Power, Place and Difference
Research within Political Sociology spans citizenship, politics, policies, and state dynamics through relational analyses and a focus on power differentials. For instance,the programme group examines how global power inequalities manifest in local urban neighborhoods and explore gendered aspects of class-based politics. By employing diverse interpretative and analytical methodologies, rigorous empirical research aimed at understanding contemporary societal issues is conducted.
The research goal is to enhance theoretically informed, comparative research while actively engaging with publics, including social movements, businesses, civil society, governments, and students, thereby bridging academic and real-world applications.
Confronting Obesity: Co-creating policy with youth (CO-CREATE) works with adolescents to create, inform and disseminate policies to tackle obesity among their peers.
The project uses a societal systems approach to understand how factors associated with obesity interact at various levels. The project focuses on adolescence as a crucial age-group with increasing autonomy and soon to be the next generation of adults, parents and policymakers, and thus important agents for change.
CO-CREATE aims to involve and empower adolescents and youth organizations to foster a participatory process of identifying and formulating relevant policies, assessing the options with other private and public actors, promoting relevant policy actions and developing tools and strategies for implementation.
CO-CREATE partner organisations include university research departments, national public health institutions and a number of civil society organisations concerned with health policies and youth well-being. The project builds on existing initiatives and platforms, and constructs new opportunities for youth engagement in the issue and youth participation in democratic moves for advocacy and policy change.
Funded by EU Horizon 2020. Food Security – Resilient and resource-efficient value chains.
EnGendering Europe’s Muslim Question proposes a new way of thinking about Muslims and Islam in Western Europe. Two deliberate theoretical and methodological strategies are used to this achieve this objective.
First, by shifting the analytical and methodological focus from ‘the Muslim other’ to the ‘European self’. Second, by centering the analysis in gender and sexuality.
The project combines elaborate conceptual work with an ‘ethnography of a problematization’ (adapting Bowen’s ‘anthropology of public reasoning’) focused on studying public debates and more precisely key texts in the realms of policy-making and public debate, as well as interviews with key figures. The empirical inquiry focuses on three topics: gender segregation, violence against women, and toleration of homosexuality. The empirical study is focused on the Netherlands, with contrasting case-studies from France, Germany, and Belgium.
Funded by NWO VICI
The research follows the preparation and implementation of policy on the de-institutionalizing and decentralizing of responsibilities for Homelessness and Mental Health, in order to learn together on the basis of experience gathered from the start, and to reflect on it and take action. Maximum participation means actively taking into account the say and perspective of the clients as end users as well as professional perspectives during this transition.
The research provides municipalities with administrative advice and explanations from different perspectives, stressing the client perspective. Amongst others, social support actors, policymakers, housing associations, mental health care (GGZ) and the police are being interviewed annually. During recurring interactive meetings (and webinars), municipalities are informed about their interim results. The study has a running time of five years and can count on the support of municipalities, suppliers, insurers and clients. Find our Dutch reports and video’s on our website (includes an English section).
One of the ways in which our knowledge about the local practices concerning de-institutionalisation and decentralisation of homelessness (social relief) and mental health (sheltered housing) is shared is by means of our executive programmes for Dutch policy professionals in social welfare and sheltered housing. During multiple sessions Dr Nienke Boesveldt and Ir Michel van Hees (process manager for Dutch municipalities and health organisations) share academic findings and local best practices.
This VENI project of Lana Sirri research aims to generate a nuanced theorisation of Muslim women’s agency. It focuses on the Gulf Cooperation Council countries—a neglected region in the Anglo-Saxon social sciences, and engages with previously ignored scholarship written in Arabic.
This aim will be achieved using three main strategies:
Using these strategies, Lana Sirri will dissect the complexity of Muslim women’s agency, and the diversity of strategies they employ to claim their ‘identities’ and transform gender relations.
The research consists of four objectives:
The research employs textual analysis, critical discourse analysis, and (digital and virtual) ethnography, involving qualitative interviews with female scholars and social (digital) activists as well as participant observation in physical and virtual settings. Scientifically, the research will advance social scientific understandings of agency, and in particular the fields of gender studies and feminist thought. Moreover, the amplification of women’s diverse experiences and marginalised Arabic scholarship promotes the decolonisation of knowledge production on women, gender and Islam.
On a societal level, the research holds great potential for empowering Muslim women by awakening an indigenous feminist heritage rooted in Islamic tradition.
Finally, the outputs of this research could help to inform policy recommendations that benefit Muslim newcomers to the EU by offering culturally sensitive „home-grown“ strategies for countering not only patriarchy but also religious extremism.
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