The Department of Sociology at Colby College is hiring a tenure-track Assistant Professor starting September 1, 2023. Colby is a highly selective liberal arts college in a spectacular setting with a rich sociological history: it was here that Albion Small taught some of the first sociology courses in the country!
The Department of Sociology is searching for an early career scholar who aims to make an impact through high-profile research, excellence in teaching, and meaningful student engagement. Areas of specialization are open. The ideal candidate will have a publication track record, ample experience with teaching—including course design—and a record of success advising and mentoring individuals from groups under-represented in higher education.
The review of completed applications will begin on October 1, 2022 and continue until the position is filled. A complete application must include:
a curriculum vitae
letter of application that outlines the candidate’s research, teaching philosophy, and teaching experience, and demonstrates a commitment to the value of diversity and to inclusive teaching
representative samples of scholarship
three confidential letters of recommendation
Materials must be submitted electronically to: http://apply.interfolio.com/111909. Candidates may be A.B.D., but Ph.D.s must be in hand prior to September 1, 2023.
The Department of Sociology at Dartmouth College invites applications for a full-time tenure-track appointment as Assistant Professor beginning Fall 2023. The Department is seeking scholars who have a teaching and research focus on South Asia and is open to a wide range of methodological and substantive approaches, including but certainly not limited to:
Comparative Historical Sociology
Demography
Gender
Urban Sociology
Migration
Social Movements
Sociology at Dartmouth is a vibrant intellectual community with scholars spanning four broad research areas: health, political and economic sociology, race and ethnicity, and social psychology. For more information about the department, please visit http://sociology.dartmouth.edu/.
The person in this position will teach courses in Sociology and in conjunction with Dartmouth’s interdicisplinary Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages Program (ASCL). ASCL boasts a strong resource commitment to South Asian programming and an active South Asian student community. For more information about ASCL, please visit: https://ascl.dartmouth.edu/.
Applicants should have a Ph.D. in Sociology or a closely related field before the appointment begins. For a complete position description, please visit https://apply.interfolio.com/111087.
The Review of applications will begin on September 15, 2022and continue until the position is filled.
Colombia is an “orangutan in cutaway,” a stable democracy in perpetual violence, a paradox, many say (Bushnell 1993; Gutiérrez 2014). It is a country that has had one of the oldest electoral democracies in the world and yet it is marked by cycles of violence that reproduce one another. In the mid-twentieth century, the country fought a civil war along party lines—Conservatives vs. Liberals during the infamous period of “La Violencia”—that ended with a short military dictatorship and a pact between the parties to alternate the presidency and divide both bureaucratic and electoral offices between them. The pact came to be known as the National Front (1958-1974). It managed to stop a first wave of violence, but lurking beneath was a second wave, one that was fought on the terms of the Cold War.
Three main kinds of actors entered the fray during this second civil war: leftist guerrillas, right-wing paramilitary groups (with close connections to the military and local elites), and the state. The communist-left was composed of a plurality of insurgent actors—the most prominent being the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), National Liberation Army (ELN), 19th of April Movement (M-19), and Popular Liberation Army (EPL). Most of them had ties with the Colombian Communist Party and had specific political ideals. In 1964, for instance, FARC launched its revolutionary program urging other leftist groups to join an armed struggle for agrarian reform. As the 1980s advanced, guerrilla groups, as well as right-wing paramilitaries, grew in conjunction with the increasingly profitable drug industry.
The term “left” in the country came to be associated with this contentious left. This was a left unlike the left elsewhere which is often associated with workers’ movements—an important difference to keep in mind in the Colombian context. During the 1990s, some of these contentious left groups or some of their factions entered institutional politics—though the largest ones, FARC and ELN, did not—but the fault-line did not blur and the left continued to be deemed the enemy of the nation.
On the contrary, former President Álvaro Uribe Vélez (2002-2010) furthered the marginalization of the left from the political establishment. He arose amidst a destabilized party system that saw the Liberal and Conservative parties lose control of the field. He espoused a law-and-order discourse; his rise was interpreted favorably by the United States as it was discursively aligned with the American government’s war on terrorism after 9/11, the national elites that saw the rise of FARC and ELN as a threat, and the anti-left commitments of paramilitary groups.
