Citing this article

A standard form of citation of this article is:

Stokoe, Elizabeth (2006). 'Public Intimacy in Neighbour Relationships and Complaints'. Sociological Research Online 11(3) <http://www.socresonline.org.uk/11/3/stokoe.html>.

The following can be copied and pasted into a Bibtex bibliography file, for use with the LaTeX text processor:

@article{stokoe2006,
title = \{Public Intimacy in Neighbour Relationships and Complaints},
author = \{Stokoe, Elizabeth},
journal = \{Sociological Research Online},
ISSN = \{1360-7804},
volume = \{11},
number = \{3},
year = \{2006},
URL = \{http://www.socresonline.org.uk/11/3/stokoe.html},
keywords = \{Neighbour Relationships, Intimacy, Complaints, Disputes, Ethnomethodology},
abstract = \{This paper examines neighbour relationships as an example of non-familial intimacy. It focuses on the way disputes between neighbours often hinge on notions of obtrusive public intimacy, in which the sights and sounds of normatively private domestic lives become sources of complaint. The analyses are based on approximately 150 hours of naturally-occurring interaction with neighbours including telephone calls to mediation centres, environmental health departments and anti-social behaviour units, neighbour mediation interviews, police-suspect interrogations in neighbour crime, and neighbour issues broadcast on television and radio. It was found that while the neighbours maintain good relations at the edges of private spaces, the physical arrangements of domestic properties, with their shared boundaries, means that personal information can be transmitted and observed as a routine matter of course. Disputes often have their basis in the illegitimate breach of boundaries, and in the unwanted and unavoidable receipt of the sights and sounds of other people's intimate lives.},
}

The following can be copied and pasted into a text file, which can then be imported into a reference database that supports imports using the RIS format, such as Reference Manager and EndNote.


TY - JOUR
TI - Public Intimacy in Neighbour Relationships and Complaints
AU - Stokoe, Elizabeth
Y1 - 2006/09/30
JO - Sociological Research Online
SN - 1360-7804
VL - 11
IS - 3
UR - http://www.socresonline.org.uk/11/3/stokoe.html
KW - Neighbour Relationships
KW - Intimacy
KW - Complaints
KW - Disputes
KW - Ethnomethodology
N2 - This paper examines neighbour relationships as an example of non-familial intimacy. It focuses on the way disputes between neighbours often hinge on notions of obtrusive public intimacy, in which the sights and sounds of normatively private domestic lives become sources of complaint. The analyses are based on approximately 150 hours of naturally-occurring interaction with neighbours including telephone calls to mediation centres, environmental health departments and anti-social behaviour units, neighbour mediation interviews, police-suspect interrogations in neighbour crime, and neighbour issues broadcast on television and radio. It was found that while the neighbours maintain good relations at the edges of private spaces, the physical arrangements of domestic properties, with their shared boundaries, means that personal information can be transmitted and observed as a routine matter of course. Disputes often have their basis in the illegitimate breach of boundaries, and in the unwanted and unavoidable receipt of the sights and sounds of other people's intimate lives.
ER -
Stokoe, Elizabeth (2006). 'Public Intimacy in Neighbour Relationships and Complaints'. Sociological Research Online 11(3) <http://www.socresonline.org.uk/11/3/stokoe.html>.

The following can be copied and pasted into a Bibtex bibliography file, for use with the LaTeX text processor:

@article{stokoe2006,
title = \{Public Intimacy in Neighbour Relationships and Complaints},
author = \{Stokoe, Elizabeth},
journal = \{Sociological Research Online},
ISSN = \{1360-7804},
volume = \{11},
number = \{3},
year = \{2006},
URL = \{http://www.socresonline.org.uk/11/3/stokoe.html},
keywords = \{Neighbour Relationships, Intimacy, Complaints, Disputes, Ethnomethodology},
abstract = \{This paper examines neighbour relationships as an example of non-familial intimacy. It focuses on the way disputes between neighbours often hinge on notions of obtrusive public intimacy, in which the sights and sounds of normatively private domestic lives become sources of complaint. The analyses are based on approximately 150 hours of naturally-occurring interaction with neighbours including telephone calls to mediation centres, environmental health departments and anti-social behaviour units, neighbour mediation interviews, police-suspect interrogations in neighbour crime, and neighbour issues broadcast on television and radio. It was found that while the neighbours maintain good relations at the edges of private spaces, the physical arrangements of domestic properties, with their shared boundaries, means that personal information can be transmitted and observed as a routine matter of course. Disputes often have their basis in the illegitimate breach of boundaries, and in the unwanted and unavoidable receipt of the sights and sounds of other people's intimate lives.},
}

The following can be copied and pasted into a text file, which can then be imported into a reference database that supports imports using the RIS format, such as Reference Manager and EndNote.


TY - JOUR
TI - Public Intimacy in Neighbour Relationships and Complaints
AU - Stokoe, Elizabeth
Y1 - 2006/09/30
JO - Sociological Research Online
SN - 1360-7804
VL - 11
IS - 3
UR - http://www.socresonline.org.uk/11/3/stokoe.html
KW - Neighbour Relationships
KW - Intimacy
KW - Complaints
KW - Disputes
KW - Ethnomethodology
N2 - This paper examines neighbour relationships as an example of non-familial intimacy. It focuses on the way disputes between neighbours often hinge on notions of obtrusive public intimacy, in which the sights and sounds of normatively private domestic lives become sources of complaint. The analyses are based on approximately 150 hours of naturally-occurring interaction with neighbours including telephone calls to mediation centres, environmental health departments and anti-social behaviour units, neighbour mediation interviews, police-suspect interrogations in neighbour crime, and neighbour issues broadcast on television and radio. It was found that while the neighbours maintain good relations at the edges of private spaces, the physical arrangements of domestic properties, with their shared boundaries, means that personal information can be transmitted and observed as a routine matter of course. Disputes often have their basis in the illegitimate breach of boundaries, and in the unwanted and unavoidable receipt of the sights and sounds of other people's intimate lives.
ER -