Personal Lives and Times: The Temporal Turn in Social Enquiry Bren Neale University of Leeds www.timescapes.leeds.ac.uk.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
the petrified forest... The Banking Concept of Education the contents, whether values or empirical dimensions of reality, tend in the process…to become.
Advertisements

Geography in the Revised Primary Curriculum
Family Life Course Transitions, Social Reproduction across the Generations, and Migration: Conceptual Approaches Catherine Locke, (School of International.
Qualitative Data Resources: Qualidata UKDA Libby Bishop ESDS Qualidata, University of Essex Timescapes, University of Leeds St Catherines College, Oxford.
The Young Lives Study: Researching Time and Processes of Change Bren Neale and Sarah Irwin Real Life Methods node of the National Centre for Research Methods,
What is Qualitative Longitudinal Research? Bren Neale School of Sociology & Social Policy University of Leeds.
ESRC Future Strategy for Resources and Methods Professor Ian Diamond Chief Executive ESRC.
Multi-Methods in Longitudinal Research Bren Neale and Janet Holland (University of Leeds, London South Bank University)
Year Two Year Three Year One Research methods teaching in the social sciences: An integrated approach to inquiry- based learning.
Transition Sue Heath, University of Southampton Session 31: Researching personal life and relationships.
What is Qualitative Longitudinal Research? Bren Neale University of Leeds Timescapes QL Initiative.
Telling the Story of Canada’s Children A Comprehensive Approach to Accountability National Children’s Alliance November 26, 2004.
PhD Success in Qualitative Research Sten Ludvigsen InterMedia University of Oslo.
DESIGNING A NEW CURRICULUM Mayfield Primary School Parents/carers September 2014.
An Intangible Dynamic: Exploring the role of parental expectations in motivating their children to climb up the social ladder Ke Cui Research Student School.
Life Transitions Career Decisions and the Workplace Changing Workplace and Psychological Contract Psychological Contract A relationship between employer.
Volunteering and ageing: Pathways into social inclusion in later life Jeni Warburton John Richards Chair of Rural Aged Care Research La Trobe University,
The Timescapes Study and Archive: A Resource for Secondary Use Bren Neale University of Leeds.
Curriculum Project Garred Kirk. EARL 1: Civics The student understands and applies knowledge of government, law, politics, and the nation’s fundamental.
Researching Complexity and Multi-Dimensionality NCRM Summer School 2005 Jennifer Mason Leeds Social Sciences Institute.
CRITICAL City-Regions as Intelligent Territories: Inclusion, Competitiveness and Learning.
1 Introduction to Social Analysis Semester 2 Week 2 Sociology and biography.
Studying a Child’s World :
Dimensions of Human Behavior: Person and Environment
Chapter 16 Narrative Research Gay, Mills, and Airasian
Chapter 17 Ethnographic Research Gay, Mills, and Airasian
Key Understandings for Learning and Teaching in the Early Years
Bringing Protective Factors to Life in the Child Welfare System New Hampshire.
The International Higher Education University Research Performance Forum April 2013 – Pan Pacific Orchard, Singapore Case Study – 2.00pm – 2.45pm.
ESDS Qualidata: Establishing and sustaining qualitative data archiving Libby Bishop ESDS Qualidata, University of Essex National University of Ireland-Maynooth.
 Examines the nature of culture and the diverse ways in which societies make meaning and are organized across time and space. Topics include cultural.
Li Wei UCL Institute of Education. Structure and Content  Rethinking ‘community language’ and ‘community language education’ in the global perspective.
Chapter VII: Gender and Development
B 203: Qualitative Research Techniques Interpretivism Symbolic Interaction Hermeneutics.
Deborah Nanschild October 2004 Librarians: An Endangered Species Case Study on an information ecology to understand organisations as knowledge ecologies.
Public Service or Active Citizenship Challenges and Opportunities Anne O’Reilly.
Advancing foresight methodology through networked conversations Ted Fuller Peter De Smedt Dale Rothman European Science Foundation COllaboration in Science.
Evolving Directions & Initiatives Secwepemc Nation Injury Surveillance & Prevention Program Mary McCullough Three Corners Health Services Society Williams.
Research Methods Festival University of Oxford 30 th June – 3 rd July 2008 The Timescapes ESRC Qualitative Longitudinal Study: Scaling Up Qualitative.
Studies of Asia and the Australian Curriculum Eastern Zone Catholic Principals network 14 February 2013.
Qualitative Research Design for the Librarian/Scholar Dr. Robert V. Labaree Head, The Von KleinSmid Library for International and Public Affairs International.
What is Qualitative Longitudinal Research? Bren Neale School of Sociology & Social Policy University of Leeds.
Programming the New Syllabuses (incorporating the Australian Curriculum)
Copyright © 2008 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey All rights reserved. John W. Creswell Educational Research: Planning,
1 Introduction to Social Analysis Week 1 Introduction.
Social Theory in Gerontology
Developing the theoretical and conceptual framework From R.E.Khan ( J199 lecture)
Transforming Patient Experience: The essential guide
Bren Neale University of Leeds Presentation for the Doctoral Progamme in Family Studies, University of Jyvaskyla October 2013.
Narrative Research Designs
Bren Neale University of Leeds SSP seminar presentation March 2013.
Carmen Coleman Center for Innovation in Education Next Generation Leadership Academy 23 July 2015.
Contextual Models of Process Professor Andrew M. Pettigrew FBA Dean School of Management University of Bath Tel: +44 (0)
MU Core Revision Proposal The Atom Visual Structure Please read information provided in each slide as well as the notes under each slide.
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN PERSPECTIVE. QUALITATIVE APPROACHES -Qualitative research is an interdisciplinary, transdisciplinary, and sometimes counterdisciplinary.
Secondary Analysis and Timescapes ‘The plan for the dataset created from the Timescapes projects and their affiliates is that it will live on as an accessible.
Scaling up of QLR: Methodological & Ethical Challenges
JEAN PAIGET "The principle goal of education in the schools should be creating men and women who are capable of doing new things, not simply repeating.
The Compassus Story March
DISCOURSES: CONVERSATIONS, NARRATIVES AND AUTOBIOGRAPHIES AS TEXTS
Whittlesea Youth Commitment / Hume Whittlesea LLEN City of Whittlesea.
Intro slide to all of these:
Year 12 – First year Sociology at a glance
Professor John Ratcliffe, Dr Ela Krawczyk, Dr Ruth Kelly
Personal Lives and Times: The Temporal Turn in Social Enquiry Bren Neale University of Leeds
Scaling up of QLR: Methodological & Ethical Challenges
Raising the bar Meeting Europe’s future challenges
Vision and philosophy Encompasses history, geography, religious education, business studies and social studies. Holistic, integrated and interdisciplinary.
Vision and philosophy Encompasses history, geography, religious education, business studies and social studies. Holistic, integrated and interdisciplinary.
B207A Big ideas in organizations
Presentation transcript:

Personal Lives and Times: The Temporal Turn in Social Enquiry Bren Neale University of Leeds

The Timescapes Study: Changing Relationships and Identities through the Life Course First major Qualitative Longitudinal (QLL) study to be funded in the UK, initially for five years. Scaling up of QLL research Enriches the Portfolio of Longitudinal research and resources in the UK. Creation of the Timescapes Archive, a national level dataset for sharing and re-use: research and archiving as integrated processes. Conducted by a consortium of researchers from 5 Universities

What is Timescapes About? Substantive topics: the dynamics of personal relationships and identities, family life, intimacy, friendship, inter-generational care and support. Empirical work: 7 projects that span the life course: two on young lives, three on mid life experiences and two on older lives. Life Course as a temporal construct, linking biological processes of ageing with the social processes of growing up, forming and transforming relationships, bearing and rearing children, growing older and dying

Producing Practical Knowledge Policy themes Intergenerational care and support Long term resourcing of families Issues of work-life balance, social support, social exclusion Implications for life chances, health and well being

Qualitative Longitudinal Methods Rich qualitative enquiry, conducted through and in relation to time Charts changes, continuity, endurance, transitions, turning points. Prospectively tracking people as their lives unfold, e.g. through particular policy landscapes that are themselves changing Retrospectively documenting their lives through the generation of life histories.

Key features: research/archiving Timescapes archive: rich resource linked to live study A continuous process of archiving: documenting the unfolding stories of peoples lives as the study progresses Specialist resource, thematically driven Dynamic: evolving, growing as study grows Based on principles of data sharing and re-use Core archive users affiliated to the study itself Archiving as a creative research output, a dissemination strategy, rather than a technical task at the end. Turning people into data in ways that preserves their vitality, their agency: multimedia data, situated ethics.

Authenticity of Personal Lives and Human Agency Personal Lives: the micro world of individual identities, practices, values, meanings, choices, world views Agency: the capacity to act, to interact, to influence the shape of ones life, the lives of others, and to impact on broader social structures. Qualitative Explorations: Ethnographic, Biographical, Narrative methods of enquiry to understand how and why questions about the textures of personal lives and the agency of individuals and groups

Understanding a life We can only recognise and understand a life when we understand not only what it has in common with other lives, but when we can grasp its individuality, the way in which a recognisable individual has made sense of, interpreted, adapted to or suffered his or her life circumstances. In short when we understand our subjects as persons like ourselves. (Chamberlayne and Rustin From Biography to Social Policy Sostris Working Paper, UEL 1999

