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  • ASA 2017: Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology Sessions

    Monday, August 14

     10:30am-12:10pm: Politics and Power in Latin America.

    Location Palais des congrès de Montréal, 510A

    Session Organizer: Cedric de Leon, Tufts University

    Brokers, Clients and Elite Political Networks in Mexico. Tod Stewart Van Gunten, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies

    Explaining the Paradox of Postwar Latin American Political Development. Simeon J. Newman, University of Michigan

    Political Party Articulation in Post-neoliberal Democracies. Gabriel Chouhy, University of Pittsburgh

    Two Primitive Accumulations Behind Political Articulation: A Case Study of Postrevolutionary Bolivia. Edwin F. Ackerman, Syracuse University

    Discussant: Diana Graizbord, University of Georgia

     

    (Also at 10:30-12:10pm: The Historical Sociology of Social Science: Quebecois Perspectives

    Cosponsored with Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology

    Location: Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G, 10:30am-12:10pm

    Session Organizer: Peter Kivisto, Augustana College

    Presider: Peter Kivisto, Augustana College

    ABSTRACT

    The sociology of sociology is a necessary component of disciplinary self-reflexivity. Over the course of sociology’s history there has been a recurrent interest in such reflection on the discipline. The earliest discussions of “historical sociology” in the annual meetings of the American Sociological Society focused on the history of sociology itself. This session foregrounds historical work on sociology by sociologists and historians based in Québec and in Francphone world. This emphasis is especially appropriate given this location of this year’s meeting and the fact that 2017 is the centenary of Durkheim’s death.

    Presenters:

    Adam Smith: Neglected, to Our Cost. John A. Hall, McGill University

    The Last Days of Durkheim’s Life. Marcel Fournier, Université de Montréal

    Quebec Sociology and How it Differentiates Itself From Mainstream Anglophone American Sociology. Jean-Philippe Warren, Concordia University

    Who Were the First Sociologists in France? A Long-term Perspective on Conflicting Narratives about the Birth of French Sociology. Sebastien Mosbah-Natanson, Paris Sorbonne University-Abu Dhabi

    Discussant: Chad Alan Goldberg, University of Wisconsin-Madison)

     

    2:30-4:10pm: The Politics of Experts and Expertise.

    Location: Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515A

    Session Organizer: Barry Eidlin, McGill University

    Companies and the Rise of Economic Thought. Emily Anne Erikson, Yale University; Mark Hamilton, Yale University

    Institutional Logics and the Veterans Administration Post-War Reforms: Implementation in its Mental Health System. Greg Greenberg, Veterans Health Administration

    Mediating Party and Public: Intellectuals and the Resurgence of Right-to-Work in the Industrial Midwest. Johnnie Anne Lotesta, Brown University

    Organizing Psychiatry: How Public Workers Shape Social Services. Isabel M. Perera, University of Pennsylvania.

    Discussant: Monika Krause, London School of Economics

     

    4:30-6:10pm: Race and Ethnoreligious Politics.

    Location: Palais des congrès de Montréal, 515B, 4:30-6:10pm

    Session Organizer: Cedric de Leon, Tufts University

    A Bourdieusian Approach to Explaining the Rise of Religious Nationalism in France, 1940-1942.  Aliza Luft, UCLA

    Black Revolutions, Black Republics. Ricarda Hammer, Brown University; Alexandre White, Boston University

    Ethnicizing the Frontier: Elite Structure of Ethnic Minority and Ethnic Mobilization in Southwest China (1660s-1930s). Yue Dai, University of Virginia

    Roots of Radicalism: The Language of Revolution, Extremism, and Localism in Afghanistan, 1979-2001. Daniel Karell, New York University Abu Dhabi (NYUAD); Michael Freedman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Discussant: Tasleem Juana Padamsee, Ohio State University

     

    6:30 to 8:10pm: Reception (Joint with Section on Political Sociology and Section on History of Sociology)

    Location: Palais des congrès de Montréal, Level 5, 517B

     

    Tuesday, August 15, 2017

    8:30-10:10am: Empires, Colonies, Indigenous Peoples

    Location: Palais des congrès de Montréal, 512G

    Abstract:

    Sociologists have shown increasing interest in the historical and comparative study of empires, colonies, and indigenous peoples. This paper brings together specialists on the British and American empires and postcolonies and the imperial frontiers with indigenous societies.

     

    Session Organizer: George Steinmetz (University of Michigan, Institute for Advanced Study)

    Presider: Kari Marie Norgaard (University of Oregon)

    Presenters:

    Yael Berda (Hebrew University): Legacies of Suspicion: from British Colonial Emergency regulations to the ‘War on Terror’ in Israel and India

    Julian Go (Boston University): American Empire and Militarization at Home

    James Fenelon (California State University) and Thomas D. Hall (De Pauw University): Standing Rock, Epicenter of Resistance to American Empire.

