# | Title | Journal | Year | Citations |
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1 | “Is it fun?” developing children centred research methods | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2003 | 317 |
2 | Street vending and public policy: a global review | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2000 | 268 |
3 | Exploring the social capital grid: bonding, bridging, qualitative, quantitative | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2007 | 204 |
4 | Street vendors, and postmodernity: conflict and compromise in the global economy | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2000 | 199 |
5 | Escaping from the economy: the politics of degrowth | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2008 | 198 |
6 | A rift in modernity? assessing the anthropogenic sources of global climate change with the STIRPAT model | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2003 | 156 |
7 | Comparative public opinion and knowledge on global climatic change and the Kyoto Protocol: the US versus the world? | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2003 | 149 |
8 | Media’s social construction of environmental issues: focus on global warming – a comparative study | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2003 | 147 |
9 | COVID-19 in Africa: socio-economic impact, policy response and opportunities | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2022 | 147 |
10 | Emiratisation: drawing UAE nationals into their surging economy | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2008 | 145 |
11 | SOCIAL EMOTIONS: CONFIDENCE, TRUST AND LOYALTY | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 1996 | 139 |
12 | New class inequalities in education | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2010 | 127 |
13 | The influence of the COVID-19 pandemic on the digital transformation of work | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2020 | 126 |
14 | Reconfiguring the sociology of the crowd: exploring crowdsourcing | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2011 | 103 |
15 | Young people’s explanations and experiences of social exclusion: retrieving Bourdieu’s concept of social capital | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2001 | 98 |
16 | The impact of COVID-19 pandemic on conventional work settings | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2020 | 97 |
17 | Women's employment in the institutional and cultural context | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2012 | 96 |
18 | International perspectives on gender and disaster: differences and possibilities | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2004 | 94 |
19 | The effects of nepotism on human resource management | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2006 | 94 |
20 | The effects of hospital restructuring that included layoffs on individual nurses who remained employed: a systematic review of impact | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2003 | 90 |
21 | The “double dynamics” of activation | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2007 | 87 |
22 | Growing sustainable consumption communities | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2007 | 84 |
23 | Relationship between organizational commitments and organizational citizenship behaviour in a sample of private banking employees | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2015 | 82 |
24 | Risk, vulnerability, and asset‐based approach to disaster risk management | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2004 | 79 |
25 | The construction of professionalism in new and existing occupational contexts: promoting and facilitating occupational change | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2003 | 78 |
26 | China's new rural pension scheme: can it be improved? | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2010 | 78 |
27 | Tax morale and institutional theory: a systematic review | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2018 | 76 |
28 | Employment in the informal economy: implications of the COVID-19 pandemic | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2020 | 75 |
29 | Humans and other animals: sociology’s moral and intellectual challenge | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2003 | 73 |
30 | Generic sources of disaster communities: a social network approach | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2004 | 73 |
31 | Shades of grey in the informal economy | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2006 | 73 |
32 | The glass ceiling of corporate social responsibility | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2010 | 71 |
33 | Exploring the moral dimension of wicked problems* | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2009 | 70 |
34 | The emerging transnational “retirement industry” in Southeast Asia | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2012 | 70 |
35 | Defamilisation, dedomestication and care policy | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2011 | 69 |
36 | Work engagement in eight European countries | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2011 | 67 |
37 | Coronavirus (covid-19) and social value co-creation | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2022 | 67 |
38 | Informal economy, informal state: the case of Uzbekistan | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2011 | 64 |
39 | Post-Soviet informality: towards theory-building | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2015 | 64 |
40 | Retuning the Nordic welfare municipality | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2011 | 63 |
41 | Flexibility and work‐life conflict in times of crisis: a gender perspective | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2013 | 63 |
42 | Individualised service provision in an era of activation and new governance | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2007 | 61 |
43 | The changing work landscape as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic: insights from remote workers life situations in South Africa | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2020 | 61 |
44 | THE ONE‐CHILD POLICY AND PARENT‐CHILD RELATIONSHIPS: A COMPARISON OF ONE‐CHILD WITH MULTIPLE‐CHILD FAMILIES IN CHINA | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 1996 | 60 |
45 | A different face of faith‐based politics: social capital and community organizing in the public arena | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2002 | 60 |
46 | Collaboration and partnership: an effective response to complexity and fragmentation or solution built on sand? | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2000 | 59 |
47 | It is a scandal! | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2014 | 59 |
48 | Work‐family and work‐life pressures in Australia: advancing gender equality in “good times”? | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2013 | 56 |
49 | Explaining the pay disparity between women and men in similar jobs | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2001 | 53 |
50 | Warming winters and New Hampshire’s lost ski areas: an integrated case study | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2003 | 53 |