
CENS
Wikidata: Q52557901
10 Projects, page 1 of 2
assignment_turned_in ProjectFrom 2018Partners:Laboratoire de droit Lab-Lex, University of Nantes, Laboratoire d’études et de recherche en sociologie, LG, Droit et Changement Social +7 partnersLaboratoire de droit Lab-Lex,University of Nantes,Laboratoire d’études et de recherche en sociologie,LG,Droit et Changement Social,Centre Interdisciplinaire de Recherche Travail, Etat et Société,WZB,CLERSÉ,CENS,Espace et sociétés Nantes,CLERSÉ,Laboratoire de droit Lab-LexFunder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-17-CE26-0019Funder Contribution: 314,766 EURThe PROFAM collaborative research project analyzes the transformations of the care work for elderly losing their autonomy, in a context of demographic ageing, but also a context of restricting the budgets allocated to social policies. This care and domestic work takes varied forms and is carried by a set of actors with contrasting social visibility: the most visible, salaried or self-employed, perform paid work; the most invisible, close relatives, neighbors, friends, voluntary associations or informal, provide mostly unpaid care and domestic work. Whatever its form, paid or not, this work is mainly carried out by women. Public policies are a major determinant of these forms of elderly care. Indeed, for 30 years in France and elsewhere in Europe, this work has been considered as a "source of employment" and measures to increase the demand for paid care work have profoundly changed the conditions of employment of caregivers and domestic workers. But the unpaid care of loved people persists and remains an inescapable condition of the maintenance of the elderly at home. Thus many intermediate situations, in which care work goes beyond the wage-earning frameworks, are now observable. The objective of PROFAM is to analyze all these forms of care and domestic work together, considering that, transgressing the borders of public and private spheres, carried out mainly by women, it is one of the places where, new hybrid forms of employment are invented, borrowing from both the normative frameworks of wage labor and those of the private sphere. While informal care for elderly losing their autonomy is often analyzed in terms of family relations and mutual assistance, PROFAM's bias, using the theoretical frameworks of gender sociology, is to consider it as a work. This involves understanding both the development of new normative frameworks for this work and how these transformations affect the quality of the jobs of those who support them. PROFAM seeks to trace the modalities of the social division of this work between private and public spheres, in order to measure the effects of the different forms of care work, especially in terms of employment, on gender equality. To this end, the PROFAM project seeks to identify the characteristics of these ambiguous intermediate situations: their protagonists, their motivations, the types of work regulation, the resulting employment modalities and their consequences for the persons concerned, in terms of equality and social integration. PROFAM uses available quantitative surveys, both national and European, both as framing elements and as a secondary analysis object. However, its objective is to explore the frontier areas between paid and unpaid work, difficult to grasp by statistics, and its methodology makes a large part of field surveys, qualitative surveys, case studies and Documentary analysis. The project is structured in two axes articulating several parts of investigations. From a macro-social perspective, the first axis focuses on the development of frameworks for care work at European, national and local levels and describes their use and determinants quantitatively. The second, at a micro-local level, outlines the distribution of care and domestic work for elderly people. PROFAM will try to measure how gender norms, actors' sets, the use of different rights, and territorial resources, by determining the frameworks of care and domestic work, affect their practices and the quality of their employment.
more_vert assignment_turned_in ProjectFrom 2013Partners:CMW, INSHS, Princess Máxima Center, CENS, CNRS +5 partnersCMW,INSHS,Princess Máxima Center,CENS,CNRS,CERAPS,Centre dÉtudes et de Recherches Administratives, Politiques et Sociales,CESSP,University of Nantes,CESSPFunder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-12-BSH1-0015Funder Contribution: 293,717 EURSOMBRERO aims at studying the biographical consequences of participation into social movements. It is from the angle of how trajectories are formed that we propose to broach this question and to determine what involvement leads to rather than, more conventionally, what produces involvement. Thus, it is a matter of understanding how participation is likely to have a continual influence, through redefining or modifying individual behavior and perceptions. Beyond the explicit learning dispensed by activist organizations, or the socializing effects of exposure to political events, it is a matter of studying the ways in which political commitment affects all individual behavior and perceptions, in other words of considering that all participation, however sustained or intense, has secondary socializing effects. For this, we have recourse to a process and multi level approach of activist trajectories, based on an interactionist and configurational approach of life-course, what we call a sociology of « Activist careers.» We start by identifying individuals who were activists in the 1970s (from immediately after 1968 up to 1981) in three “movement families” (the feminist movement, workers’ unions and extreme-leftist organizations) and in five urban locations (Marseille, Lyon, Lille, Rennes, Nantes). On one hand, we produce a mapping of the 1970’s multi organizational fields in each city under study; on the other hand we conduct 500 life-histories, associated to a “sequence analysis” of life calendars. Such a research design will allow us to reconstruct these people’s life course in order to articulate micro (idiosyncrasies) meso (secondary socialization through commitment) and macro (local and national contexts) levels of analysis in order to make sense of individual trajectories.
