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Dive into the research topics where Bridget Garnham is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Bridget Garnham.


Qualitative Health Research | 2006

What's in a Number? Issues in Providing Evidence of Impact and Quality of Research(ers)

Julianne Cheek; Bridget Garnham; James Quan

One of the challenges facing qualitative researchers in a climate in which audit culture has permeated many facets of the institutions in which they research is how to establish the impact and quality of their research. When examining track records, granting institutions place significant emphasis on publication performance. Although the quality and impact of publications have traditionally been assessed by peer review, there is currently a global trend toward the development, refinement, and increased use of quantitative metrics, particularly citation analysis and journal impact factor. In this article, the authors share their experience of using the metrics citation analysis and journal impact factor in the preparation of an application for funding. Their aim is twofold: to raise awareness about potential issues in the practical application of these metrics; and to offer critique about and, they hope, “quality” to the writing and rhetoric concerning how to measure publication impact and quality.


Gender Place and Culture | 2015

The fallen hero: masculinity, shame and farmer suicide in Australia

Lia Bryant; Bridget Garnham

The drought-stricken Australian rural landscape, cultures of farming masculinity and an economy of value, moral worth and pride form a complex matrix of discourses that shape subjective dynamics that render suicide a possibility for distressed farmers. However, the centrality of a ‘mental health’ perspective and reified notions of ‘stoicism’ within this discursive field operate to exclude consideration of the ways in which cultural identity is linked to emotions. To illuminate and explore complex connections between subjectivity, moral worth and affect in relation to understanding farmer suicide, this article draws on theory and literature on agrarian discourses of masculine subjectivity and shame to analyze empirical data from interviews with farmers during times of environmental, social and economic crisis. The idealized notion of the farming man as ‘Aussie battler’ emerges from romantic agrarian mythology in which pride and self-worth are vested in traditional values of hard work, struggle and self-sacrifice. However, the structural context of agriculture, as it is shaped by the political economy of neoliberalism, threatens farm economic viability and is eroding the pride, self-worth and masculine identity of farmers. The article suggests that the notion of the ‘fallen hero’ captures a discursive shift of a masculinity ‘undone’, a regress from the powerful position of masculine subjectivity imbued with pride to one of shame that is of central importance to understanding how suicide emerges as a possibility for farmers.


International Social Work | 2018

Tele-social work and mental health in rural and remote communities in Australia:

Lia Bryant; Bridget Garnham; Deirdre Tedmanson; Sophie Diamandi

Rural and remote communities often have complex and diverse mental health needs and inadequate mental health services and infrastructure. Information and communication technologies (ICTs) provide an array of potentially innovative and cost-effective means for connecting rural and remote communities to specialist mental health practitioners, services, and supports, irrespective of physical location. However, despite this potential, a review of Australian and international literature reveals that ICT has not attained widespread uptake into social work practice or implementation in rural communities. This article reviews the social work literature on ICT, draws on research on tele-psychology and tele-education, and provides suggestions on how to enhance engagement with ICT by social workers to implement and provide mental health services and supports tailored to community values, needs, and preferences that are commensurate with the values of the social work profession.


Ageing & Society | 2014

A cutting critique: transforming ‘older’ through cosmetic surgery

Bridget Garnham

ABSTRACT This paper engages with a cultural politics of ‘older’. At the centre of this politics are essentialist discourses of corporeal ‘ageing’ that limit and stigmatise the subjective experience of ‘older’. Drawing together theoretical insights from Foucaults work on care of the self with data from in-depth interviews with ‘older’ people who have undergone cosmetic surgery and cosmetic surgery practitioners, this paper advances the proposition that cosmetic surgery can be re-imagined as an ethical practice of self-care. To critique the limitations imposed by ‘natural ageing’ through an ethic of ‘ageing gracefully’, the paper explores how older people who have undergone cosmetic surgery stylise the ethical experience of ‘older’ through active resistance of an ‘elderly’ identity. It argues that the practice of cosmetic surgery by ‘older’ people constitutes a cutting critique of the limits of ‘older’ and an experiment with the possibility of exceeding and ultimately transforming those limits.


Ageing & Society | 2017

Policy, plans and pathways: the ‘crisis’ transition to post-parental care for people ageing with intellectual disabilities in rural Australian carescapes

Bridget Garnham; Lia Bryant; Paul Ramcharan; Nilan G. Yu; Valerie Adams

ABSTRACT The concurrent ageing of parental care-givers and people with intellectual disabilities is driving academic and social welfare concern for a post-parental care ‘crisis’. The ‘crisis’ typically pertains to a transition from primary care in the family home precipitated by the death or incapacity of older parents without a pre-planned pathway to post-parental care. This crisis is amplified in rural communities given low service engagement with families and a deficit of disability-supported accommodation and services. Academics, service providers and policy makers have responded through a problematisation of post-parental care planning. This focus continues to normalise informal care, burdens families with responsibility for planning, and diverts attention from structural deficits in the socio-political carescape. This paper attends to the Australian policy landscape in which long-term care-giving for families living with intellectual disability is enmeshed. It contends that the dyadic and didactic model of informal long-term care has profound implications for social service support and post-parental care planning. Problematisation of carers’ ‘need’ to relinquish primary care and for people with intellectual disabilities to transition to independent and supported living is necessary to unsettle the dominant policy and service discourse around the provision of services to sustain informal care-giving. Innovation is then needed to forge pathways of support for families in rural communities planning on continuing, transitioning and transforming care arrangements across the lifespan.


Journal of Rural Studies | 2014

Economies, ethics and emotions: Farmer distress within the moral economy of agribusiness

Lia Bryant; Bridget Garnham


Journal of Aging Studies | 2013

Designing ‘older’ rather than denying ageing: Problematizing anti-ageing discourse in relation to cosmetic surgery undertaken by older people

Bridget Garnham


Journal of Rural Studies | 2013

Beyond discourses of drought: The micro-politics of the wine industry and farmer distress

Lia Bryant; Bridget Garnham


Sociologia Ruralis | 2014

Problematising the suicides of older male farmers: subjective, social and cultural considerations

Bridget Garnham; Lia Bryant


International Journal of Older People Nursing | 2009

The research/practice nexus: underlying assumptions about the nature of research uptake into practice in literature pertaining to care of the older person.

Bridget Garnham; Julianne Cheek; Pamela Alde

Collaboration


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Lia Bryant

University of South Australia

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Julianne Cheek

University of South Australia

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Deirdre Tedmanson

University of South Australia

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James Quan

University of South Australia

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Nilan G. Yu

University of South Australia

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Sophie Diamandi

University of South Australia

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Wendy Lacey

University of South Australia

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