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Dive into the research topics where Aneta Piekut is active.

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Featured researches published by Aneta Piekut.


Environment and Planning A | 2012

Multidimensional diversity in two European cities: thinking beyond ethnicity

Aneta Piekut; Philip Rees; Gill Valentine; Marek Kupiszewski

This paper shifts discussion on social diversity from ethnic diversity to broader social diversity. We explore spatial social diversity and assess opportunities to encounter diversity in an urban context. In doing so, we prepared a description of diversity in the residential communities of two cities, Leeds and Warsaw, using census data for small areas (UK 2001, Poland 2002). Selected variables were used to represent the key social dimensions of difference: demographic, socioeconomic, ethnic, and disability. A cluster analysis using a k-means algorithm was implemented for each city separately and for the two cities combined using harmonized indicators. We selected eight cluster solutions for each city which had different profiles and spatial distributions. A combined cluster analysis showed that there was little overlap in community types across the two cities. The paper illustrates that Leeds and Warsaw residents experience very different opportunities to encounter difference which need to be taken into account when local diversity policies are implemented.


Sociology | 2016

'Other' Posts in 'Other' Places: Poland through a Postcolonial Lens?

Lucy Mayblin; Aneta Piekut; Gill Valentine

Postcolonial theory has tended to focus on those spaces where European colonialism has had a territorial and political history. This is unsurprising, as much of the world is in this sense ‘postcolonial’. But not all of it. This article focuses on Poland, often theorised as peripheral to ‘old Europe’, and explores the application of postcolonial analyses to this ‘other’ place. The article draws upon reflections arising from a study of responses to ethnic diversity in Warsaw, Poland. In doing so we conclude that postcolonialism does indeed offer some important insights into understanding Polish attitudes to other nationalities, and yet more work also needs to be done to make the theoretical bridge. In the case of Poland we propose the ‘triple relation’ be the starting point for such work.


Qualitative Research | 2015

‘Big Brother welcomes you’: exploring innovative methods for research with children and young people outside of the home and school environments

Catherine Harris; Lucy Jackson; Lucy Mayblin; Aneta Piekut; Gill Valentine

This article discusses some of the challenges involved in conducting research with children and young people outside of the home and school environments. We respond to the need to develop new child-centred research techniques which move beyond existing power relations among children and adults by anchoring our approach in the idea of mystery. The paper reports on research utilising a mixed-method design which includes one new technique – the Big Brother diary room. We discuss the unpredictable nature of the fieldwork, reflect on the ‘messiness’ of the research process, and critically evaluate our own research design.


Ethnicities | 2015

Mapping the meaning of ‘difference’ in Europe: A social topography of prejudice

Gill Valentine; Aneta Piekut; Aleksandra Winiarska; Catherine Harris; Lucy Jackson

This paper draws on original empirical research to investigate popular understandings of prejudice in two national contexts: Poland and the United Kingdom. The paper demonstrates how common-sense meanings of prejudice are inflected by the specific histories and geographies of each place: framed in terms of ‘distance’ (Poland) and ‘proximity’ (United Kingdom), respectively. Yet, by treating these national contexts as nodes and linking them analytically the paper also exposes a connectedness in these definitions which brings into relief the common processes that produce prejudice. The paper then explores how inter-linkages between the United Kingdom and Poland within the wider context of the European Union are producing – and circulating through the emerging international currency of ‘political correctness’ – a common critique of equality legislation and a belief that popular concerns about the way national contexts are perceived to be changing as a consequence of super mobility and super diversity are being silenced. This raises a real risk that in the context of European austerity and associated levels of socioeconomic insecurity, negative attitudes and conservative values may begin to be represented as popular normative standards which transcend national contexts to justify harsher political responses towards minorities. As such, the paper concludes by making a case for prejudice reduction strategies to receive much greater priority in both national and European contexts.


Social Science Research | 2017

Spaces of encounter and attitudes towards difference: A comparative study of two European cities

Aneta Piekut; Gill Valentine

Scholars have been increasingly interested in how everyday interactions in various places with people from different ethnic/religious background impact inter-group relations. Drawing on representative surveys in Leeds and Warsaw (2012), we examine whether encounters with ethnic and religious minorities in different type of space are associated with more tolerance towards them. We find that in Leeds, more favourable affective attitudes are associated with contact in institutional spaces (workplace and study places) and socialisation spaces (social clubs, voluntary groups, religious meeting places); however, in case of behavioural intentions - operationalised as willingness to be friendly to minority neighbours - only encounters in socialisation spaces play a significant role in prejudice reduction. In Warsaw, people who have contacts with ethnic and religious minorities in public (streets, park, public services and transport) and consumption spaces (cafés, pubs, restaurants) express more positive affective attitudes towards them, but only encounters in consumption space translate into willingness to be friendly to minority neighbours.


Social & Cultural Geography | 2017

Attitudes towards the ‘stranger’: negotiating encounters with difference in the UK and Poland

Catherine Harris; Lucy Jackson; Aneta Piekut; Gill Valentine

Abstract Due to recent intensification in international mobility in Europe, its citizens are exposed to a much wider range of lifestyles and competing attitudes towards difference. Individuals are, therefore, increasingly likely to encounter ‘strangers’ and are, therefore, required to negotiate discontinuities and contradictions between the values that are transmitted through different sites. In response, the article explores the concept of the ‘stranger’ through original data collected in the UK and Poland. The article highlights that the construction of who is a stranger depends on national historical contexts, core values and related visions of the society. The UK and Poland have very different histories and experiences with social diversity, impacting on the ways in which individuals negotiate strange encounters. In both countries, the ‘stranger’ is often seen in a negative way and in relation to the minority groups that are perceived to be visibly different, distinct or ‘unknown’ in contemporary times. In Poland, this is now largely articulated through sexual prejudice (homophobia), whilst in the UK, attitudes towards the ‘stranger’ are largely conveyed through religious prejudice (Islamophobia). As such, the article offers a means of understanding how encounters with difference ‘produce’ strangers in different contexts.


The Geographical Journal | 2015

Intimate encounters: the negotiation of difference within the family and its implications for social relations in public space

Gill Valentine; Aneta Piekut; Catherine Harris


European Sociological Review | 2016

Perceived Diversity and Acceptance of Minority Ethnic Groups in Two Urban Contexts

Aneta Piekut; Gill Valentine


Archive | 2007

Od zbiorowości do społeczności: rola migrantów osiedleńczych w tworzeniu się społeczności imigranckich w Polsce

Agata Górny; Aleksandra Grzymała-Kazłowska; Ewa Kępińska; Agnieszka Fihel; Aneta Piekut


Polish Sociological Review | 2014

Seeking the New Normal? Troubled Spaces of Encountering Visible Differences in Warsaw

Aneta Piekut; Ulrike M Vieten; Gill Valentine

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Lucy Jackson

University of Sheffield

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Lucy Mayblin

University of Sheffield

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Ulrike M Vieten

Queen's University Belfast

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Marek Kupiszewski

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Nema Dean

University of Glasgow

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