The recent presidential election represents a break from this pattern. On 19 June 2022, in the second round of the presidential election, Gustavo Petro and Francia Márquez won the presidential and vice-presidential seats, respectively. Petro is a demobilized member of M-19—a guerrilla organization that in 1990 transformed into the political movement Democratic Alliance M-19. That is, the new president, Gustavo Petro, comes from the communist left, and thus hails from a category that only a short time ago was deemed an enemy of the nation.
This points to a number of questions of interest to those in the historical and political social sciences and to Latin America experts alike. What is happening in Colombia? Is it as big a shift as it seems? Where could the country be heading? Laura Acosta and Nicolás Torres-Echeverry, experts on Colombia, provide insights.
CHS: What do you make of this political moment in Colombia?
Laura:
Gustavo Petro and Francia Márquez won on a platform that promised radical and substantive social and economic change. For years, Petro and Márquez have consistently launched political programs that are meant to represent the “people” and “the nobodies.” Their election has given hope to many Colombians who have been historically oppressed by violence, patriarchy, racism, and classism. Will they be able to live up to their promises? That is still to be seen. Their electoral victory, however, appears to be of historic importance because the election of the alternative candidate, Rodolfo Hernández, would presumably have taken the country in a dramatically different direction. Most importantly, judging by the country’s most recent history, the results of the election were hard to predict.
Petro won with 50.4 percent of the vote against Hernández, a 70-year old businessman and TikTok celebrity who has been called the Colombian Trump. Among his most controversial statements are that women from neighboring Venezuela (a country with which Colombia had broken off diplomatic relations due to the emigration crisis) “are factories of poor children” and that Adolf Hitler was a “great thinker.”
Considering Hernández’s profile in addition to his plans to expand the military budget, it is not unreasonable to believe that recent post-election events would not have happened if he had won. A few days after the election, the last group of FARC leaders appeared in front of the Special Jurisdiction of Peace (in Spanish: Jurisdicción Especial para la Paz, JEP) to give evidence of human rights violations—JEP was created in the framework of the peace agreement signed in 2016 between FARC and the Colombian government. Additionally, the still-active guerrilla ELN expressed their intention to engage in peace negotiations with Petro’s government.
Only weeks after the election, Petro sat to dialogue with Uribe and formed alliances with Liberals, Conservatives, and the U party—he has now consolidated a majority coalition in congress. After half a century of fighting against communist guerrillas and preventing the left from participating in politics, is it possible for former antagonists to stand on the same side of the political boundary? Has the left finally lost its place as the primary enemy of the nation?
Seen with a bit of hindsight, it appears as though the current moment may represent a shift of political boundaries. Colombia has a long history of intense anti-communist violence. For decades, mutating violent coalitions have persecuted leftist political parties and social movements (Gómez-Suárez 2020). The violence escalated in the late 1980s with the genocide of the leftist leaders of the Unión Patriótica—a political party launched by FARC. And even after the signing of a peace agreement between the government and FARC in 2016, murders of leftist leaders of social movements and demobilized combatants continued. This year alone, 99 social leaders and 23 demobilized FARC combatants have been assassinated.
As President, Uribe claimed that leftist guerrilla groups were “international criminal organizations” who disguised themselves as representatives of the “people.” During his mandate, official violence against the left escalated to the point that the army executed thousands of people it deemed “insurgents” who were in fact innocent civilians. National and international human rights activists condemned his government’s use of excessive force and exposed Uribe’s ties with right-wing paramilitaries. He was also a vocal opponent of peace negotiations with FARC and led the campaign to reject the peace agreement because, as he declared, the country should not “negotiate with criminals.”
The Colombian right has capitalized on anti-leftist discourse for nearly two decades while enjoying—almost unchallenged—electoral success. Not only that, it has motivated a campaign of violent oppression against social leaders in the country’s periphery. While Petro’s victory was surprising under such circumstances, it is perhaps even more unexpected to see former enemies cooperating with him. It will be interesting to see how political discourse develops as politicians make sense of the current moment and what may be a very different future.
Nicolás:
I agree that this is a big shift in Colombian politics. I would add three things to what Laura has already said.
