Items where School / Department / Research Groups is "School of Humanities & Social Sciences > Department of Sociology, Criminology & Cultural Studies"
![]() | Up a level |
- University Structure (5836)
- School of Humanities & Social Sciences (754)
- Department of Sociology, Criminology & Cultural Studies (11)
- School of Humanities & Social Sciences (754)
2010
Owusu-Kwarteng, Louise (2010) ‘Between two lives': parenting and impacts on academic, professional achievements and socio-emotional outcomes for British-Ghanaians. PhD thesis, University of Greenwich.
2004
Light, Richard John (2004) Ballast lives: an excursus on socio-political accounts of disablement in the age of globalization. PhD thesis, University of Greenwich.
2003
Pourzand, Niloufar (2003) A tapestry of resistance: Afghan educated refugee women in Pakistan: `agency', identity and education in war and displacement. PhD thesis, University of Greenwich..
2002
Butler, Karen Lee (2002) Impulsivity and risk-taking in clinical and non-clinical populations. PhD thesis, University of Greenwich.
2001
Bricheno, Patricia Anne (2001) Pupil attitudes: a longitudinal study of children's attitudes to science at transfer from primary to secondary school. PhD thesis, University of Greenwich.
2000
Trimikliniotis, Nicos (2000) The role of state processes in the production and resolution of "ethnic" and "national" conflict: the case of Cyprus. PhD thesis, University of Greenwich.
Uguris, Tijen (2000) Ethnic and gender divisions in tenant participation in public housing. PhD thesis, University of Greenwich.
1999
Coomber, Ross (1999) Perceptions of illicit drugs and drug users: myth-understandings and policy consequences. PhD thesis, University of Greenwich.
1988
Goldstein, Nance (1988) Changing corporate strategies in a period of crisis: high technology multinational corporations in Scotland. PhD thesis, Thames Polytechnic.
1982
Abbott, Pamela Ann (1982) Towards a social theory of mental handicap. PhD thesis, Thames Polytechnic.
1981
Coward, Rosalind (1981) The patriarchal theory: some modes of explanation of kinship in the social sciences. PhD thesis, Thames Polytechnic.



