BernardesJ (1985) Family ideology: Identification and exploration. Sociological Review33: 275–297 (reproduced in ChealD (ed.) (2003) Family: Critical Concepts in Sociology. London: Routledge).
2.
BernardesJ (1987) Doing things with words: Sociology and family policy debates. The Sociological Review35(4): 679–702.
3.
BourdieuP (1996) On the family as a realized category. Theory, Culture & Society13(3): 19–26.
4.
BudgeonSRoseneilS (2004) Editors’ introduction: Beyond the conventional family. Current Sociology52(2): 127–134.
5.
CalhounC (2012) Human suffering and humanitarian response: Sociology, suffering and humanitarianism. Presidential Seminar, British Sociological Association, London, 3February.
6.
CarbyHV (1996) White woman listen! Black feminism and the boundaries of sisterhood. In: BakerHADiawaraMLindeborgRH (eds) Black British Cultural Studies: A Reader. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 61–86. (First published in Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (1982) The Empire Strikes Back: Race and Racism in Seventies Britain. London: Hutchinson).
7.
CraibI (1994) The Importance of Disappointment. London: Routledge.
8.
CrossleyS (2016a) Realising the (troubled) family’, ‘crafting the neoliberal state’. Families, Relationships and Societies5(2): 263–279.
9.
CrossleyS (2016b) The Troubled Families programme: In, for and against the state? In: FengerMHudsonJNeedhamC (eds) Social Policy Review28. Cambridge: Polity Press, pp. 127–146.
10.
EdwardsRGilliesV (2012) Farewell to family? Notes on an argument for retaining the concept. Families, Relationships and Societies1: 63–69.
11.
EdwardsRGilliesVRibbens McCarthyJ (2012) The politics of concepts: Family and its (putative) replacements. British Journal of Sociology63(4): 730–746.
12.
GabbJSilvaEB (2011) Introduction to critical concepts: Families, intimacies and personal relationships. Sociological Research Online16(4): 1–5.
13.
GildingM (2010) Reflexivity over and above convention: The new orthodoxy in the sociology of personal life, formerly sociology of the family. British Journal of Sociology61(4): 757–777.
14.
GilliesV (2003) Families and intimate relationships: A review of the sociological literature. Families & Social Capital ESRC Research Group, Working Paper no. 2. London: South Bank University. Available at: http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/families/workingpapers/familieswp2.pdf
15.
GilliesV (2007) Marginalised Mothers: Exploring Working Class Experiences. London: Routledge.
16.
GilliesV (2011) ‘From function to competence: Engaging with the new politics of family. Sociological Research Online 16. Available at: http://www.socresonline.org.uk/16/4/11.html
17.
GubriumJHolsteinJ (1990) What Is ‘Family’?Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing.
18.
HeaphyB (2011) Critical relational displays. In: DermottESeymourJ (eds) Displaying Families: A New Concept for the Sociology of Personal Life. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
19.
HooperCA (1992) Mothers Surviving Child Sexual Abuse. London: Routledge.
20.
HooperCAHumphreysC (1998) Women whose children have been sexually abused: Reflections on a debate. British Journal of Social Work28: 565–580.
21.
HooperCAGorinSCabralCet al. (2007) Living with Hardship 24/7: The Diverse Experiences of Families in Poverty in England. London: The Frank Buttle Trust.
22.
KleinmanAKleinmanJ (1991) Suffering and its professional transformation: Toward an ethnography of interpersonal experience. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry15(3): 275–301.
23.
KorbinJ (2013) Cultural context, families and troubles. In: Ribbens McCarthyJHooperCAGilliesV (eds) Family Troubles? Exploring Changes and Challenges in the Family Lives of Children and Young People, pp. 27–34.
24.
MorganDHJ (1985) The Family, Politics, and Social Theory. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
25.
MorganDHJ (2003) Introduction. In: ChealD (ed.) Family: Critical Concepts in Sociology. London: Routledge, pp. 1–16.
26.
MorganDHJ (2011) Rethinking Family Practices. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
27.
PhoenixAHussainF (2007) Parenting and Ethnicity. York: Joseph Rowntree Foundation /National Children’s Bureau.
28.
RibbensJ (1994) Mothers and Their Children: A Feminist Sociology of Childrearing. London: SAGE.
29.
Ribbens McCarthyJ (2008) Security, insecurity and family lives. In: CochraneATalbotD (eds) Security: Welfare, Crime and Society. Maidenhead: Open University Press/McGraw-Hill, pp. 61–92.
30.
Ribbens McCarthyJ (2012) The powerful relational language of ‘family’: Togetherness, belonging and personhood. Sociological Review60(1): 68–90.
31.
Ribbens McCarthyJEdwardsR (2011) Key Concepts in Family Studies. London: SAGE.
32.
Ribbens McCarthyJDoolittleMDay SclaterS (2012) Understanding Family Meanings: A Reflective Text. Bristol: Policy Press (Published in a previous version in 2008 as Family Meanings. Milton Keynes: Open University).
33.
Ribbens McCarthyJGilliesVHooperCA (2018) Introduction. Sociological Research Online.
34.
Ribbens McCarthyJHooperCAGilliesV (eds) (2013) Family Troubles? Exploring Changes and Challenges in the Family Lives of Children and Young People. Bristol: Policy Press.
35.
SayerA (2011) Why Things Matter to People. Cambridge: Polity Press.
36.
Shweder RichardAMenonU (2014) Old questions for the new anthropology of morality: A commentary. Anthropological Theory14(3): 356–370.
37.
SmartC (2007) Personal Lives. Cambridge: Polity Press.
38.
SomervilleJ (2000) Feminism and the Family: Politics and Society in the UK and USA. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
39.
ThorneBYalomM (1982) Rethinking the Family: Some Feminist Questions. London: Longman.
40.
VetereA (2013) What supports resilient coping among family members? A systemic practitioner’s perspective. In: Ribbens McCarthyJHooperCAGilliesV (eds) Family Troubles? Exploring Changes and Challenges in the Family Lives of Children and Young People. Bristol: Policy Press, pp. 279–290.
41.
WilkinsonI (2005) Suffering: A Sociological Introduction. Cambridge: Polity Press.
42.
ZvinklieneA (1996) The state of family studies in Lithuania. Marriage & Family Review22(3–4): 203–232.