First, the political field in Colombia is highly fragmented, which serves to explain why it is susceptible to rapid ideological change and the current political moment. For a long time, during the National Front, the 1970s and 1980s, that fragmentation was contained within the two dominant parties. During this period, as the conflict ceased to be fought along party lines and competition turned intra-partisan, party boundaries lost meaning and fragmentation increased (Gutiérrez 2007). As a result, political operatives started to cross party boundaries. For these operatives, the one boundary that remained relevant throughout the 1990s and 2000s and thus limited their action was the one which divided the establishment parties from “the left”; this boundary was also central to the “left” insofar as it did not countenance working with the political actors tied to the two parties.
But something has changed. During my fieldwork examining the presidential elections in mid-sized cities, I saw a variety of political operatives and organizations moving to support Petro and Márquez’s campaign. A clear example were neighborhood leaders or “brokers,” figures who are central to electoral mobilization in Colombia as they are elsewhere (Auyero 2001). Many of these brokers supported the political patrons they had worked with in the congressional elections in March 2022—in parties that had explicitly opposed the Petro-Márquez campaign. When the congressional election was over, these operatives switched to support the Petro-Márquez ticket in the presidential campaign. Patrons, mostly congressional candidates and party bosses, were very worried about this; they couldn’t believe that, the week before the election for congress, neighborhood brokers used their WhatsApp profile pictures to promote one candidate, say of the Conservative Party, and a week after the election, they used them to promote the Petro-Márquez campaign. There was a fissure that allowed those political operatives to cross what had been a boundary.
Yet, the fissuring of support for traditional political elites doesn’t mean solid support for Petro and Márquez. The Petro-Máquez campaign relied on a patchwork of diverse and fragmented organizations. Some had social movement characteristics, like peasant associations, indigenous and Afro-Colombian associations, and student organizations. These were often types of organizations that developed solidarities in the midst of the ongoing civil war or in advocating for peace and for victims. Others were more like the political organizations that comprised the base of the Liberal and Conservative parties of yore and the parties that branched out of them after the 1990s—organizations which relied more heavily on patronage and clientelism, often in the form of bureaucratic appointments and state support to improve neighborhoods. What changed to enable these unlikely friends to work together is a question that we should grapple with in the future.
So, there was organizational grounding behind Petro and Márquez, but it was quite fragmented—it did not stand on a strong labor or indigenous movement, for instance. For this reason, it is hard to assess how stable the political phenomenon will be in the long run. In other words, Petro and Márquez’s base is shifting under their feet. But we should keep an eye on Petro’s party development and how it evolves in the lead-up to the local elections next year. I am skeptical that the party-building effort will be successful; I do not see the conditions that would allow for a more institutionalized political organization in the country.
The second thing that I’d like to say is that I trace the process of incorporation of the left—of the contentious or communist left as mentioned above—as part of the broader changes tied to the 1991 Constitution and the political decentralization that took place around the same period. This might seem flippant to some sociologists that do not think of constitutions as deepening democracy, but, in the case of Colombia (and I would argue that more broadly in other Global South countries), constitutional reforms in recent decades represented an attempt to incorporate groups that did not participate in institutional politics and the constitutions themselves were products of political struggles. In the case of M-19 and Gustavo Petro, this incorporation is very clear; they decided to pivot from contentious armed action to participation in the national assembly that drafted the Constitution. M-19 had around one third of the seats in that assembly.
The Constitution was already a product of diverse organized groups (Lemaitre 2009). But it also provided several mechanisms of participation from which the same groups and others developed political identities and tools to organize politically and fight for their interests on institutional terrain. Tianna Paschel (2016) has described this well in the case of Afro-Colombian communities. Afro-Colombians mobilized to demand recognition as an ethnic group in the Constitution. It led to blackness becoming a category of contestation. In striving for this, black organizations developed capabilities and an understanding of blackness as a political category tied to ethnicity and rights over their territories. This is only an example, but it is particularly interesting for the election at hand because Francia Márquez, a former activist, single mother, and the first Afro-Colombian vice-president, comes from this process. Yet, we need to keep in mind that the development of political identities and organizational capabilities has been broader including indigenous, peasant, and LGBTQ movements. In this sense, those changes that deepened democratization in Colombia are similar to other Global South democracies that triggered the development of an increasing variety of political identities that entered the fight for power within institutions (see Heller 2022). Part of the Petro and Márquez story starts there.
