References
- Alexander, J., Boudon, R., & Cherkaoui, M. (Eds.). (1997). The classical tradition in sociology. London, England: Sage.
- Austin-Broos, D. (1989). Australian sociology and its historical environment. In N. Genov (Ed.), National traditions in sociology. London, England: Sage.
- Baldock, C. (1994). Sociology in Australia and New Zealand. In R. P. Mohan & A. S. Wilke (Eds.), International handbook of contemporary developments in sociology (pp. 587–622). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
- Baldock, C., & Lally, J. (1974). Sociology in Australia and New Zealand. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
- Beilharz, P., & Hogan, T. (2006). The state of sociology in Australia and New Zealand. In S. K. Sareen (Ed.), Australia and India: Interconnections – Identity, representation, belonging (pp. 298–314). New Delhi, India: Mantra Books.
- Bourke, H. (1981). Sociology and the social sciences in Australia, 1912–1928. Australia and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, 17(1), 26-35.
- Butler, L. (2003). Modifying publication practices in response to funding formulas. Research Evaluation, 12(1), 39–46.
- Clair, J. M., Clark, C., Hinote, B. P., Robinson, C. O., & Wasserman, J. A. (2007). Developing, integrating, and perpetuating new ways of applying sociology to health, medicine, policy, and everyday life. Social Science and Medicine, 64, 248–258.
- Collins, R. (1998). The sociology of philosophies. Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
- Collyer, F. M. (1997). The Port Macquarie base hospital: Privatisation and the public purse. Just Policy, 10, 27–39.
- Collyer, F. M. (1998). Privatisation and Australian hospitals. Health Issues, 56, 12–14.
- Collyer, F. M. (2003, November). Theorising privatisation: Policy, network analysis, and class. Electronic Journal of Sociology, 7, 25.
- Collyer, F. M. (2011). The sociology of health and medicine in Australia. Politica Y Sociedad, 48(2), 101–118.
- Collyer, F. M. (2012a). Mapping the sociology of health and medicine: America, Britain and Australia compared. Basingstoke, England: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Collyer, F. M. (2012b). The birth of a speciality: The sociology of health and medicine in Australia. Health Sociology Review, 21(1), 116–130.
- Collyer, F. M. (2013). The production of scholarly knowledge in the global market arena: University ranking systems, prestige and power. Critical Studies in Education, 54, 245–259. doi:10.1080/17508487.2013.788049
- Collyer, F. M., & White, K. N. (1997). Enter the market: Competition, regulation and hospital funding in Australia. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, 33(3), 344–363.
- Collyer, F. M., & White, K. N. (2001). Corporate control of healthcare in Australia Discussion Paper No. 42. Canberra, ACT: Australia Institute, Australian National University.
- Crane, D. (1972). Invisible colleges; diffusion of knowledge in scientific communities. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
- Crane, D., & Small, H. (1992). American sociology since the seventies. In T. C. Halliday & M. Janowitz (Eds.), Sociology and its publics (pp. 197–234). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
- Encel, S. (1984) Sociological education. Alumni Papers, 1(3), 4–9. Kensington, NSW: Alumni Association of the University of New South Wales.
- Encel, S. (2005). Sociology. In J. Germov & T. McGee (Eds.), Histories of Australian sociology (pp. 43–55). Carlton, VIC: Melbourne University Press.
- Freidson, E. (1986). Knowledge and the practice of sociology. Sociological Forum, 1(4), 684–700.
- Germov, J., & McGee, T. (Eds.). (2005). Histories of Australian sociology. Carlton, VIC: Melbourne University Press.
- Grant, J., & Luxford, Y. (2011). ‘Culture it’s a big term isn’t it?’: An analysis of child and family health nurses’ understandings of culture and intercultural communication. Health Sociology Review, 20(1), 16–27.
- Hatt, G. (1996). ‘Feeling low’: The emergence of a concept of low blood pressure and the representation of an embodied identity. Annual Review of Health Social Sciences, 6(1), 57–80.
