BAXTER, JH, BOREHAM, PR, CLEGG, SR, EMMISON, JM, GIBSON, DM, MARKS, GN, WESTERN, JS & WESTERN, MC 1989, 'THE AUSTRALIAN CLASS-STRUCTURE - SOME PRELIMINARY-RESULTS FROM THE AUSTRALIAN CLASS PROJECT', AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 100-120.
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This paper describes the class structure of the Australian workforce in terms of the theoretical approaches developed by Erik Olin Wright. The two class profiles presented and discussed are Wright's contradictory class location schema and his second schema based on the exploitation of assets. The distributions of class according to occupational group, gender and age are also discussed
BOREHAM, PR, CLEGG, SR, EMMISON, JM, MARKS, GN & WESTERN, JS 1989, 'SEMI-PERIPHERIES OR PARTICULAR PATHWAYS - THE CASE OF AUSTRALIA, NEW-ZEALAND AND CANADA AS CLASS FORMATIONS', INTERNATIONAL SOCIOLOGY, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 67-90.
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Chua, W & Clegg, S 1989, 'CONTRADICTORY COUPLINGS: PROFESSIONAL IDEOLOGY IN THE ORGANIZATIONAL LOCALES OF NURSE TRAINING', Journal of Management Studies, vol. 26, no. 2, pp. 103-127.
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ABSTRACTNursing is a contemporary occupation which has developed an explicit ‘professional project’. In the UK this has centred around an occupational ideology which stresses managerialism and credentialism. This occupational ideology comes into contradiction with older conceptions of professionalism which are couched in vocational terms. The vocational meaning is shown to be situated and reproduced in organizational locales which serve to undercut the managerialist and credentialist meanings. The focus of these cross‐cutting meanings is the interpretation of a ‘good nurse’. Using a ‘negotiated order’ perspective, focusing on ‘contradictions’, case study material suggests that there are important gaps between formal representations of the professionalism project and the actual, situated practice of ‘nursing’. For trainee nurses these gaps are particularly apparent. In day‐to‐day organizational life they have to negotiate contradictory conceptions encountered in the diverse locales of ward work and nurse training. In addition, the different meanings may be encountered even in the same locales.
Clegg, S 1989, 'Book Reviews', Theory, Culture & Society, vol. 6, no. 3, pp. 487-489.
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CLEGG, SR 1989, 'RADICAL REVISIONS - POWER, DISCIPLINE AND ORGANIZATIONS', ORGANIZATION STUDIES, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 97-115.
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Clegg, SR & Higgins, W 1989, 'Better Expert than Orthodox: Reply to Shenkar', Organization Studies, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 253-258.
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Clegg, SR, Lash, S & Urry, J 1989, 'The End of Organized Capitalism.', Contemporary Sociology, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 48-48.
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MOORE, JB, PALMER, G, MACDONALD, D, DEERY, S, HARMAN, EJ, CLEGG, S, ZEFFANE, R, DEDOUSSIS, V, BENSON, J, NYLAND, C, PATMORE, G, COLLINS, J & MACONACHIE, G 1989, 'BOOK REVIEWS', Labour & Industry: a journal of the social and economic relations of work, vol. 2, no. 3, pp. 529-551.
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Veal, AJ 1989, 'Leisure, lifestyle and status: a pluralist framework for analysis', Leisure Studies, vol. 8, no. 2, pp. 141-153.
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In contrast to the Marxist view of society and leisure, with its basis of class division and conflict, analyses of leisure based on the pluralist defence of the liberal democratic market system seem to lack both a satisfactory classificatory system of society and an adequate sociological explanation of the dynamic forces shaping leisure and society. This leads in turn to an inadequate agenda for the study of leisure in its wider social context. This paper suggests that Weber’s concepts of status, status groups and lifestyle offer a way forward for pluralist analysis. It examines how research on ‘status politics’, or the ‘politics of lifestyle concern’, and existing research on lifestyle might be incorporated into such an approach. © 1989 E. and F.N. Spon Ltd.
Veal, AJ 1989, 'Lifestyle, leisure and pluralism — a response', Leisure Studies, vol. 8, no. 3, pp. 213-218.
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It is flattering and somewhat daunting to find that my paper ‘Leisure, lifestyle and status - a pluralist framework for analysis’ (Leisure Studies, 8, 2, 1989) was of sufficient interest to have attracted comment from Chas Critcher, Sheila Scraton and Margaret Talbot and that the editors have seen fit to publish those comments. I welcome the comments and have found them stimulating and helpful in developing my own views. I am grateful for the opportunity to reply.© 1989 E. and F.N. Spon Ltd.
Veal, AJ 1989, 'THE DOUBTFUL CONTRIBUTION OF ECONOMICS TO LEISURE MANAGEMENT: ANALYSIS OF A PARADOX', Loisir et Société / Society and Leisure, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 147-155.
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Economies is widely seen as the senior social science discipline and as a key ingredient in management training. Leisure and tourism have become significant components of developed market economies, accounting for between 20 and 30 per cent of consumer expenditure. Economics should therefore be an important discipline in the study of leisure and tourism. While macro-economic theory has been widely applied in the leisure and tourism field through economic impact studies and the tourism multiplier, micro-economic applications have been almost entirely concerned with non-market, public sector leisure phenomena or quasi-market phenomena such as professional team sports. The paper raises the question as to why so few examples exist of the application of micro-economics to leisure markets. © Presses de l’ Université du Québec.