The third thing I want to briefly mention is political decentralization. Decentralization was also a reform that came as an incorporation mechanism negotiated between the government and FARC in the mid-1980s. For the former contentious actors of the left, involvement in subnational governments, especially in large cities, was very important. Their experience governing Bogotá was especially important. Cities offered relative cover from violence, allowed them to develop a bureaucracy, and taught them to compete in large elections. The case of Gustavo Petro shows just how important this was, since he grew politically from his term as mayor of Bogotá (2011-2015), gaining visibility and testing policy ideas. Without subnational elections and the left’s control of subnational governments, I think, we would be seeing a very different political field and, possibly, a very different kind of left.
CHS: Where could the country be heading?
Laura:
Colombia still has a lot to learn from its own history. Institutional reform, alone, does not provide all the guarantees needed to achieve true peace. The government also needs to protect its civilians and former rebels from violence. This is going to be a major challenge in a country that suffers from a disconnection between what is discussed and articulated at the institutional level and the reality of unfolding events on the ground.
Studying the period between “La Violencia” (1948-1958) and the second civil war (1964-2016), I have found that by 1958 both local and national leaders were willing to cooperate within the existing institutional arrangements. In the provinces, rebel leaders mobilized their organizations to sign peace pacts with former enemies. They were committed to a peaceful bipartisan coexistence as well as cooperating with the national government. Thousands of combatants demobilized in the framework of the National Front. In return, they demanded that the new government expand democratic protections and adopt a new state policy toward the countryside, which would include the loosening of Agrarian Bank loan requirements, building roads and schools, and returning stolen lands (Karl 2017).
On paper, Liberals and Conservatives agreed to implement an agrarian reform. But they failed to do so. Perhaps even more consequential was their failure to protect demobilized combatants and civilians from ongoing violence, which ultimately forced them to return to arms in 1964. Elite politicians in Bogotá thought that if they stopped fighting, violence would stop too. Yet they ignored that violence, as it was experienced in rural areas, followed a very different logic. Rural citizens reported being persecuted by state officials (Guzmán, Fals Borda, and Luna 1962). On the ground, violence was understood as a form of state oppression.
It appears that the country is heading in a new direction. Petro and Márquez are set to start their mandate on 7 August 2022 not only with a majority coalition in congress, but also with active armed groups willing to negotiate. The ELN guerrilla leaders and leaders from “El Clan del Golfo” and other remobilized paramilitary groups have stated their intention to engage in peace talks with Petro’s government. Some experts are optimistic about the possibility of a lasting and genuine peace.
Yet, not all of the news is good news. In a country where the government does not have a monopoly on violence, the military is reluctant to cooperate. A day after Petro announced his plans to reform the military, Colombia’s chief general, Eduardo Zapateiro, resigned. The Colombian military has fought against leftist guerrillas for decades and, as in many countries, it is a politically conservative institution. It is still to be seen what kind of relationship Petro will have with the military. So far, the persecution of leftist leaders and ex-combatants does not seem to have diminished and they urgently need the protection of the incoming government.
Nicolás:
I take Laura’s cautious remark seriously, but I am more optimistic. The reason has precisely to do with the change of political subjectivities tied to the second wave of conflict and the political coalition and bureaucracy that is starting to emerge around Petro and Márquez’s government.
The National Front did end the first wave of violence. It did so partially because it extinguished discursively the fight between liberals and conservatives and transformed political subjectivities. We might be facing a similar context in which “the left” will finally be completely incorporated institutionally and in which the Manichean discourse against it perishes. This would imply a reinvention of the left and the right in the country. Though of course we also need to be attentive to the way a discursive reinvention of the ideological spectrum holds the potential to reproduce violence.
What also seems to be happening is that two bureaucratic paths are converging. One path comes from the trajectory of the left in subnational governments; the other comes from the bureaucracy that was developed during the era of President Juan Manuel Santos(2010-2018) and that accompanied the peace process. On the one hand, this is a competent bureaucracy that also has the potential of integrating a set of minority actors into the state—as has recently happened by naming indigenous leaders as heads of the Unit for Victims and the Unit for Land Restitution. On the other hand, this convergence of bureaucratic paths appears to represent a pact between the left and a sector of the national elites. Both things might lead to more stable and capable government, even if less transgressive in terms of the political reforms that some expect from Petro and Márquez, or less progressive and inclusive than even Petro and Márquez would wish for.
