Items where Author is "Eseonu, Temidayo"
Journal Article
Eseonu, Temidayo (2025) Conceptualising Anti‐Racist Institutionalism. Social Policy and Administration. ISSN 0144-5596
Eseonu, Temidayo (2023) Street-level bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the individual in public services. Michael Lipsky. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2010. Pp. xviii, 244. Administrative Theory & Praxis, 45 (3). pp. 259-261.
Eseonu, Temidayo (2022) Co-creation as social innovation: including ‘hard-to-reach’ groups in public service delivery. Public Money and Management, 42 (5). pp. 306-313. ISSN 0954-0962
Eseonu, Temidayo and Duggan, James (2022) Negotiating cultural appropriation while re-imagining co-production via Afrofuturism. Qualitative Research Journal, 22 (1). pp. 96-107. ISSN 1443-9883
Eseonu, Temidayo (2021) Entanglements of Race and Opportunity Structures : Challenging Racialised Transitions for ‘the Lost Generation’. Journal of Applied Youth Studies, 4 (5). pp. 445-458. ISSN 2204-9193
Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings
Eseonu, Temidayo (2024) Racialised institutions in the UK welfare state. In: Diversity and Welfare Provision Tension and Discrimination in 21st Century Britain :. Bristol Policy Press, Bristol, pp. 78-96. ISBN 9781447365150
Eseonu, Temidayo (2022) Lets talk about race: considerations for course design in public administration. In: International Handbook on Teaching Public Administration :. Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, pp. 300-308. ISBN 9781800375680
Eseonu, Temidayo (2021) Building Back Inclusively. In: Democracy in a Pandemic :. University of Westminster Press, London, pp. 37-42. ISBN 9781814386183
Book/Report/Proceedings
Jacobs, Naomi and Fonseca Braga, Mariana and Calvo, Mirian and Costa, Ana and Eseonu, Temidayo and Fagan, Des and Kwon, Nuri and Montalvan Lume, Juan and Mullagh, Louise and Thomas, Lisa and Peevers, Jenny and Perez Ojeda, David and Schmidt, Scott and Chekansky, Kirsty (2024) The Little Book of Design for Policy. ImaginationLancaster, Lancaster.
Other
Eseonu, Temidayo (2024) Video Summary: Making a case for Afrofuturism as a critical qualitative inquiry method for liberation. UNSPECIFIED.