more_vert assignment_turned_in ProjectFrom 2022Partners:Cimi, CENS, l'unité de recherche de l'Institut du Thorax, Centre dImmunologie et de Maladies Infectieuses, LPPL +8 partnersCimi,CENS,l'unité de recherche de l'Institut du Thorax,Centre dImmunologie et de Maladies Infectieuses,LPPL,Cimi,Lunité de recherche de linstitut du thorax,Centre d’Immunologie et des Maladies Infectieuses,CHU de Nantes Cliniques des données PHU 11,CHU de Nantes Cliniques des données PHU 11,LPPL,University of Nantes,l'unité de recherche de l'Institut du ThoraxFunder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-21-CE41-0028Funder Contribution: 327,040 EURObserving a decline of interest in academic careers in medicine, both in France and internationally, this research focuses on the factors underlying career choices made by young physicians. We suspect that the decline in medical academia may be in part due to an insufficient recruitment of women that starts at the beginning of the training curriculum, and we hypothesize that the ideal mentoring/guidance/selection process of young female physicians may not be identical to the one ideal for young male physicians and that it is part of a complex and multifactorial set of individual and organizational factors. The aims of this project are to assess, with a mixed methodology (quantitative survey, interviews, archival analysis and observation), the respective contribution of different factors involved in career choices. Among these variables, some of which are already identified in the literature as predictive (mentoring and role models, perceived discrimination), others are identified but controversial (attitude toward research, work-life balance), and others are present in the area of counselling psychology, but have not yet been invoked to report on choosing a career in academic medicine (congruence of values between an organization-the academic community- and the individual, learning experiences, and several variables of personality: anxiety, stress, intrapreunarial self-capital). To provide a better understanding of the levers and barriers to engagement in academic careers in medicine, a first quantitative study is planned. This survey will be administered to the population of interns and fellows in France (N= 44,000) and will measure the variables invoked in the decision of a career choice in academic medicine and to articulate these variables within a global integrative model accounting for gender specific effect based on knowledge on the field of guidance psychology and educational sociology and inspired by Lent's theory. These quantitative analyses will be followed by a qualitative study from a retrospective point of view. Forty in-depth semi-structured interviews will be conducted with several women and men who have successfully completed an academic career in the field of medicine. These interviews will attempt to retrace their perceived career (trajectories) to identify critical periods during which they encounter difficulties or supports. Analysing the development of professional identity in regard with positive and negative experiences during the training course and after can provide a better understanding of individual dynamic over time and confirm our conclusions from study 1. The first two studies will provide elements on the influence of the proximal environment in individual decisions. However, beyond individual choices, we can also consider that the institution plays an active role in "designating" potential candidates for an academic career. The objective of the third study will be to analyse in a more specific way and by a mixed methodology (observation, archival analysis, interviews) the role of the institution in periods which could prove to be decisive during the curriculum: the choice to do or not a Master's degree and the process of becoming a fellow. Given serious consideration to the suggestion that individuals choose what they are chosen by, the aim is to highlight the institution’s role in framing personal and professional aspirations and producing a the range of possibilities. Beyond the contribution of new scientific knowledge on this issue, our consortium makes changing this situation, so that women have easier access to academic positions, central to its work. This is facilitated by the structure of our consortium, which brings together experts in the humanities and social sciences (psychology and sociology) and physicians who will be able to play the role of brokers of this knowledge to institutions (medical schools and national organizations) and residents in medicine.
