Graduate Journal of Social Science GJSS - Graduate Journal of Social Science, published by EBSCO Publishing, twice a year, in June and December. http://gjss.org/index.php 2012-05-18T00:38:41Z Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management Volume 9:1, March 2012: Critical Whiteness Studies - Methodologies 2012-04-01T08:55:09Z 2012-04-01T08:55:09Z http://gjss.org/index.php?/Volume-91-March-2012-Critical-Whiteness-Studies-Methodologies.html editor admin@gjss.org <p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://gjss.org/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=118:volume-91-march-2012-critical-whiteness-studies-methodologies&amp;catid=71:current-issue&amp;Itemid=77"><img style="width: 470px; height: 608px; border: 1px solid #ababa1;" src="http://gjss.org/images/stories/volumes/9/1/cover%209.1.jpg" alt="cover 9.1" width="470" height="608" /></a></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://gjss.org/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=118:volume-91-march-2012-critical-whiteness-studies-methodologies&amp;catid=71:current-issue&amp;Itemid=77"><img style="width: 470px; height: 608px; border: 1px solid #ababa1;" src="http://gjss.org/images/stories/volumes/9/1/cover%209.1.jpg" alt="cover 9.1" width="470" height="608" /></a></p> Sexuality in Focus 2011-10-19T06:32:37Z 2011-10-19T06:32:37Z http://gjss.org/index.php?/Sexuality-in-Focus.html editor admin@gjss.org <p> The Graduate Journal of Social Sciences (GJSS) invites papers for its December 2012 special edition on <strong>Sexuality in Focus</strong>. This issue is inspired by the Network of Interdisciplinary Women&rsquo;s Studies in Europe (NOISE) 2011 Summer School, which was hosted by the University of Utrecht (the Netherlands). This year&rsquo;s theme was &lsquo;The Miraculous (dis)appearing Act of Sexuality: Mapping the Study of Sexuality in Europe, 1960-2010&rsquo;. Central to this summer school was the exploration of what has appeared in discourses of&nbsp;sexualities&nbsp;and what has been missing. The special issue aims to further explore this complex and multifaceted subject.</p> <p> The Graduate Journal of Social Sciences (GJSS) invites papers for its December 2012 special edition on <strong>Sexuality in Focus</strong>. This issue is inspired by the Network of Interdisciplinary Women&rsquo;s Studies in Europe (NOISE) 2011 Summer School, which was hosted by the University of Utrecht (the Netherlands). This year&rsquo;s theme was &lsquo;The Miraculous (dis)appearing Act of Sexuality: Mapping the Study of Sexuality in Europe, 1960-2010&rsquo;. Central to this summer school was the exploration of what has appeared in discourses of&nbsp;sexualities&nbsp;and what has been missing. The special issue aims to further explore this complex and multifaceted subject.</p> Theorising Futurities in the Social Sciences 2011-10-19T06:20:01Z 2011-10-19T06:20:01Z http://gjss.org/index.php?/Theorising-Futurities-in-the-Social-Sciences.html editor admin@gjss.org <p>In times of crisis and social change, the question of the future can become increasingly pressing. Amidst the threat of continued economic recession, extensive budget cuts, and the growing intrusion of government into the sphere of academic research, it is understandable that the future has become shrouded in discussions of impending catastrophe and the indisputable sensation that things can only be getting worse. This edition explores this by asking how the future is being represented and played out in the contemporary social world. It asks how we, as social scientists,&nbsp;theorise&nbsp;futures in times of apparent social crisis and change, and asks how these dynamics may affect our methodological and epistemological approaches. Must we always strive for ‘positive’ futures? And what could come out of a social science driven by ‘negativity’?</p> <p>In times of crisis and social change, the question of the future can become increasingly pressing. Amidst the threat of continued economic recession, extensive budget cuts, and the growing intrusion of government into the sphere of academic research, it is understandable that the future has become shrouded in discussions of impending catastrophe and the indisputable sensation that things can only be getting worse. This edition explores this by asking how the future is being represented and played out in the contemporary social world. It asks how we, as social scientists,&nbsp;theorise&nbsp;futures in times of apparent social crisis and change, and asks how these dynamics may affect our methodological and epistemological approaches. Must we always strive for ‘positive’ futures? And what could come out of a social science driven by ‘negativity’?</p>