|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This book is about the surprisingly neglected area of the
regulation of sex. It describes and discusses the ways in which
various sexual activities are controlled, regulated and made
illegal and/or deviant and illicit. Its primary focus is upon the
multiple and complex social controls (laws, statutory regulations,
professional/occupational codes, normative frameworks)
constructing, constituting and shaping how we 'do' sex, and deals
with sex that is both illicit (deviant, illegal) and illegal
(criminal, offending). The book challenges the idea that early
twenty-first century Britain is increasingly sexually 'liberated'
by suggesting that this very 'openness' provides the conditions in
which all sexual activities have become increasingly subject to
regulation and control. By examining the policies and laws about
various sexually activities, and the social conditions underpinning
them, alongside existing research and theoretical literature the
authors have provided an accessible text on the sociology of sex.
This book is about the surprisingly neglected area of the
regulation of sex. It describes and discusses the ways in which
various sexual activities are controlled, regulated and made
illegal and/or deviant and illicit. Its primary focus is upon the
multiple and complex social controls (laws, statutory regulations,
professional/occupational codes, normative frameworks)
constructing, constituting and shaping how we 'do' sex, and deals
with sex that is both illicit (deviant, illegal) and illegal
(criminal, offending). The book challenges the idea that early
twenty-first century Britain is increasingly sexually 'liberated'
by suggesting that this very 'openness' provides the conditions in
which all sexual activities have become increasingly subject to
regulation and control. By examining the policies and laws about
various sexually activities, and the social conditions underpinning
them, alongside existing research and theoretical literature the
authors have provided an accessible text on the sociology of sex.
Since the early 1980s there has been a surge of interest in both
issues of gender and sexuality in work and organizational life, and
in the founding and running of co-operatives and collectives. Since
hierarchy rests on divisions which are in part gendered and
sexualized, and co-operatives (for the most part) operate with
"flat" or non-hierarchical structures, they could be seen as places
where gender and sexuality make little difference to the
experiences of workers. This text takes issue with the assumption
that where there is an absence of formal hierarchy in work and
organizational life, there is likely to be an absence of gender
inequalities. It argues that the matter is more complex than the
simple equating of less hierarchy with greater gender equality.
Contents: Frameworks for conceptualizing "flat" organizations; patterns of gendered employment; organizational sexuality - gendered material and ideological restraints; gendered entry into co-operatives and collectives; marginalization of co-operatives and collectives by gender and sexuality; gendered benefits and challenges.
|
|