Assoc. Professor Adrian Franklin Sociology University of Tasmania Adrian's research interests include Social Anthropology and the Sociology of Nature. He has an Australian Research Council funded project entitled 'The Changing Nature of Human-Animal Relations in Australia'. Adrian's publications include: Franklin, AS, Animal Nation: The True Story of Animals and Australia, Sydney, UNSW Press, (2005) Franklin, AS, Nature and Social Theory, Sage Publications Ltd, London, (2002) Franklin, AS, White, RD, ‘Animals and modernity: changing human-animal relations, 1949-98’, Journal of Sociology, 37 (3) 219-238 (2001) Franklin, AS, Tranter, BK, White, RD, ‘Explaining Support for Animal Rights: A Comparison of Two Recent Approaches to Humans, Nonhuman Animals, and Postmodernity’, Society and Animals, 9 (2) 127-144 (2001) Franklin, AS, ‘Neo-Darwinian Leisures, the Body and Nature: Hunting and Angling in Modernity’, Body and Society, 7 (4) 57-76 (2001) Franklin, AS, Tranter, BK, White, RD, ‘Animals and Postmaterialism: An Anomaly for Inglehart’, Sociological Sites/Sights, Adelaide: Flinders University, 1-11 (2000) Franklin, AS, Animals and Modern Cultures, Sage, London, 213 (1999) Franklin, AS, ‘Australian hunting and angling sports and the changing nature of human-animal relations in Australia’, The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, 32 (3) 39-56 (1996) Franklin, AS, ‘On Fox-hunting and Angling: Norbert Elias and the 'Sportisation' Process’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 9 (4) 432-457 (1996). |