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David Oswell

Researcher at Goldsmiths, University of London

Publications -  12
Citations -  394

David Oswell is an academic researcher from Goldsmiths, University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Agency (sociology) & Childhood studies. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 11 publications receiving 368 citations. Previous affiliations of David Oswell include University of London.

Papers
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Book

The Agency of Children: From Family to Global Human Rights

TL;DR: This paper surveys the main problem spaces of childhood studies, including family, schooling, crime, health, consumer culture, work and human rights, and provides the theoretical tools for thinking children's agency as spatially, temporally and materially complex.
Book

Television, Childhood, and the Home: A History of the Making of the Child Television Audience in Britain

David Oswell
TL;DR: In this article, the authors uncovers a history of the child television audience and how an audience literally came into being, how it was given substance, and how it became the site of intervention.
Book

Culture and Society: An Introduction to Cultural Studies

David Oswell
TL;DR: From the Beginning Semiosis: From Representation to Translation Power: From Ideology to Government Popular Culture: From People to Multitude Identity: Between Subject and Object Body: Between Nature and Technology Economy: Between Structure and Network World: Between Globe and Empire Ethics: By Way of a Conclusion as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

When images matter: Internet child pornography, forms of observation and an ethics of the virtual

TL;DR: Townshend's arrest and conviction for downloading and possessing Internet child pornography and the publicity surrounding the case provides an initial point of discussion concerning the emergence of an ethics of the image that is not predicated on the actual evidential status of that image but on more virtual forms of observation as mentioned in this paper.
Book Chapter

Media and Communications Regulation and Child Protection: An Overview of the Field

David Oswell
TL;DR: In an age when there is a plurality of content providers, in a system of media abundance, and with an increasing uncertainty to centralized regulatory monopolies, how are children to be protected from harm and illegalities, without chilling the creative heat of invention and new synergies? as mentioned in this paper look to the broader historical context and then to contemporary discussion about regulation.