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Multiple affiliations: autobiographical narratives of displacement by (im)migrant US women
In: Skrifter från moderna språk 2
Towards a language of sexual gray zones: feminist collective knowledge building through autobiographical multimedia storytelling
In: Feminist media studies, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 210-224
ISSN: 1471-5902
Self-Placement in the Social Structure of Sweden: The Relationship between Class Identification and Subjective Social Placement
In: Critical sociology, Band 43, Heft 7-8, S. 1045-1061
ISSN: 1569-1632
The aim of this study is to evaluate the relationship between the two assessments of subjective placement in the social structure – class identification and subjective social placement – in a top-to-bottom social hierarchy. In this article, the focus is on the association between working-class identity and subjective social placement. The source material is derived from the International Social Survey Programme from 2009 and 2012. The analysis reveals that women who identified with the working class to a higher extent located themselves towards the lower strata compared to their male counterparts, a result indicating that the female class structure may be more polarized than that of males. The results imply a need for more research concerning how women and men relate their objective class position to social status, as well as the relationship to different outcomes, such as subjective well-being and social justice.
Desperately Seeking Sameness: The processes and pleasures of identification in women's diary blog reading
In: Feminist media studies, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 137-153
ISSN: 1471-5902
Today's Girl, Tomorrow's Woman
In: Development: journal of the Society for International Development (SID), Band 44, Heft 2, S. 63-68
ISSN: 1461-7072
Today's Girl, Tomorrow's Woman
In: Development: the journal of the Society of International Development, Band 44, Heft 2, S. 63-68
ISSN: 0020-6555, 1011-6370
Rape narratives in motion
In: Palgrave studies in crime, media and culture
Socioeconomic disparities in climate vulnerability: neonatal mortality in northern Sweden, 1880–1950
In: Population and environment: a journal of interdisciplinary studies, Band 43, Heft 2, S. 149-180
ISSN: 1573-7810
AbstractThe aim of this study was to analyse the association between season of birth, temperature and neonatal mortality according to socioeconomic status in northern Sweden from 1880 to 1950. The source material for this study comprised digitised parish records combined with local weather data. The association between temperature, seasonality, socioeconomic status and neonatal mortality was modelled using survival analysis. We can summarise our findings according to three time periods. During the first period (1880–1899), temperature and seasonality had the greatest association with high neonatal mortality, and the socioeconomic differences in vulnerability were small. The second period (1900–1929) was associated with a decline in seasonal and temperature-related vulnerabilities among all socioeconomic groups. For the last period (1930–1950), a new regime evolved with rapidly declining neonatal mortality rates involving class-specific temperature vulnerabilities, and there was a particular effect of high temperature among workers. We conclude that the effect of season of birth on neonatal mortality was declining for all socioeconomic groups (1880–1950), whereas weather vulnerability was pronounced either when the socioeconomic disparities in neonatal mortality were large (1880–1899) or during transformations from high to low neonatal rates in the course of industrialisation and urbanisation.