Making Social Worlds - for iPod/iPhone - podcast cover

Making Social Worlds - for iPod/iPhone

The Open Universitywww3.open.ac.uk
How does society create and control our social world? How do passports and passbooks function as agents of government control? And what are the purposes of citizenship tests and ceremonies? This album provides insight into how large communities are organised to regulate their social behaviour. People who lived under Apartheid in South Africa describe how their passbook governed their social world, from alcohol consumption to medical health. Philosophers, politicians and academics offer differing perspectives on requirements for citizenship and the importance of citizenship ceremonies in the UK and Australia. In the two audio tracks, course team members Liz McFall and Sophie Watson put the ideas covered in the album into their academic context. This material is taken from The Open University course DD308 Making social worlds.
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Episodes

Classifying races

How races were classified after the introduction of the 1950 Population Registration Act.

Jun 02, 200834 sec

Finding work

The rules of working in South Africa and the role of the passbook.

Jun 02, 20082 min

Why ceremony?

David Blunkett talking about the reasons behind the British citizenship ceremony.

Jun 02, 200851 sec

Inclusion ceremonies

How the British government engineers citizenship as an achievement.

Jun 02, 200846 sec

What is Britishness?

UK government minister David Blunkett defines good British citizenship.

Jun 02, 20082 min

Changes in policy

Sir Bernard Crick talking about the limitations of new citizenship policy.

Jun 02, 20081 min
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