- Jones, J. (2007). Integration and diversification in healthcare: Financial performance and implications for medicare. Health Sociology Review, 16(1), 27–42.
- Larsen, A.-C. (1996). The child health service: Governing families of pre-school children in Western Australia. Annual Review of Health Social Sciences, 6(1), 113–137.
- Lupton, D. (1993). Is there life after Foucault? Australian Journal of Public Health, 17(4), 298–300.
- Lupton, D. (2005). Medicine and health care in Australia. In W. C. Cockerham (Ed.), The Blackwell companion to medical sociology (pp. 429–440). Carlton, VIC: Blackwell.
- Macintyre, S. (2010). The poor relation: A history of social sciences in Australia. Carlton, VIC: Melbourne University Press.
- Mackenzie, N., & Knipe, S. (2006). Research dilemmas: Paradigms, methods and methodology. Issues in Educational Research, 16(2), 193–205.
- Manderson, L. (1998). Health, illness and the social sciences. In The Academy of Social Sciences (Ed.), Challenges for the social sciences and Australia. Canberra, ACT: RC and NBEET.
- Marginson, S. (1997). Markets in education. Sydney, NSW: Allen & Unwin.
- Marginson, S. (1999). Diversity and convergence in Australian higher education. Australian Universities’ Review, 42(1), 12-23.
- Marginson, S. (2007). Global university rankings: Implications in general and for Australia. Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 29(2), 131–142.
- Marginson, S. (2009). Open source knowledge and university rankings. Thesis Eleven, 96, 9–39.
- Marginson, S., & Considine, M. (2000). The enterprise university: Power, governance and reinvention in Australia. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
- Marshall, H., Robinson, P., Germov, J., & Clark, E. (2009). Teaching sociology in Australia. Canberra, ACT: Education, Employment and Workplace Relations.
- Meyer, J. W., & Rowan, B. (1977). Institutionalised organisations. The American Journal of Sociology, 83(2), 340–363.
- Nisbet, R. (1967). The sociological tradition. London, England: Heinemann.
- Oberschall, A. (Ed.). (1972). The establishment of empirical sociology. New York, NY: Harper and Row.
- Pearlin, L. (1992). Structure and meaning in medical sociology. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 33(1), 1–9.
- Pemberton, J. (2002). Origins and early history of the society for social medicine in the UK and Ireland. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 56, 342–346.
- Richmond, K. (2005). Sociology’s roller-coaster ride in Australia. In J. Germov & T. McGee (Eds.), Histories of Australian sociology (pp. 57–64). Carlton, VIC: Melbourne University Press.
- Seale, C. (2008). Mapping the field of medical sociology. Sociology of Health and Illness, 30(5), 677–695.
- Shils, E. (1982). Knowledge and the sociology of knowledge. Knowledge: Creation, Diffusion, Utilization, 4, 7–32.
- Sikora, J., & Lewins, F. (2007). Attitudes concerning euthanasia: Australia at the turn of the 21st century. Health Sociology Review, 16(1), 68–78.
- Slaughter, S., & Leslie, L. (1997). Academic capitalism. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
- Ward, J. (1979). Symposium on the sociology of medicine. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, 15(3), 18–19.
- Waters, M., & Crook, S. (1990). Sociology one (2nd ed.). Melbourne, VIC: Longman Cheshire.
- White, K. N., & Collyer, F. M. (1997). To market to market: Corporatisation, privatisation and hospital costs. Australian Health Review, 20(2),13–25.
- White, K. N., & Collyer, F. M. (1998). Health care markets in Australia: Ownership of the private hospital sector. International Journal of Health Services, 28(3), 487–510.
- Willis, E. (1982). Research and teaching in the sociology of health and illness. Community Health Studies, 6(2), 144–153.
- Willis, E. (1991). The sociology of health and illness in Australia. Annual Review of Health Social Sciences, 1, 46–53.
- Willis, E. (2005). The first sociology doctorate in Australia. Nexus, 17(1), 11–13.
- Willis, E., & Broom, A. (2004). State of the art. Health Sociology Review, 13(2), 122–144.