Ewch i’r prif gynnwys

Dr Helen Lorna Blakely

Research Associate

Ysgol y Gwyddorau Cymdeithasol

Email
BlakelyH1@caerdydd.ac.uk
Telephone
+44 29206 88726
Campuses
sbarc|spark, Ystafell 03.14, Heol Maendy, Cathays, Caerdydd, CF24 4HQ

Trosolwyg

I began working as a researcher with the Wales Institute of Social Economic Research Data and Methods (WISERD) in 2015. My reseach interests include empirical and theoretical work on work, welfare and citizenship, which I engage with through ethnographic and interview research methods.

Currently I am a Co-Investigator working on the WISERD ESRC Centre on Civil Society: Changing perspectives on Civic Stratification and Civil Repair. This involves undertaking case study research on precarious work within the foundational economy, alongside a focus on the role of grassroots trade union organising in this context. I am also working as part of a team conducting research in the urban factory districts in India, which is funded by the Global Challenges Reseach Fund. The research is examining the challenges facing garment workers in operationalising their labour rights at the workplace. Underpinning this work is an interest in qualitative research methods, particularly ethnographic and longitudinal approaches,  and I am an editor of Qualitative Research.

Cyhoeddiad

2024

  • Felstead, A. and Blakely, H. 2024. Changing places of work. In: McDonough, B. and Parry, J. eds. Sociology, Work and Organisations: A Global Context. Routledge

2023

2021

2020

2019

2018

2017

Adrannau llyfrau

  • Felstead, A. and Blakely, H. 2024. Changing places of work. In: McDonough, B. and Parry, J. eds. Sociology, Work and Organisations: A Global Context. Routledge
  • Blakely, H. and Davies, S. 2020. Austerity, resistance and the labour movement. In: Baines, D. and Cunningham, I. eds. Working in the Context of Austerity: Challenges and Struggles. Bristol University Press, pp. 301-320.

Cynadleddau

Erthyglau

Monograffau

Ymchwil

  • Civil Society
  • Quality of work
  • Welfare states

Bywgraffiad

I completed my doctoral studies (A Second Chance at Life: Labour, Love and Welfare on a South Wales Estate) at Cardiff University’s School of Social Science in 2011. The thesis examined the implications of welfare reform for mothers living in the upper reaches of the South Wales Valleys, charting the everyday interactions of the women with the labour market and pervasive mechanisms of street-level welfare governance. I began working as a researcher with the Wales Institute of Social Economic Research Data and Methods (WISERD) in 2015.