The Temporal Turn in Sociology Conceptual, substantive and methodological engagement with time: making tangible the intangible Time as a focus of enquiry in its own right Time as –linear and cumulative and invariably moving forward: quantitative model of time as chronology, sequence, duration, interval –fluid, recursive, multi-dimensional, infinitely varied: qualitative model of time as a social construct

Temporal Understandings of the Life Course Life cycle: structured, pre-defined life stages: seen as benchmarks against which to measure development and behaviour (e.g. Piaget, Kohlberg (6 stages) Berthoud: 8 stages (2000:216, 230) Life course: the negotiation of a passage through an unpredictably changing environment (Harris 1987: 27-8) The life course does not simply unfold before and around us, rather we actively organise the flow, pattern and direction of experience…as we navigate the social terrain of everyday lives (Holstein and Gubrium 2000: 184)

Conceptualising Time Chronotopes (Timespace) Bakhtin (1981 [1938]): The intrinsic connectedness of temporal and spatial relationships. intersection of where and when as the key mechanism for grasping the significance and meaning of events Timescales (the pace of time) Lemke (2001): Ecological model of Time. We simultaneously inhabit many different timescales, from the microscopic functions of the cells in our bodies (where time moves at infinite speed) to the cosmic history of the universe e.g. the ice age (where time moves infinitely slowly or stand still) One can live for years, sometimes without living at all, and then all life comes crowding into one single hour (Oscar Wilde). Turning Points, Critical Moments, Defining Moments, Epiphanies (Denzin, Giddens)

Timescapes biographical, generational and historical time. How these timescapes intersect through the life course. We cant hope to understand society unless we have a prior understanding of the relationship between history and biography (C. Wright Mills)

Biographical Time An individual life that flows through the life span, from birth to death, shaped by and interacting with a multitude of personal, relational and historical events and circumstances Life Journeys (Chamberlayne and Rustin 1999) : If an individual moves from point A to B how did they get there, what was the journey like on the way? Were there diversions or hold ups along the way, was this journey a matter of choice, was the destination planned? We can explore the intersection of time and place, the direction and pace of change, the momentum of change: What moves individuals on? Turning Points, Critical Moments, Defining Moments, Epiphanies (Denzin, Giddens. Holland and Thompson) which may mark a significant change in an individual life. Epiphany: A sudden intuitive leap of understanding, especially through an ordinary but striking occurrence. Or how do individuals endure or sustain particular relationships or circumstances, how do they bide their time

Generational Time Individuals as part of an age or generational convoy, moving collectively through time, relating to the generation above (parents, grandparents, their contemporaries) and/or those below (children, grandchildren, their contemporaries). Micro-relational dimension of time, bound up with shifting structures of family and kinship. Age and, more broadly, generational categories (e.g. child, young person, older life, deep old age) are fluid and shifting as people cross generational boundaries, and as life course categories expand or contract. We have to account for changes in the shape of the life course itself: it is not only individuals who change but the categories that they inhabit (Hockey and James 2003; 57)

Historical Time How individuals locate themselves in different epochs and in relation to different external events, circumstances and environments, both locally and globally. External events include socio-economic conditions, and varied policy landscapes, which intersect with critical moments for individuals Links also between historical time, industrial time and seasonal time – how we mark the passage of our lives through clocks and the seasons (Adam, Haraven).

Past and Present People have a personal past, situated present. The past as a subjective resource: heritage, memories, past relationships are used in the ongoing construction of social identities and as a resource for our future aspirations. People continually overwrite their biographies, as they re-interpret the past through the lens of the present day.

Present and Future People have unknown futures that may be scripted in the present. Different orientations to the future impact on how we overwrite our biographies: e.g. beginning/ending, change/continuity, opportunity/constraint, foresight/foreboding, hopes/fears, planning/drifting, choice/no choice. Tracking individuals through time: comparing projected futures with the actuality of lives, discerning how age and generation are implicated in the construction of the future. Orientations to the future are under-researched (Adam). Yet they may be highly significant in our understanding of the course of biographical and historical change.

Generating Dynamic Knowledge Linking biography, generation and history, or micro/meso/macro levels of understanding: Provides insights into the nature of social change, the strategies used by individuals to create change in their personal lives, and the way that structural conditions and changes impinge on individuals. The relationship between individual/collective agency and structure is essentially dynamic: it is only through time that we can begin to discern how agency and structure, the personal and social, the micro and macro are interconnected and how they come to be transformed.

The Dynamics of Personal lives and Public Policy Provides a counter balance to objective, over generalised and static understandings of policy Potential for re-historicising our understanding of policy narratives and processes, of understanding life journeys taking shape in the context of particular aspirations and values, resources both material and social, and external opportunities and constraints. Taking a temporal, biographical and/or narrative approach to social policy helps close the gap between the individual and the social order; and allows for a more humanistic and dynamic understanding of the relationship between personal lives and public policy