more_vert assignment_turned_in ProjectFrom 2021Partners:Institut Francilien Recherche, Innovation et Société, CNRS, Pacte - Laboratoire de Sciences sociales, Centre de recherches historiques, LEST +11 partnersInstitut Francilien Recherche, Innovation et Société,CNRS,Pacte - Laboratoire de Sciences sociales,Centre de recherches historiques,LEST,UTM,CENS,LISST,Laboratoire déconomie et de sociologie du travail,University of Nantes,INSHS,LISST,CESSP,LEST,ISP,CESSPFunder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-20-COV8-0007Funder Contribution: 144,838 EURBeyond the many victims of the pandemic, all citizens may have been affected in their daily lives, and are likely to be affected in the long term, by the economic and social consequences of the Covid-19 health crisis. Everyone has been confined (except for some particular professions), but certainly not in the same way: containment has revealed not only inequalities in relation to illness and social ties, but also in relation to housing and work. Similarly, the denial of liberty (and in particular freedom of movement and assembly) during confinement did not apply to everyone in the same way. Did it only update the social inequalities that already existed under normal circumstances? Did it exacerbate them? Did it introduce new ones? In terms of social relations, which ones have become stronger, weaker or worse? How did French people stand loneliness or, on the contrary, cohabitation in confinement? Research on social networks has shown that personal relationships are crucial resources, just as material resources, and that they function as a “social capital” that can be mobilized throughout the life course. What impact in the short, medium and longer term will the Covid-19 crisis have on our personal networks, on our relationships with our relatives, friends, neighbors and colleagues? To answer these questions, there is a major challenge in developing large-scale research that will make it possible to precisely measure the effects, over time, of this crisis on the living and working conditions of the French, on the ways in which they live and move around, and on the forms of sociability and solidarity that are at the basis of social cohesion. With this in mind, the VICO project aims to conduct a broad longitudinal survey. The distinctive feature of this survey: it is based on a large sample of the ordinary population having experienced confinement in France in the spring of 2020; it will consist in several successive waves during which the members of the panel will be interviewed three times over a period of 15 months in total; and it will combine quantitative and qualitative approaches. In the urgency to collect solid scientific data during the event, but also with the opportunity to understand what is changing in our social life in times of crisis, a first group of researchers in sociology and social sciences has already teamed up to design, carry out and disseminate the first wave of this original longitudinal survey. The survey, based on an online questionnaire distributed during containment, received more than 16,000 responses. The objective of the VICO project is thus to add: 1. an additional wave of interview surveys, which are essential to seize the subjective experiences, representations and transformations of the respondents' values; and 2. a second wave of questionnaire survey 12 months after the first, i.e. one year after the confinement, to measure the sustainability of the social dynamics observed during this exceptional crisis. The overall goal of the project is to analyse the social consequences of the health crisis over time, in order to determine whether the changes were just transitory, or eventually prove more persistent. The financial, material and human resources requested in this ANR project will sustain the analyses of the data from the first wave of the survey, and the implementation of the quantitative and qualitative surveys of the two following waves.
more_vert assignment_turned_in ProjectFrom 2017Partners:CSO, CERAPS, CNE, CENS, Centre Universitaire de Recherche sur l'Action Publique et le Politique +8 partnersCSO,CERAPS,CNE,CENS,Centre Universitaire de Recherche sur l'Action Publique et le Politique,Centre Norbert Elias – Equipe HEMOC,Centre de Recherches Juridiques,LATTS,EHESS,TRIANGLE,University of Nantes,LATTS,Centre Universitaire de Recherche sur l'Action Publique et le PolitiqueFunder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-16-CE26-0013Funder Contribution: 404,699 EURIn France, spending on the financial remuneration of politicians comes in at more than a billion euros in per year. These costs associated with political work are regularly subject to sharp criticism, which accuses elected representatives of costing too much and putting their own financial interests first. The ELUAR project looks to break with common, all-embracing representations and examine in detail the role played by financial remunerations in the process of the professionalization of elected representatives. From a scientific point of view, it seeks to fill in a gap in the French literature about political work. Although many publications have appeared about this subject since the 1990s, the analysis of the material conditions of the exercise of mandates remains a blind sport for research in France. Through an interdisciplinary approach which mobilises sociology, political science, history and law, this collective research project aims to put the financial dimension back at the centre of the analysis of careers and engagements of national and local political personnel. The central hypothesis of the project is to highlight heterogeneity and inequality in the remuneration of elected representatives and in the forms of political professionalization. Practically speaking, the project is structured around two parts. The first part centres around the study of the production of reforms and judicial frameworks in order to bring up to date the political construction of economic hierarchisation between mandates. Which actors are invested in the production of reforms? What registers have been used to justify these reforms since the 1950s? How does the principle of accumulating mandates affect these games? What are the possibilities for remuneration and material gratification open to the politicians? Do the same logics of hierarchisation apply abroad? The second part analyses the uses and appropriations of the rules which frame the remuneration of elected representatives. By focusing on remuneration, and more largely on the material conditions in which mandates are exercised, this study will lead to a better understanding of the variety of contemporary forms of political professionalization, and the subjective relations that the elected representations have with money and the political uses of money. By what processes do elected representatives manage to abandon their initial profession in favour of a political mandate? What strategies of economic reassurance do they deploy? How are allowances and bonuses attributed? Does money win the loyalty of political teams? Is it constructed as a political arm to disqualify an opponent? These are just some of the questions that will be dealt with in the second part. Ultimately, the project ELUAR seeks to make a double break, firstly with ordinary discourses which homogenise elected representatives and are suspicious about remunerations they receive; and secondly with the scholarly point of view visible in research on political work, which posits that compensation makes more or less mechanically the professional.
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1 Organizations, page 1 of 1
corporate_fare Organization FranceWebsite URL: http://www.univ-nantes.fr/more_vert