Now showing items 1-10 of 10

    • Dangerously Empty? Hegemony and the construction of the Irish Entrepreneur 

      Kenny, Kate; Scriver, Stacey (SAGE Journals Online, 2012-03)
      In this paper we build on Jones and Spicer's (2009) conceptualisation of the entrepreneur as an empty signifier. We explore the function of the signifier 'entrepreneurship' within a social context marked by crisis: Ireland ...
    • Economic and social costs of violence against women in Ghana: Technical report 

      Asante, Felix; Fenny, Ama; Dzudzor, Makafui; Chadha, Mrinal; Scriver, Stacey; Ballantine, Carol; Raghavendra, Srinivas; Sabir, Muhammad; Duvvury, Nata; Alverado, Gina; O’Brien-Milne, Lila; Mueller, Jennifer; Grant-Vest, Sara; Kennedy, John; Mensah, William (NUI Galway, 2019-04)
      Socio-economic costs of violence against women and girls in Ghana Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is one of the most widespread human rights violations. VAWG is a significant social, economic and public health ...
    • Economic and social costs of violence against women in Pakistan: Technical report 

      Ghaus, Khalida; Ali, Adeel; Anis, Rafea; Areeb, Tabinda; Sabir, Muhammad; Chadha, Mrinal; Ballantine, Carol; Scriver, Stacey; Raghavendra, Srinivas; Duvvury, Nata; Grant-Vest, Sara; Kennedy, John; Ahmed, Aftab; Akhtar, Naveed; Alvarado, Gina; O’Brien-Milne, Lila; Mueller, Jennifer (NUI Galway, 2019-04)
      Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is widely recognised as a violation of human rights and a challenge to public health. VAWG also has economic and social costs that have not been adequately recognised. These costs ...
    • Economic and social costs of violence against women in South Sudan: Technical report 

      Elmusharaf, Khalifa; Scriver, Stacey; Chadha, Mrinal; Ballantine, Carol; Sabir, Muhammad; Raghavendra, Srinivas; Duvvury, Nata; Kennedy, John; Grant-Vest, Sara; Edopu, Peter (NUI Galway, 2019-03)
      Introduction Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is widely recognised as a violation of human rights and a challenge to public health. Further, VAWG is an under-examined, but crucial component of the overall crisis ...
    • Editorial: The Spectre of Violence in Graduate Feminist Research 

      Scriver, Stacey; Ballantine, Carol; Chippendale, Roisin (School of Political Science and Sociology, University of Galway, 2023)
      [No abstract available]
    • Emerging feminist research: courage and determination 

      Ballantine, Carol; Le Goff, Damien; Scriver, Stacey (School of Political Science and Sociology, University of Galway, 2022)
      This volume is the third edition of Dearcadh journal. When we issued our first call for papers in November 2019, we did not know that the journal’s first three editions would all be carried out in the context of a global ...
    • The health and economic costs of violence against women and girls on survivors, their families and communities in Ghana 

      Alvarado Merino, Gina; Scriver, Stacey; Mueller, Jennifer L.; O’Brien-Milne, Lila; Fenny, Ama P.; Duvvury, Nata (IntechOpen, 2019-10-08)
      Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is a worldwide phenomenon. Globally, 35% of women have experienced physical or sexual intimate partner violence (IPV) or non-partner sexual violence in their lives. VAWG is estimated ...
    • Introducing Dearcadh: A tradition in feminist academics and publishing 

      Scriver, Stacey; Ballantine, Carol (School of Political Science and Sociology, University of Galway, 2020)
      [No abstract available]
    • Mental health as a weapon: Whistleblower retaliation and normative violence 

      Kenny, Kate; Fotaki, Marianna; Scriver, Stacey (Springer Verlag, 2018-04-17)
      What form does power take in situations of retaliation against whistleblowers? In this article, we move away from dominant perspectives that see power as a resource. In place, we propose a theory of normative power and ...
    • The possibilities of feminism(s) in an uncertain world 

      Scriver, Stacey; Ballantine, Carol; Monks, Ysabel (School of Political Science and Sociology, University of Galway, 2021)
      [No abstract available]