Centre for Research on Families and Relationships

Friendships as a lever of social change?

Monday 31 March

5pm – 6:30pm

G.159 MacLaren Stuart Room, Old College & Online

Friendships as a lever of social change?

Register for this event: Eventbrite.

This is a hybrid event. If you register to attend online, you will be sent a joining link prior to the date of the event.

Friendships are more or less intimate relationships and intimate relationships are always implicated in the making of selves and social worlds. In this lecture Lynn Jamieson will consider whether the social research evidence suggests hope concerning friendships’ impacts on uncertain futures. One positive strand of recent research claims that men’s friendships are advancing emotionally literate, empathetic forms of masculinity that is pro-feminist and has no place for ‘lad culture’ or homophobia. Some literature encourages optimism about cross-ethnic friendship. However not all research dealing with cross-class and racist ‘othering’ is so optimistic and, perhaps unsurprisingly, analysis of populist right wing movements is not so upbeat about the role of friendship. Research on activist and everyday responses to climate change and catastrophic loss of biodiversity offers a more mixed picture. All this points to how important it is for social scientists to systematically attend to friendships as both lived realities and ideals in the imagination.

 

Lynn Jamieson is Professor of Families and Relationships at the University of Edinburgh.

This lecture will be chaired by Sue Scott, Visiting Professor at Newcastle University.

CRFR NEWS

CRFR News

ENTER A SEARCH TERM AND HIT RETURN

Do you have some news, or are you running an event that may be of interest to the CRFR Community?

Suggestions must be broadly connected with our focus on research on families and relationships. To recommend your news/event, please contact us.