distinguishing Between Quasi-Feminists and Neoliberals | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:23:33

Past research regarding feminist identity has revealed that a significant number of women endorse feminist attitudes yet reject a feminist identity. In the current study, we sought to examine whether these nonlabeling women fall into two distinct groups: (a) one that falls on the same ideological continuum of their feminist peers and (b) the other that represents an attitudinally unique group of women characterized by their neoliberal beliefs that prioritize individual merit as the sole determinant of success. Two samples of undergraduate women self-reported their feminist identity and political and sexist attitudes. In our first sample (N = 231), we used k-means cluster analysis to identify two types of nonlabelers: quasi-feminists and neoliberals. Results revealed that, despite both groups’ shared belief in gender equality, quasi-feminists reported relatively lower levels of meritocratic, just world, and modern sexist beliefs, all of which were similar to those of their feminist-identified peers, whereas neoliberals indicated stronger meritocratic, just world, and modern sexist beliefs. In our second sample (N = 351), we replicated findings from our first sample and subsequently validated these groupings. Specifically, multivariate analysis of variance results demonstrated that, separate from the differences found in relation to the measures used for cluster analysis, quasi-feminists scored lower than neoliberals on measures of ambivalent sexism, social dominance, and equal opportunity beliefs. Women’s individual and collective welfare often hinges on their endorsement of neoliberal and feminist beliefs, especially in the face of unfair treatment. We suggest that activists and policy makers tailor strategies for engaging nonlabelers in the movement toward gender equality to the subtype of nonlabeler in question.

 Dancing the Body Beautiful | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:07:34

Using accounts from several professional Latin dancers augmented by the author's own experience, Julia A. Ericksen traces the ways bodily perfection has become an important part of dancers' identities. In addition, Ericksen argues that this is a more extreme form of general cultural pressure to engage in bodywork.

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