Stuart Tannock
Institute of Education
45 Papers
261 Citations
Stuart Tannock is an academic researcher from Institute of Education. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social change & Youth studies. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 45 publications. Previous affiliations of Stuart Tannock include University College London & Cardiff University.
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Papers
Postcapitalism: a guide to our future
TL;DR: McGimpsey, Tannock and Lauder as discussed by the authors read a reading of Post-Capitalism: A Guide to Ou... and found that the headlines are dominated by Brexit and a phone game called Pokemon Go.
643
Education, meritocracy and the global war for talent
Phillip Brown,Stuart Tannock +1 more
TL;DR: The authors argues that the global war for talent represents a new phase in neoliberalism, as it seeks to liberalise the global movement not just of capital and commodities, but of high skill labour as well.
321
On the Problem of Over-researched Communities: The Case of the Shatila Palestinian Refugee Camp in Lebanon
Mayssoun Sukarieh,Stuart Tannock +1 more
TL;DR: The authors discuss the problem of over-research as articulated by the residents of the Shatila Palestinian refugee camp in Beirut, Lebanon, a camp which is probably one of the most heavily researched neighbourhoods anywhere, and certainly within the Palestinian diaspora.
151
In the best interests of youth or neoliberalism? The World Bank and the New Global Youth Empowerment Project
Mayssoun Sukarieh,Stuart Tannock +1 more
TL;DR: The authors argue that the new turn to youth serves primarily to serve the goal of insulating the increasingly contested neoliberal project from further political and ideological challenge, and they show how the Bank deploys an old strategy of using youth as a marketing tool to promote the interests of business and political elites.
112
Subcontracting Academia: Alienation, Exploitation and Disillusionment in the UK Overseas Syrian Refugee Research Industry
Mayssoun Sukarieh,Stuart Tannock +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on a case study of the experiences of local research assistants employed on UK-directed research projects on Syrian refugees in Lebanon, and argue that these problems arise from subcontracted labour relations in the workplace itself, but also the broader political economy of how overseas social science research is currently produced.