Now showing items 1-5 of 5

    • Ambivalence and Acquiescence: Gender and the Cosmopolitan Class in Cairo 

      NAGI, MARIAM HESHAM (Trinity College Dublin. School of Social Sciences & Philosophy. Discipline of Sociology, 2019)
      Socioeconomic and demographic transformations have led to the decreased occurrence of marriage, chipped at the link between sexuality and marriage, and increased the liminal period of ‘waithood’ in Egypt. However, there ...
    • Kinship, neighbourhood and social change in Irish rural communities 

      Hannan, D (Economic & Social StudiesDUBLIN, 1972)
      Rural communities in the West of Ireland, even in the most remote, and most traditional areas have experienced immense social organisational and cultural changes during the past twenty years. Indeed, in many respects, these ...
    • A long and winding road: The hard graft of scaling social change in complex systems 

      Donnelly Cox, Gemma (2024)
      Advice abounds on how to implement large-scale social change, much of which emphasizes a simplistic linear process, led by a heroic central actor. Rigorous case studies have shown that social change is far more complex: ...
    • Settlement Patterns and Socio-Economic Change in the Diocese of Tuam c.AD 400–1000 

      Tighe, John (Trinity College Dublin. School of Histories & Humanities. Discipline of History, 2021)
      This thesis explores the inter-relationship between settlement patterns and socio-economic change during the early medieval period in the Diocese of Tuam. A thematic approach is taken, exploring the physical settlement ...
    • What the Pandemic Means: Perspectives from the Trinity Long Room Hub Covid-19 Blog Collection 

      Erickson, Jacob; Lyons, Donna; Grile, Courtney Helen; Devitt, Ann; Slote, Samuel; Patten, Eve; Payne, Elspeth; Ahmed, Sahar; Hendley Rooney, Daryl; Leeson, Lorraine (Trinity Long Room Hub Arts and Humanities Research Institute, 2021)
      In the spring of 2020, when the pandemic hit our shores, we were told to stay home. We listened to public health advice and to experts debating the measures required to protect us. Scientific terminology crept into our ...