STS
@shakirateh.bsky.social
Sociology, Pub. Policy | Part-Time PhD candidate @IOE_London @ucl | Researching meritocracy & elite schools | @ColumbiaSIPA '11 | Mommy to autistic twins A&Z
Reposted by STS
"In Gaza, women are not asking for boardroom seats or missions to Mars. They are asking for bread. For water. For soap. For a sanitary pad. For their children to wake up in the morning. If our feminism cannot hold space for that who is it really for?" Nadine Quomsieh
www.haaretz.com/opinion/2025...
www.haaretz.com/opinion/2025...
A feminism that cannot name Gaza is not feminism | Opinion
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www.haaretz.com
April 28, 2025 at 12:39 PM
"In Gaza, women are not asking for boardroom seats or missions to Mars. They are asking for bread. For water. For soap. For a sanitary pad. For their children to wake up in the morning. If our feminism cannot hold space for that who is it really for?" Nadine Quomsieh
www.haaretz.com/opinion/2025...
www.haaretz.com/opinion/2025...
Reposted by STS
In the UK, feelings of class antagonism and injustice run deep. But whereas the left struggles to address these feelings, the populist right has no such difficulty. @mikesavagelse.bsky.social asks: do we need to discuss a new politics of class? #LSEInequalitiesBlog
buff.ly/4hVNEoo
buff.ly/4hVNEoo
We need to talk more about class
The UK is a divided nation where feelings of class antagonism and injustice run deep. But whereas the left struggles to address these feelings, the populist right has no such difficulty. Ten years …
buff.ly
February 26, 2025 at 10:27 AM
In the UK, feelings of class antagonism and injustice run deep. But whereas the left struggles to address these feelings, the populist right has no such difficulty. @mikesavagelse.bsky.social asks: do we need to discuss a new politics of class? #LSEInequalitiesBlog
buff.ly/4hVNEoo
buff.ly/4hVNEoo
Reposted by STS
Once you get used to the luxury of flavors and textures that make up the SEAsian working class lunch, you start to pity our western counterparts and their sad sandwiches.
December 20, 2024 at 4:43 AM
Once you get used to the luxury of flavors and textures that make up the SEAsian working class lunch, you start to pity our western counterparts and their sad sandwiches.
Reposted by STS
Wondering about the scare stories of wealthy tax flight based on non-dom tax changes or private school VAT?
Our new research explains why the vast majority won’t migrate, and are snobbish about tax havens
w/@andy-summers.bsky.social Emma Taylor,Victoria Gronwald
academic.oup.com/ser/advance-...
Our new research explains why the vast majority won’t migrate, and are snobbish about tax havens
w/@andy-summers.bsky.social Emma Taylor,Victoria Gronwald
academic.oup.com/ser/advance-...
‘But Switzerland’s boring’: tax migration and the pull of place-specific cultural capital
Abstract. Many countries are concerned about the migration of top taxpayers. Yet we know little about how economic elites weigh the taxes they pay when dec
academic.oup.com
February 24, 2025 at 8:16 AM
Wondering about the scare stories of wealthy tax flight based on non-dom tax changes or private school VAT?
Our new research explains why the vast majority won’t migrate, and are snobbish about tax havens
w/@andy-summers.bsky.social Emma Taylor,Victoria Gronwald
academic.oup.com/ser/advance-...
Our new research explains why the vast majority won’t migrate, and are snobbish about tax havens
w/@andy-summers.bsky.social Emma Taylor,Victoria Gronwald
academic.oup.com/ser/advance-...
Reposted by STS
I always shock my students a bit when I tell them that quantitative data is just qualitative data that has already been interpreted numerically.
In case you need a teaching example of the social construction of quantitative data...
www.nytimes.com/2025/02/21/u...
www.nytimes.com/2025/02/21/u...
DOGE’s Only Public Ledger Is Riddled With Mistakes (Gift Article)
The figures from Elon Musk’s team of outsiders represent billions in government cuts. They are also full of accounting errors, outdated data and other miscalculations.
www.nytimes.com
February 22, 2025 at 2:29 PM
I always shock my students a bit when I tell them that quantitative data is just qualitative data that has already been interpreted numerically.
Reposted by STS
📢 Save the Date!
Join us on 24 February 2025 for "Peak Injustice: Solving Britain's Inequality Crisis." 🕕 6:30 PM - 8:00 PM
Experts will tackle the growing inequality in the UK & explore solutions. Attend in person or online! 🌍
#LSE #Inequality #SocialJustice
Join us on 24 February 2025 for "Peak Injustice: Solving Britain's Inequality Crisis." 🕕 6:30 PM - 8:00 PM
Experts will tackle the growing inequality in the UK & explore solutions. Attend in person or online! 🌍
#LSE #Inequality #SocialJustice
Peak injustice: solving Britain's inequality crisis
6.30pm Mon 24 Feb | Danny Dorling, Danny Sriskandarajah, Kitty Stewart, Polly Toynbee | Free public event at LSE
buff.ly
January 29, 2025 at 10:00 AM
📢 Save the Date!
Join us on 24 February 2025 for "Peak Injustice: Solving Britain's Inequality Crisis." 🕕 6:30 PM - 8:00 PM
Experts will tackle the growing inequality in the UK & explore solutions. Attend in person or online! 🌍
#LSE #Inequality #SocialJustice
Join us on 24 February 2025 for "Peak Injustice: Solving Britain's Inequality Crisis." 🕕 6:30 PM - 8:00 PM
Experts will tackle the growing inequality in the UK & explore solutions. Attend in person or online! 🌍
#LSE #Inequality #SocialJustice
Reposted by STS
This. The goal of companies' AI-ification is to increase profit but just by increasing productivity but also by reducing labor costs, especially in the kinds of jobs that have historically been able to resist underpayment by virtue of their reliance on creativity and intellectual skills.
