
| States of Human Rights |
| Comment on Kate Nash/1. States Make Human Rights and Human Rights Abuses Make States |
| Comment on Kate Nash/2 |
| Comment on Kate Nash/3 |
| Comment on Kate Nash/4. Are Human Rights Justiciable? |
| Why Study States of Human Rights? A Reply to the Comments |
| Introduction. Feminist Views on Social Policy and Gender Equality |
| Policy, Politics, Gender. Bringing Gender to the Analysis of Welfare States |
| Beyond Care. The Persistent Invisibility of Unpaid Family Work |
| Work-Family Tensions and childcare. Reflections on Latin American Experiences |
| Gender and Power in Families and Family Policies. Sweden in the Nordic Context |
| How gender neutral are state policies on science and international mobility of academics? |
| Stephen Coleman and Jay G. Blumler, The Internet and Democratic Citizenship. Theory, Practice and Policy. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009, 220 pp. |
| Norbert Elias, Essay III. On Sociology and the Humanities. Vol. 16 of The Collected Work of Norbert Elias, edited by Richard Kilminster and Stephen Mennell. Dublin: UCD Press, 2009, 312 pp. |
| Marion Fourcade, Economists and Societies. Discipline and Profession in the United States, Britain and France, 1890 to 1990s. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009, xxiv + 386 pp. |
| Pranee Liamputtong, Performing Qualitative Cross-Cultural Research. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010, 288 p. |
| Brian A. Monahan, The Shock of the News. Media Coverage and the Making of 9/11. New York-London: New York University Press, 2010, 221 pp. |
| Alejandro Portes, Economic Sociology. A Systematic Inquiry. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010, 320 pp. |
| Robert D. Putnam and David E. Campbell, American Grace. How Religion Divides and Unites Us. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2010, 688 pp. |
| Roberta Sassatelli, Fitness Culture. Gyms and the Commercialisation of Discipline and Fun. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010, 248 pp. |