Author Archives: admin

Notebook Series – 14

I have always been overly keen to begin new writing projects, be they books, chapters, papers, blogs or, nowadays, poems (have you acquired a copy of my Rhythmic Musings yet – proceeds to Medecins Sans Frontieres?). Well, at the moment I’m sitting in a local café in Dorking, having just completed a draft chapter on… Read More »

Social Class in Europe

In their Social Class in Europe Hugree, Penissat and Spire have performed a useful service. They are fully cognisant – and open – about the methodological (and consequent theoretical) difficulties of measurement across very different European countries. They used the European Socio-Economic Groups (ESEG) classification and ended up with a breakdown into three main social… Read More »

A Sociological Autobiography: 103 – Sociological Knowledge and Experiential Knowledge

I have reflected before on my personal background. Briefly, I was born to parents whose middle-class lives had been disrupted by the WW2. My father had been in line for promotion to the board of a company specialising in German shipping. After a brief period in Hamburg helping wrap up what little was left of… Read More »

A Time for Anger: Sociology and the NHS

There are times when it is appropriate, even necessary, to be angry and to shout out. I’m presently in a local café trying hard to restrain myself. I have two immediate sources of irritation (and many more lurking around). These are: (1) the reviewers’ reasons for calling for a second set of revisions to our… Read More »

Growing Wealth Inequality During COVID

A new report from the Resolution Foundation tells of a widening of the wealth gap in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic. The short summary that follows is indebted to Larry Elliot’s summary on 12 June in the Guardian. In terms of wealth, the richest 10% of the population have gained £50,000 on average, dwarfing… Read More »

Sociological Theorists: Harold Garfinkel

I recall in particular here two sessions of the British Sociological Association, I think in the mid-1970s. The first was at Surrey University and involved a group of ethnomethodologists from Goldsmiths College in London who had pre-circulated the text of a book on ethnomethodology they’d just written and, when presenting to an audience of 100+,… Read More »

Social Structure and Health Equity

I have repeatedly called for academics interested in the social determinants of disease, and most particularly sociologists, to go beyond: (1) merely re-affirming the existence of health inequalities; (2) emphasising the salience of structural factors like class, gender and race; and (3) commending social and health policy reform that is simply not going to happen… Read More »

Muckraking Sociology, the NHS & COVID

We have written a paper on the salience of ‘muckraking sociology’ in the era of COVID which has (1) been rejected by a mainstream sociology journal, in part because it apparently doesn’t publish ‘polemical pieces’, and (2) returned to us with a request for a second set of revisions by a specialist health sociology journal,… Read More »

Sociology and ‘Systematically Distorted Communication’

Today my co-authors and I have withdrawn a manuscript under consideration in a well-regarded international journal. We were invited to make a second set of revisions to a paper on ‘muckraking sociology, the NHS and COVID’, but felt that to agree to yet more revisions/compromises would be a step too far, not least in a… Read More »

A Sociological Autobiography: 102 – The h-index and the i10-index!

As someone who retired eight years ago I have been managing the transition to the complete lack of relevance of my CV. Ok, I still publish stuff and I keep an updated note on my website of my publications (www.grahamscambler.com), but I appreciate that these are no longer a matter of institutional significance or consequence.… Read More »