Laura Acosta is a PhD candidate in sociology at Northwestern University. Her research investigates the causes of the most persistent civil wars and the factors that lead to their self-reproduction.
Nicolás Torres-Echeverry is a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at the University of Chicago. His research grapples with the decay of political parties and the forms of political organization that take their place.
References
Auyero, J. (2001). Poor people’s politics: Peronist survival networks and the legacy of Evita. Duke University Press.
Bushnell, D. (1993). The Making of Modern Colombia: A Nation in Spite of Itself. University of California Press.
Gómez-Suárez, A. (2020). A Short History of Anti-Communist Violence in Colombia (1930–2018): Rupture with the Past or Rebranding? The Palgrave Handbook of Anti-Communist Persecutions, 383-403.
Gutiérrez, F. (2007). ¿Lo que el viento se llevó? Los partidos políticos y la democracia en Colombia, 1958-2002. Editorial Norma.
Gutiérrez, F. (2014). El orangután con sacoleva: cien años de democracia y represión en Colombia (1910-2010). IEPRI.
Guzmán, G., Fals Borda, O., & Luna, E. U. (1962). La violencia en Colombia: estudio de un proceso social (Vol. 10). Ediciones Tercer Mundo.
Heller, P. (2022). Democracy in the Global South. Annual Review of Sociology, 48.
Karl, R. (2017). Forgotten Peace. Oakland, CA: University of California Press.
Lemaitre, J. (2009). El derecho como conjuro: fetichismo legal, violencia y movimientos sociales. Bogotá: Siglo del Hombre, Uniandes. Paschel, T. S. (2016). Becoming Black Political Subjects. Princeton University Press.
The American Sociological Association (ASA) invites you to submit your abstract for the session The Toolkit of Emerging Autocrats to present at the International Sociological Association’s XX World Congress of Sociology. The conference will take place in Melbourne, Australia from June 25th to July 1st, 2023.
Description
How are the emerging autocrats grabbing and maintaining power across the world? Many aspiring autocrats share strategies and tools to undermine democratic processes. These strategies include changing political institutions, rewriting constitutions, silencing opposition, spreading misinformation, and crafting divisions by instigating racism, nativism, and nationalism. Through a global and comparative lens, the session panelists will examine the tools, conditions, and mechanisms that allow strongmen to successfully undermine democratic traditions and constrain civil rights.
The Toolkit of Emerging Autocrats will be the ASA session at the International Sociological Association (ISA) conference. It is organized by Cecilia Menjívar (ASA president) and Deisy Del Real (ASA delegate to ISA). Please, direct your questions to (deisydel@usc.edu) and submit your 300-word abstracts by September 15, 2022.
University College Dublin, Ireland (UCD), School of Sociology is hiring an Assistant Professor (Above Bar – Prestigious Ad-Astra Fellow). Peace, conflict, memory, nationalism, war and human rights are among many topics and areas of interest.
The International Studies and International Business Program at Fairfield University invites applications for a position of Assistant Professor of the Practice or Instructor of the Practice in College of Arts & Sciences to begin fall 2022. This is a non-tenure track, full-time, fixed-term, renewable position. Candidates must have PhD in Sociology or Anthropology, international expertise, and be able to teach our foundational course, “People, Places, and Global Issues.” Candidates should show a commitment to excellence in teaching. Interest and experience in teaching to promote social justice is desirable.
Responsibilities include:
Teaching four courses each semester at the undergraduate level. Teaching assignments may require teaching day, evening, face-to-face, hybrid and online. Academic advising and extracurricular student engagement. Providing service to the program, the College of Arts & Sciences, the university, and the community at-large as necessary and appropriate.
Qualifications: Candidates must have masters or PhD in Sociology or Anthropology from an accredited institution.
