4 studies found in English from a total of 37402
Keywords
GROUP DYNAMICS 
×

Conflicts and Violence in Prison, 1998-2000

Edgar, K., University of Oxford, Centre for Criminological Research; Martin, C., University of Oxford, Centre for Criminological Research
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.By their nature, prisons engender potentially violent conflicts; this research project explored the circumstances which led to violence in prisons; the consequences of violent confrontations for prisoners and staff; and the ways in which conflicts with the potential to lead to violence were resolved...
Study description available in:EN
Data access:Restricted
Access study

Crowd Dynamics, Policing and Hooliganism at Euro 2004

Stott, C., Keele University, School of Psychology
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This research project analysed the impact of public order policing strategies upon levels of 'hooliganism' at the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) European Championships in Portugal in June and July 2004 (Euro 2004). The project combined two methodological approaches, structured observation...
Study description available in:EN
Data access:Restricted
Access study

Adolescent Culture and the Mass Media, 1973-1974

Murdock, G., University of Leicester, Centre for Mass Communications Research
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The aim of this survey was to establish the extent to which involvement in `pop culture' is age-specific and to examine the social class and sex differentials in adolescent and adult involvement. Families were located with teenage children in three contrasted areas of a large midland city (a middle class...
Study description available in:EN
Data access:Restricted
Access study

Qualitative Individual Reports with Global Virtual Team Participants, 2019

Saarinen, E, University of Turku; Chamakiotis, P, ESCP Business School
The collection includes a total of 274 individual qualitative reports reflecting on each participant's experience of having worked in a global virtual team (GVT) environment through their participation in the VIBu 2019 project. 204 participants — organised in 16 GVTs, dispersed between Austria, Finland, the UK and the USA — took part. Participants were asked to complete two...
Study description available in:EN
Access study