"What trillion-dollar problem is AI trying to solve?"
Wages. They're trying to use it to solve having to pay wages.
Wages. They're trying to use it to solve having to pay wages.
December 30, 2024 at 8:32 PM
This. The goal of companies' AI-ification is to increase profit but just by increasing productivity but also by reducing labor costs, especially in the kinds of jobs that have historically been able to resist underpayment by virtue of their reliance on creativity and intellectual skills.
Reposted by STS
A thing that pisses me off when you talk about privilege (not in some academic way, just like what you have or were born with) and advantages one had that they may not actively consider is the de facto reply of “I worked hard for this.” Yea jackass a lot of people work hard
December 30, 2024 at 2:54 PM
A thing that pisses me off when you talk about privilege (not in some academic way, just like what you have or were born with) and advantages one had that they may not actively consider is the de facto reply of “I worked hard for this.” Yea jackass a lot of people work hard
Underemployment is an issue that impacts the economy, but it shouldn’t be viewed solely as an economic concern.
Sure, there is the economic argument about the lack of jobs for graduates and the failure to offer commensurate pay.
It also reflects how society views labor. 1/n
Sure, there is the economic argument about the lack of jobs for graduates and the failure to offer commensurate pay.
It also reflects how society views labor. 1/n
December 30, 2024 at 2:45 PM
Underemployment is an issue that impacts the economy, but it shouldn’t be viewed solely as an economic concern.
Sure, there is the economic argument about the lack of jobs for graduates and the failure to offer commensurate pay.
It also reflects how society views labor. 1/n
Sure, there is the economic argument about the lack of jobs for graduates and the failure to offer commensurate pay.
It also reflects how society views labor. 1/n
Any discussions or conversations on education that does not give adequate consideration to socioeconomic class is incomplete.
And instead of solely focusing on social mobility, we must also honestly examine how education reinforces inequality and perpetuates class structures.
And instead of solely focusing on social mobility, we must also honestly examine how education reinforces inequality and perpetuates class structures.
December 22, 2024 at 7:06 AM
Any discussions or conversations on education that does not give adequate consideration to socioeconomic class is incomplete.
And instead of solely focusing on social mobility, we must also honestly examine how education reinforces inequality and perpetuates class structures.
And instead of solely focusing on social mobility, we must also honestly examine how education reinforces inequality and perpetuates class structures.
I was entertaining some thoughts today:
In what situations should you follow the majority, and when or how should you accommodate and include minority and underrepresented groups?
And should minority groups speak up when they are being excluded?
In what situations should you follow the majority, and when or how should you accommodate and include minority and underrepresented groups?
And should minority groups speak up when they are being excluded?
December 20, 2024 at 2:54 PM
I was entertaining some thoughts today:
In what situations should you follow the majority, and when or how should you accommodate and include minority and underrepresented groups?
And should minority groups speak up when they are being excluded?
In what situations should you follow the majority, and when or how should you accommodate and include minority and underrepresented groups?
And should minority groups speak up when they are being excluded?
Those least affected by the retirement or pension crisis are the ones making decisions for those who will be most impacted.
Those with easy access to healthcare are making decisions for those who face the greatest challenges in accessing it.
Those with easy access to healthcare are making decisions for those who face the greatest challenges in accessing it.
December 14, 2024 at 12:57 AM
Those least affected by the retirement or pension crisis are the ones making decisions for those who will be most impacted.
Those with easy access to healthcare are making decisions for those who face the greatest challenges in accessing it.
Those with easy access to healthcare are making decisions for those who face the greatest challenges in accessing it.
Policies, like many things in life, are also subjected to class-biases. Which is why socioeconomic diversity is very important in policy institutions.
December 2, 2024 at 12:56 AM
Policies, like many things in life, are also subjected to class-biases. Which is why socioeconomic diversity is very important in policy institutions.
The problem is not so much about not having a career path at 15 - the bigger challenge is that when the time comes to decide, access to information, resources, and guidance to help make a meaningful decision is very much shaped and determined by one's b/ground and social class.
x.com/OECDEduSkill...
x.com/OECDEduSkill...
x.com
x.com
November 28, 2024 at 2:28 PM
The problem is not so much about not having a career path at 15 - the bigger challenge is that when the time comes to decide, access to information, resources, and guidance to help make a meaningful decision is very much shaped and determined by one's b/ground and social class.
x.com/OECDEduSkill...
x.com/OECDEduSkill...
"The whole meritocracy is a system of segregation."
Perhaps one of the biggest tragedy of meritocracy is that you end up with a society that views how much money a person makes, and the credentials that a person has, is a measure of his/ her value and worth...
www.theatlantic.com/magazine/arc...
Perhaps one of the biggest tragedy of meritocracy is that you end up with a society that views how much money a person makes, and the credentials that a person has, is a measure of his/ her value and worth...
www.theatlantic.com/magazine/arc...
How the Ivy League Broke America
The meritocracy isn’t working. We need something new.
www.theatlantic.com
November 24, 2024 at 7:04 AM
"The whole meritocracy is a system of segregation."
Perhaps one of the biggest tragedy of meritocracy is that you end up with a society that views how much money a person makes, and the credentials that a person has, is a measure of his/ her value and worth...
www.theatlantic.com/magazine/arc...
Perhaps one of the biggest tragedy of meritocracy is that you end up with a society that views how much money a person makes, and the credentials that a person has, is a measure of his/ her value and worth...
www.theatlantic.com/magazine/arc...