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The rites of jazz institutions: Uncertainty and valuation in music auditions
In: American journal of cultural sociology: AJCS, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 266-276
ISSN: 2049-7121
Mastering the jazz standard: Sayings and doings of artistic valuation
In: American journal of cultural sociology: AJCS, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 66-96
ISSN: 2049-7121
The transnational track : State sponsorship and Singapore's Oxbridge elite
This paper explores the process of transnational institutional matching between elite institutions in Singapore and Great Britain, and the role of state-sponsored scholarships in enabling this process as political and administrative elites are selected and groomed. Using data gathered from in-depth interviews conducted with Singaporean undergraduates study- ing at Oxbridge and a dataset of the institutional origins of 580 Singap- orean government scholars, the analysis illustrates how students are being matched from two Singaporean junior colleges to Oxbridge and back to the higher strata of the Singaporean Public Service. We show that the educational trajectories of these government scholars need to be addressed in relation to the informational capital acquired in specific elite schools as well as the governing roles these individuals are meant to obtain within the state upon graduation.
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The transnational track: state sponsorship and Singapore's Oxbridge elite
In: British journal of sociology of education, Band 36, Heft 1, S. 11-33
ISSN: 1465-3346
Export- och import-handbok
In: (Sveriges Allmänna Exportförening. Handböcker Nr 2)
Exploring the themes of the territory : a topic modelling approach to 40 years of publications in International Journal of Lifelong Education (1982-2021)
The question of what the research of lifelong education is all about needs to be revisited from time to time. Not only is this line of research approached from a multitude of academic disciplines - such as sociology, psychology or philosophy - the very concepts that are used to denote the field also undergo important changes over time, e.g. from lifelong education to lifelong learning. In this contribution, we will explore this rather elusive research territory using a large-scale text analysis of a specific scientific journal, International Journal of Lifelong Education, based on meta-data (abstracts, keywords and titles) from 1,185 articles published between 1982 to 2021. Based on topic modelling techniques, we identify the main themes that have been prevalent within the journal, and how the journals content has changed character over time. We end the paper with a more critical examination of what kind of political and scientific currents might help explain what has led research practices to be more descriptive, micro-oriented and work-related over time.
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