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Discover Society aims to overcome âa serious risk of a democratic deficitâ and to offer the general public âa better understanding of the social context in which politics takes placeâ.
The magazine, which went live this week, already includes contributions on everything from sustainable consumption and 21st-century relationships to multilingual citizenship to âthe rise of the British comedy snobâ. Ìę
âAlong with many others, we have lamented the absence of social research at the heart of public debate,â said co-editor John Holmwood, professor of sociology at the University of Nottingham.
âThere is a âfolk memoryâ within the disciplines of sociology and social policy of the old days of New Society, which published [in this area] from its launch in 1962 to its demise in 1988 and had contributions from many British academics,â he said, adding that the new magazine sets out to fulfil a similar function through research-based articles, âviewpointsâ (on current social issues), âpolicy briefingsâ and reports âon the frontlineâ of austerity Britain.
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âWe think that there should be a better understanding of the social context in which politics takes place,â Professor Holmwood went on.
âThere is a serious risk of a democratic deficit if the drive toward evidence-based policy means that researchers focus on informing policy-makers, rather than the wider public.â
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Another stimulus was the late Baroness Thatcherâs famous statement: âThere is no such thing as society. There are only individual men and women, and there are families.â
Though families are âfrequently invoked in political debates (especially âhard-workingâ ones)â, co-editor Sue Scott, professor of sociology (and currently pro vice-chancellor) at Glasgow Caledonian University, argued that they are âfrequently misunderstood and their varied nature misrepresentedâ.
Since setting up the magazine, Professor Holmwood reported that many organisations âhave said to us that they had been thinking of doing this for some time, âbut hadnât found a business model; how have you done it?â Answer: We didnât look for a business model, we just did it!â
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