Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/63832
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dc.creatorThompson, P., University of Essex, Department of Sociologyen
dc.date2011-08-31T08:13:59Zen
dc.identifier6226-
dc.identifier10.5255/UKDA-SN-6226-6-
dc.identifierhttp://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-6226-6-
dc.identifier.urihttps://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/63832*
dc.description<P>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</P>en
dc.description<p>This is a qualitative data collection. The Pioneers of Social Research collection includes the full interview transcripts, interview summaries, edited thematic highlights, short biographies and links to audio extracts from detailed life story interviews conducted with some fifty pioneers of social research.</p> <p>Undertaken by pioneering oral historian, Paul Thompson and his colleagues, over a 20 year period (1996-2018) the interviews record the researcher’s own account of the influences which shaped the major phases of their research work, and how the research was carried out, including the problems encountered. The interviews begin with family background and education, in order to understand the key influences that originally shaped the researcher’s interests, and also include some brief account of later family life, but the focus is primarily on understanding the research work.</p> <p>Because of their detail, these interviews are long, in Peter Townsend’s case extending to some twenty hours of recording. The material provides a valuable insight into their lives and careers and the trajectory of social research in some key disciplines in the social sciences.</p> <p>Those recorded include:</p> <ul><li>Frank Bechhofer on researching <em>The Affluent Worker</em>, the petite bourgeoisie and identity on the Anglo-Scottish border</li><li>Colin Bell on middle class families in Wales, the second Banbury community study and East Anglian farmers</li><li>Daniel Bertaux on life stories in France and social mobility in France and UK</li><li>Mildred Blaxter on Scottish women and health</li><li>George Brown and Tirril Harris on the social origins of depression among London women</li><li>Sir David Butler on quantitative and qualitative sources in the media in politics</li><li>John Bynner on youth cultures and on longitudinal studies</li><li>Pat Caplan on community and gender in Nepal, Madras and Tanzania</li><li>Stan Cohen on moral panics, teenage culture, prisons and working for peace in Israel</li><li>Leonore Davidoff on feminism, gender, work and the family</li><li>John Davis on community and land in rural southern Italy</li><li>Glen Elder on methods and interpretation of American community studies</li><li>Janet Finch on qualitative and mixed methods, families and inheritance</li><li>Ruth Finnegan on oral tradition in Sierra Leone and musical culture in Britain</li><li>Ronald Frankenberg on community study in Wales</li><li>Sir Raymond Firth on community, family and work in the Pacific, Malaya and in Britain</li><li>John Goldthorpe , Daniel Bertaux and Paul Thompson on class, gender and social mobility</li><li>Sir Jack Goody, Mary Douglas, Ruth Finnegan, Bruce Kapferer and Sandra Wallman on kinship and anthropological theory in Africa</li><li>Sir Jack Goody on oral tradition in Ghana, the Church and the family in Europe, and the social cultures of food and flowers in Africa, North America and Asia</li><li>Harry Goulbourne, Stuart Hall and Raymond Smith on community, family, migration and race in the Caribbean</li><li>Harry Goulbourne on transnational families</li><li>Sir Peter Hall on urbanism, planning and the culture of cities</li><li>Stuart Hall on New Left culture in the 1950s-60s, the development of Cultural Studies, and the impact of feminism on academic and personal lives</li><li>David Hargreaves on the sociology of education, school cultures and training doctors</li><li>Bruce Kapferer on industrialisation and the family in Zambia and network theory</li><li>Diana Leonard on the feminist revival in Britain</li><li>David Lockwood on working class culture and social class</li><li>Peter Loizos on exile from a Greek community in Cyprus</li><li>Robert Moore on researching class and race in Birmingham, mining communities in northern England and a Scottish fishing port</li><li>Howard Newby on deferential farm workers and farmers in East Anglia</li><li>Ann Oakley on gender, housework and motherhood and on evidence-based research</li><li>Ray Pahl on urban sociology, gender in business families, community studies, and friendship</li><li>Judith Okely on researching marginal groups including gypsies</li><li>Margaret Stacey on the Banbury community studies and on feminism within sociology</li><li>Marilyn Strathern on her secondary study of family and community in an East Anglian village</li><li>Paul Thompson on oral history, family and the economy in fishing communities, grandparenting and social mobility</li><li>Peter Townsend on East London families, old people’s homes in England, poverty, and social policy in Britain, and social policies for Georgia and Kenya</li><li>Sandra Wallman on families in Lesotho, women and AIDS in Kampala, community and migration in London and London households</li><li>Meg Stacey and Colin Bell on urban community studies</li><li>Michael Young, Janet Finch and Colin Bell on family, kinship and community</li></ul> <p>The data collection results from three grants since 2009; the first from the University of Essex, and the second two from The British Academy and the Leverhulme Trust respectively. The second phase added a further 12 Pioneers including more accounts from women researchers, anthropologists and on linked social research in cultural studies and social geography. The third set added in prominent quantitative researchers, statisticians and economists.