https://journals.uminho.pt/index.php/configuracoes/issue/feed Configurações: Revista de Ciências Sociais 2025-06-18T09:50:57+00:00 Editorial Team configuracoes_cics@ics.uminho.pt Open Journal Systems <p><strong><em>Configurações: Revista de Ciências Sociais </em></strong>is one of the platforms available to national and international researchers for the dissemination of works in sociology and related areas of social sciences. It is a publication that aspires to achieve high standards of quality, featuring external scientific peer review and an Advisory and Scientific Board composed of renowned social scientists at both national and international levels. It is published by the <a href="http://www.cics.uminho.pt/">Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences - University of Minho Hub</a>.</p> https://journals.uminho.pt/index.php/configuracoes/article/view/6017 The invention of healthy grief: repercussions for the experience of bereaved parents 2025-03-19T17:27:22+00:00 Luis Henrique Fuck Michel luis.hfmichel@gmail.com <p>The article aims to empirically verify the repercussions of the concept of healthy grief, identifying the effects of the medicalisation of grief on the experience of parents who have lost their children. To this end, it employs a qualitative and microsocial approach, with data collected through 33 semi-structured interviews. The data were analysed using content analysis techniques and revealed that the medical logic of apprehending grief is not imposed in a homogeneous manner, with the bereaved resisting the conception of their suffering exclusively through this lens.</p> 2025-06-18T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2025 Luis Henrique Fuck Michel https://journals.uminho.pt/index.php/configuracoes/article/view/6623 Ecologising urbanism: a timely dialogue between Bruno Latour and Jean Rémy 2025-06-16T10:52:10+00:00 Domingos Vaz dmvaz@sapo.pt <p>The focus on ecological urbanism challenges existing conceptions of urban planning. In this article, we argue how an articulated framework between Bruno Latour’s political ecology and Jean Rémy’s concept of social transaction can help to conceive a more participatory planning. It is suggested that the two theoretical-analytical approaches, when combined, allow us to consider that society is composed of networks of associations that are fed and transformed by social transactions, providing an analytical entry point for understanding the role that cities play in the ecological and climate crisis.</p> 2025-06-18T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2025 Domingos Vaz https://journals.uminho.pt/index.php/configuracoes/article/view/6624 Pachukanis and the Marxist critique of law: The General Theory of Law and Marxism a century later 2025-06-16T11:14:19+00:00 Vitor Bartoletti Sartori vitorbsartori@gmail.com <p>The Pachukanian project of a Marxist critique of Law depended on the expectation of suppression of legal relations (and commercial exchange as such), precisely considering the author’s positions as part of an innovative project, which, in 1924, understood that the suppression of the Law is close. As a result, the most important thing is that <em>The General Theory of Law and Marxism</em> proposes unfulfilled tasks, related to the thesis about the beneficial character of a Marxist critique of the general theory of Law and based on the revolutionary history of the 20th century. So, it is important to see the merits and aporias of the Marxist critique of Law inspired in Pachukanis’s book.</p> 2025-06-18T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2025 Vitor Bartoletti Sartori https://journals.uminho.pt/index.php/configuracoes/article/view/6618 Nota Editorial: “Género e Desigualdades: Desafios Contemporâneos" 2025-06-16T09:42:40+00:00 Dalila Cerejo dalilacerejo@fcsh.unl.pt Ana Paula Gil anapgil@fcsh.unl.pt Nuno Ferreira Dias dnmf@fcsh.unl.pt <p>-</p> 2025-06-18T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2025 Dalila Cerejo, Ana Paula Gil, Nuno Ferreira Dias https://journals.uminho.pt/index.php/configuracoes/article/view/6619 #EuVivo – (dis)Order around the concept of obstetric violence and its criminalisation in Portugal 2025-06-16T09:52:33+00:00 Laura Brito laura.elisabete91@gmail.com <p style="text-align: justify;">The criminalisation of obstetric violence is one of the demands of social movements for the humanisation of childbirth. The WHO acknowledges the existence of mistreatment in sexual and reproductive health care, recognising it as a global phenomenon. In Portugal, there was an attempt to advance the criminalisation of obstetric violence, which was contested by the Order of Physicians and, in turn, led to the creation of a social movement for the recognition of obstetric violence. This article aims to analyse the response of the Order of Physicians in comparison with existing literature and reports on the creation of the #EuVivo movement as a way to value social movements against obstetric violence.</p> 2025-06-18T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2025 Laura Brito https://journals.uminho.pt/index.php/configuracoes/article/view/6620 Silences unveiled: men disclosing sexual victimisation during childhood and/or adolescence 2025-06-16T10:13:15+00:00 Joana Teixeira Ferraz da Silva jofteixeira@gmail.com Ana Maria Brandão anabrandao@ics.uminho.pt Jean Von Hohendorff jhohendorff@gmail.com <p style="text-align: justify;">This article examines the process of disclosure of sexual victimisation experienced by men during childhood and/or adolescence. Thirteen men living in Portugal, aged between 25 and 63, were interviewed, and the data was analysed using thematic content analysis. Findings indicate that sharing these experiences is often delayed for years due to factors such as self-blame, fear of re-victimisation, and fear of being discredited. Conversely, maturity, emotional support, and intimacy in interpersonal relationships can facilitate the disclosure. Misalignment with normative masculinity emerges as a key factor, reinforcing sociocultural barriers to reporting victimisation.</p> 2025-06-18T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2025 Joana Teixeira Ferraz da Silva, Ana Maria Brandão, Jean Von Hohendorff https://journals.uminho.pt/index.php/configuracoes/article/view/6621 Laying out a script for students’ emotions through gender and emotion socialisation 2025-06-16T10:23:49+00:00 Rebecca Judeh a2019143150@campus.fcsh.unl.pt Dalila Cerejo dalilacerejo@fcsh.unl.pt <p>Acknowledging the harmful impact gender stereotypes have on children’s social and emotional development and education (Fawcett Society, 2020; King<em> et al</em>., 2021) is essential to fostering a positive developmental process. Utilising a gender and emotion socialisation lens, this preliminary study investigates the expression of gender stereotypes and feeling rules in school interactions. Building from Judith Butler’s (2006) theory of gender performativity and Arlie Hochschild’s (1979, 2012) concepts of feeling rules and emotion work, an ethnographic study was conducted at a Portuguese primary school in the spring of 2023. The preliminary data observed feeling rules and gender stereotypes in classroom discourse, learning material, and student acts.</p> 2025-06-18T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2025 Rebecca Judeh, Dalila Cerejo https://journals.uminho.pt/index.php/configuracoes/article/view/6622 The persistence of gender inequalities in the distribution of unpaid work: an explanatory contribution 2025-06-16T10:40:06+00:00 Miguel Chaves miguel.chaves@fcsh.unl.pt Ana Lúcia Teixeira analuciateixeira@fcsh.unl.pt María Dolores Martín-Lagos lmlagos@ugr.es Marta Donat ma.donat@isciii.es <p>This article analyses whether and to what extent gender inequalities persist in the distribution of unpaid domestic work among younger Europeans with higher education, segments of society where the ideals of gender equality are particularly present. Using data from the International Social Survey Programme, we show that this inequality persists to a significant degree, which leads us to draw up a set of hypotheses aimed at contributing to the effort to analyse this phenomenon. This framework of hypotheses draws attention to the importance of analytically considering the cultural survival, albeit in a mitigated, modified and diffuse form, of relevant aspects of the male breadwinner model.</p> 2025-06-18T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2025 Miguel Chaves, Ana Lúcia Teixeira, María Dolores Martín-Lagos, Marta Donat