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Last broadcast on Mon, 1 Mar 2010, 00:15 on BBC Radio 4 (see all broadcasts).
Synopsis
CP Snow first used the phrase 'corridors of power' in his book Homecoming in 1956. It soon became a cliché, conjuring up a world of officialdom, hierarchy, whispers and secret machinations. The advent of open plan, with its airy atriums and glass walls, was supposed to put pay to all that, ushering in a new sense of democracy to the work place. However, research from Rachel Hurdley reveals the hidden values of corridors. The chance meetings, gossip and confrontations which actually undermine hierarchy will all be lost if we fail to appreciate the seemingly unimportant passage between doors. She discusses her research with Laurie Taylor and with the architect Jeremy Till.
Simon Duncan, Professor of Comparative Social Policy at the University of Bradford, talks about the phenomenon of Living Apart Together - or 'LAT' - a form of relationship which keeps partners out of each other's living space.
Rachel Hurdley
Dr Rachel Hurdley, Sociological Review Fellow at Keele University
Paper: The Power of Corridors: connecting doors, mobilising materials, plotting openness
Published Online: 19 Jan 2010: Sociological Review
Volume 58 Issue 1, Pages 45 - 64
Jeremy Till
Jeremy Till, Dean of Architecture and the Built Environment at the University of Westminster and a partner at Sarah Wigglesworth Architects
Architecture Depends
Publisher: MIT Press
ISBN-10: 0262012537
ISBN-13: 978-0262012539
Architecture and Participation
by Peter Blundell Jones (Editor), Doina Petrescu (Editor), Jeremy Till (Editor)
Publisher: Routledge; 1 edition
ISBN-10: 0415317460
ISBN-13: 978-0415317467
Simon Duncan
Simon Duncan, Professor of Comparative Social Policy, Director of research at the School of Social & International Studies,
New families? Tradition and change in modern relationships
Simon Duncan and Miranda Phillips
Park, A., Curtice, J., Thomson, K., Phillips, M., Johnson, M. and Clery, E. (eds.)
(2008), British Social Attitudes: the 24th Report, London: Sage
Broadcasts
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Wed 24 Feb 201016:00
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Mon 1 Mar 201000:15