</p> <p>The archived collection includes interviews with 56 pioneers, set out in the Data List in the documentation. All interviews are fully transcribed and summarised, and key text extracts and audio clips, selected by Paul Thompson, have been published. As well as being available to download, from the Data Catalogue, a selection of the interviews have been published to UK Data Service’s online data browsing system, Qualibank, where the content can be explored. Audio extracts can be listened to on the UK Data Service's <a href="https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmK1mj5dCq0XuCWI7DVKx2w/playlists?disable_polymer=1">YouTube Pioneers channel</a> where each Pioneer has its own playlist.<br> <br> Finally, the UK Data Service has also created the <a href="http://ukdataservice.ac.uk/teaching-resources/pioneers.aspx">Pioneers Teaching Resource</a> website to showcase the Pioneers interviews, and includes further information about the Pioneers project, and for each Pioneer, a short biography, a list of publications, and links to any data they have themselves deposited.&nbsp;A book from the Pioneers collection combining extracts and discussion of the material will be published by Thompson and colleagues from the University of Essex in 2020.</p> <p><br> Some of the Pioneers were also video interviewed earlier as part of the Leading Thinkers project, hosted by the <a href="http://sms.cam.ac.uk/">University of Cambridge Video and Audio service</a>. The collection also holds video interviews with a range of pioneering anthropologists, historians, ethno-musicologists, international travellers, amongst others.&nbsp;</p> <p>The further 13 pioneers that have been interviewed between 2016-18 will be available in the next edition</p> <ul><li>Mark Abrams on his innovative work implementing new techniques in statistical surveying and opinion polling.</li><li>Avtar Brah on Asians in Uganda and Britain</li><li>Sir David Cox, Lord Claus Moser, John Goldthorpe, Sarah Arber, Harvey Goldstein, Jonathan Gershuny and Dame Karen Dunnell on survey and statistical methods</li><li>Sir Ivor Crewe on the development of quantitative methods in political research, and of archiving social research</li><li>Meghnad Desai economic theory, fieldwork and interpreting class power in rural India</li><li>Duncan Gallie on economic sociology, work and unemployment in France and Britain</li><li>Richard Lipsey on his theory of <em>Positive Economics</em>, and practical applications in Canada</li><li>Maxine Molyneux on colonial society in India and in Latin America, on the position of women in socialist Yemen and Ethiopia and on women in Latin America</li><li>Ken Plummer on researching sexuality and on qualitative methods</li><li>Hilary Rose on researching marginal groups including squatters and the unemployed</li><li>Elizabeth Thomas-Hope on community, family, migration and race in the Caribbean</li><li>W.M. Williams on rural community studies</li></ul>en
dc.description<B>Main Topics</B>:<BR>en
dc.descriptionThe interviews offer an insight into the research pioneers' backgrounds, their motivations for undertaking particular pieces of research and some useful observations about the study of sociology in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. <br> <br> Topics covered include family, social background, intellectual and career development and key influences. Detailed accounts of the major research projects associated with that researcher are also included.<br>en
dc.languageen-
dc.rightsCopyright held jointly between British Library and P. Thompsonen
dc.subjectSOCIAL RESEARCHen
dc.subjectCHILDHOODen
dc.subjectINTERPERSONAL INFLUENCEen
dc.subjectSOCIOLOGYen
dc.subjectSOCIAL HISTORYen
dc.subjectETHNOGRAPHYen
dc.subjectANTHROPOLOGYen
dc.subjectRESEARCHen
dc.subjectORGANIZATION OF RESEARCHen
dc.subjectCHANGING SOCIETYen
dc.subjectSOCIAL INEQUALITYen
dc.subjectFAMILY LIFEen
dc.subjectGENDERen
dc.subjectCAREER DEVELOPMENTen
dc.subjectEDUCATIONen
dc.subjectSOCIAL STRUCTUREen
dc.subjectSOCIAL STRATIFICATIONen
dc.subjectSOCIAL MOBILITYen
dc.subjectELITEen
dc.subjectMETHODOLOGYen
dc.subjectDATA ANALYSISen
dc.subjectCONTENT ANALYSISen
dc.subjectDATA COLLECTION METHODOLOGYen
dc.subjectINTERVIEWS (DATA COLLECTION)en
dc.subjectOBSERVATION (DATA COLLECTION)en
dc.subjectMOTHERSen
dc.subjectWOMEN'S ROLEen
dc.subjectWOMEN'S MOVEMENTen
dc.subjectFAMILY INFLUENCEen
dc.subjectSOCIAL CLASSen
dc.subjectMIDDLE CLASSen
dc.subjectWORKING CLASSen
dc.subjectONE-PARENT FAMILIESen
dc.subjectELDERLYen
dc.subjectSAMPLING PROCEDURESen
dc.subjectSTEPCHILDRENen
dc.subjectINTERPERSONAL RELATIONSen
dc.subjectCONSCRIPTIONen
dc.subjectDIVORCEen
dc.subjectEDITORSen
dc.subjectFIELD WORKen
dc.subjectRESEARCH WORKERSen
dc.subjectRESEARCH PUBLICATIONSen
dc.subjectORAL HISTORYen
dc.subjectLIFE HISTORIESen
dc.subjectFINANCINGen
dc.subjectFAMILY MEMBERSen
dc.subjectHOBBIESen
dc.subjectLECTURESen
dc.subjectLEISURE TIME ACTIVITIESen
dc.subjectMARRIAGEen
dc.subjectMARITAL HISTORYen
dc.subjectROLE MODELSen
dc.subjectSCIENTIFIC INNOVATIONen
dc.subjectPOLITICAL ISSUESen
dc.subjectPOLITICAL INTERESTen
dc.subject1996-2012en
dc.subjectUnited Kingdomen
dc.titlePioneers of Social Research, 1996-2018en
dc.typeDataseten
dc.coverageUnited Kingdomen
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