Application Instructions:
Review of applications will begin immediately and will continue until the position is filled. Preference will be given to applications that arrive before March 1, 2022. Only complete files will be reviewed by the search committee and for full consideration, please upload the following materials:
(1) cover letter that includes teaching experience and/or teaching philosophy,
(2) curriculum vitae,
(3) samples of syllabi and teaching evaluations (if available)
(4) contact information for three or more professional references. Please contact David Crawford (dcrawford@fairfield.edu) with questions.
Note: If you have more than 5 documents to upload to your application, please combine them into 5 or less documents or submit additional documents to sociologysearch@fairfield.edu
About Fairfield University
Fairfield University was founded in 1942 as a Jesuit institution in Fairfield, CT, one hour from New York City along the Long Island Sound. The University’s 200-acre campus includes five College and Professional Schools that enroll approximately 3,500 undergraduate students and 1,200 graduate students.
The Department of Sociology at Stony Brook University seeks a Chair to serve as the intellectual leader of the department, facilitating a positive environment for teaching, scholarship, and service to the college and the university. This individual will continue the Department’s tradition of excellence in research and teaching. The Sociology Department possesses strengths in many areas, and is renowned for its focus on global phenomena and their connection to national dynamics. It also has a large undergraduate major, one of the most popular minors on campus (in Health and Society), and a robust and nationally-recognized doctoral program.
The search is open with regard to methodological specialization; we welcome scholars with qualitative (e.g., ethnographic, archival) and/or quantitative (e.g., statistical or big data) skills. We are, however, particularly interested in scholars whose research overlaps with one or more of the Department’s strengths, including computational social science, environment, global and public health, race and ethnicity, international development, inequality, politics, and culture. The candidate should have at least two years of administrative experience. We welcome applications from Advanced Associates (at least three years post-tenure or have extraordinary leadership accomplishments warranting consideration) and Full Professors. We especially invite applications from women and under-represented minority candidates.
The ideal candidate will:
● Possess a minimum of two years of administrative experience at the Departmental or College level
● Be ready to serve at least one three-year term as Chair
● Have a demonstrated track-record of publication in nationally or internationally-prominent venues within Sociology, as well as a clear pathway to continued excellence in the field
● Contribute to diversity, equity and inclusion efforts in the Department and University
Requested Application Materials:
1) State employment application
2) Cover letter
3) Curriculum Vitae
4) Research Statement
5) Teaching Statement
6) Diversity Statement
We will begin review of applications on January 10, 2022, and continue until the position has been filled.
Doctoral students in departments of sociology who have not yet defended their dissertation proposals are invited to apply to a dissertation proposal development workshop on “problem solving sociology.” Northwestern University will pay for economy-class airfare and accommodation in Evanston, IL, plus meals and transportation expenses, for a one-day workshop to be held on May 26, 2022. If an in-person workshop cannot be held, the workshop will be held online over two days, May 25 and May 26. This workshop is made possible by a grant from the National Science Foundation.
Problem-solving sociology uses sociological insights to attempt to solve (not just describe) contemporary social problems, and uses investigation of social problems to further sociological theory. For more on problem-solving sociology see our website at https://problemsolvingsociology.com.
The workshop will include discussion of principles and techniques of problem-solving sociology and examples of sociological scholarship that applies the approach, plus extensive feedback on individual student projects.
To apply, please submit by January 31, 2022, to DevinWiggs2023@u.northwestern.edu (1) a short cover letter detailing your university, your department, your year in the program, whether or not you have defended your dissertation proposal, and any other information that might be relevant. If you know the date you expect to defend your proposal, please indicate it, but we also welcome students who are several years away from defending. Please also submit (2) a separate document, no more than 2 single spaced pages, responding to some or all of the following questions (not all questions will be relevant for all applicants):
1) What is the social problem that you seek to solve?
2) What is your research project for solving it?
a. What do scholars already know about solving this problem, and what do they not yet know?
b. What social theories or approaches might be useful in solving this problem? If none, can you use this research as a way to critique and reformulate existing theories?
c. What methods will you use in your research?
3) What are some potential solutions?
4) (more relevant for some topics than others) Have you been involved with non-academic groups that work on this problem? Describe if so, or if you have plans to be in future. Do you see a way to engage sociological theory with the work of these groups?
5) (if possible) How could short-term solutions feed into longer-term, structural change on this problem?
We welcome both creative and ambitious ideas, as well as focused and practical ideas, as well as ideas that are somewhere in between. If the problem is the basic structure of the economic system and the only solution that you see is revolution, then think about how to bring about revolution. If the problem is colleges closing over spring break and low-income students having nowhere to go, think about how to nudge institutions to respond to the needs of nontraditional members. If the problem is racism or sexism, think about how to solve (not just describe) racism or sexism. If you already know the solution to the problem, but the problem is convincing policymakers, then focus on how to convince (or change) policymakers.
In a world of vertiginous inequality, escalating ecological disaster, and extraordinary political and economic turbulence generated by a winner take all society seemingly designed to concentrate privilege and power in the hands of a very few, the central question that faces sociology is whether social protest will change anything or whether elites will continue to lead the planet and its population to disaster. All the important topics of contemporary sociology, including racial justice, environmental change, immigration, economic inequality, and education, to name a few, turn around this issue. The question of the power of elites, and the conditions under which that power might be tamed, happened to lie at the heart of the historical sociology of Richard Lachmann, who died tragically and suddenly this Fall. In his honor, we solicit papers that address the issues of elite and nonelite influences on political and social processes and outcomes. We welcome both theoretical and empirical papers. Submissions could be, for example, reprises of elite theory, critical summaries, critiques, discussions of class versus elite power, developments of alternatives (i.e., nonelite influences, people power), empirical evaluations of the relative power of elites and nonelites, or concrete investigations into the processes that maintain and undermine that power. Possible topics include the origins of capitalism, empires, elites and contemporary capitalism, social movements and elite conflict, and popular culture and influencers.
Abstracts are due to Rebecca Jean Emigh (emigh@soc.ucla.edu) and Dylan Riley on January 28th, 2022 and should be no longer than 500 words. We are collecting papers with an eye to publishing them as an edited volume for a major university press.
Held as a hybrid in-person/zoom event on August 4th (additional details TBD)*
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: Friday, February 25, 2022 by 11:59PM PST
We invite submissions of précis for the 16th Junior Theorists Symposium (JTS). The annual symposium will be held in person on August 4th (additional details TBD) prior to the 2022 ASA Annual Meeting. The JTS is a conference featuring the work of up-and-coming sociologists, sponsored in part by the Theory Section of the ASA. Since 2005, the conference has brought together early career sociologists who engage in theoretical work, broadly defined.
It is our honor to announce that Steven Epstein (Northwestern University), Saskia Sassen (Columbia University), and Mario Small (Harvard University) will serve as discussants for this year’s symposium. Paul Joosse (Hong Kong University) and Robin Willey (Concordia University of Edmonton), winners of the 2021 Junior Theorist Award, will deliver a keynote address. Finally, the symposium will include an after-panel titled “Theorizing Intersections,” with panelists Tey Meadow (Columbia University), Tianna Paschel (UC Berkeley), Vrushali Patil (Florida International University), Mary Romero (Arizona State), and Adia Harvey Wingfield (Washington University St. Louis).
We invite all ABD graduate students, recent PhDs, postdocs, and assistant professors who received their PhDs from 2018 onwards to submit up to a three-page précis (800-1000 words). The précis should include the key theoretical contribution of the paper and a general outline of the argument. Successful précis from last year’s symposium can be viewed here. Please note that the précis must be for a paper that is not under review or forthcoming at a journal.
As in previous years, there is no pre-specified theme for the conference. Papers will be grouped into sessions based on emergent themes and discussants’ areas of interest and expertise. We invite submissions from all substantive areas of sociology. and we especially encourage papers that are works-in-progress and would benefit from the discussions at JTS.
Please remove all identifying information from your précis and submit it via this Google form. Tara Gonsalves (University of California at Berkeley) and Davon Norris (The Ohio State University) will review the anonymized submissions. You can also contact them at juniortheorists@gmail.com with any questions. The deadline is Friday, February 25th. By mid-March, we will extend 9 invitations to present at JTS 2022. Please plan to share a full paper by July 5, 2022. Presenters will be asked to attend the symposium in its entirety in order to hear fellow scholars’ work. Please plan accordingly.
*Presenters should plan to attend in-person, though this may change based on the Covid-19 pandemic.