    Saliha Belmessous (University of New South Wales): Indigenous and European Laws of Nations in North America to 1763

    Discussant: Krishan Kumar (University of Virginia)

    10:30-11:30 Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology Refereed Roundtables

    Location: Palais des congrès de Montréal, Level 5, 520A

    11:30am to 12:10pm, BUSINESS MEETING

    Location: Palais des congrès de Montréal, Level 5, 520A

    12:30-2:10 pm: Pierre Bourdieu and Historical Sociology

    Location: Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B

    Session Organizer: George Steinmetz (University of Michigan, Institute for Advanced Study

    Abstract:

    Recognition of the importance of Pierre Bourdieu’s work for empirical and theoretical sociology continues to grow worldwide, including the United States and North America. Yet the relations between Bourdieu and historical social science, historical sociology, and historiography are less obvious. This panel brings together sociologists and historians from France, Germany, and the United States to examine the role of Bourdieu, past and present, in historical social science and historiography.

    Presider: George Steinmetz

    Presenters:

    Jean Louis Fabiani (Central European University; L’École des hautes études en sciences sociales). Event, structure and history.

    Lutz Raphael (Trier University). Micro-histories and Huge Comparisons: Bourdieu and the Practice of Social History

    Gisèle Sapiro (L’École des hautes études en sciences sociales): Field theory in global and historical perspective

    Discussant:

    Mathieu Desan (University of Colorado-Boulder)

     

    2:30-4:10 pm Theory, Epistemology, and Ethics in Historical Social Science

    Location: Palais des congrès de Montréal, 514B, 2:30-4:10pm

    Session Organizer: George Steinmetz (University of Michigan, Institute for Advanced Study)

    Abstract:

    This panel examines current discussions of theory, epistemology, and ethics in historical social science.

    Presider: Samuel Clark (University of Western Ontario, Sociology)

    Presenters:

    Phil Gorski (Yale University, Sociology): On the Ethics of Social Science

    Herman Paul (Leiden University, History): The Scientific Self: Epistemic Virtues as Embodied Research Ethics

    Dan Little (University of Michigan, Philosophy and Sociology). Historical foundations of the social sciences

    Ann Orloff (Northwestern University): Feminist theories, Sociologies of Gender and Historical Social Science

    Discussant:

    Isaac Reed (University of Virginia, Sociology)

  • Spring 2017 Newsletter

    Spring 2017 Newsletter

    The latest issue of our newsletter – Trajectories Vol.28 No.3 (Spring 2017) – can be accessed here.

    This issue features an op-ed corner on European populism with contributions from Mabel Berezin, Dorit Geva, Seán Ó Riain, and Besnik Pula; an author-meets-critics special feature on Rebecca Jean Emigh, Dylan Riley, and Patricia Ahmed’s two-volume How Societies and States Count with contributions from Daniel Hirschman, Mara Loveman, G. Cristina Mora, Jacob Foster, Tong Lam, Corey Tazzara, Jean-Guy Prévost, and Emily Klancher Merchant; an author-meets-critics feature on Julian Go’s Postcolonial Thought and Social Theory with contributions from Aldon Morris, Zine Magubane, and Marco Garrido; an author-meets-critics feature on Josh Pacewicz’s Partisans and Partners with contributions from Elizabeth Popp Berman and Michael McQuarrie; a spotlight on the section’s Carbon Tax and Tax Reform problem-solving working groups; and new member publications and section news.

  • Congratulations To Our 2017 Section Award Winners!

    Barrington Moore Book Award

    Winners


    Heather A. Haveman. 2015. Magazines and the Making of America: Modernization, Community, and Print Culture, 1741-1860. Princeton University Press.

    Tianna S. Paschel. 2016. Becoming Black Political Subjects: Movements and Ethno-Racial Rights in Colombia and Brazil. Princeton University Press.


    Honorable Mention


    Rebecca Jean Emigh, Dylan Riley & Patricia Ahmed. 2016. How Societies and States Count (2-volume work: Antecedents of Censuses from Medieval to Nation States and Changes in Censuses from Imperialist to Welfare States) . Palgrave MacMillan.

    Charles Tilly Best Article Award

    Winners


    Barry Eidlin, 2016, “Why is There No Labor Party in the United States? Political Articulation and the Canadian Comparison, 1932-1948.” American Sociological Review 81(3) :488-516.

    Ivan Ermakoff, 2015, “The Structure of Contingency,” American Journal of Sociology, 121(1) : 64-125.

    Theda Skocpol Dissertation Award

    Winner


    Robert Braun (Cornell University [now an incoming AP at Northwestern]): “Religious Minorities and Resistance to Genocide: Christian Protection of Jews in the Low Countries during the Holocaust”


    Honorable Mention


    Honorable Mention: Shai Dromi (Yale University [now a Fellow at Harvard]): “The Religious Origins of Transnational Relief: Calvinism, Humanitarianism, and the Genesis of Social Fields”

    Reinhard Bendix Student Paper Award

    Winner


    Chengpang Lee (Chicago, Sociology) and Myung-Sahm Suh (Chicago, Divinity School), “State-Building and Religion: Explaining the Diverged Path of Religious Change in Taiwan and South Korea, 1950-1980.”


    Honorable Mention


    Alexander F. Roehrkasse (Berkeley, Sociology), “The Demise of the Debtors’ Prison: Market Development, State Formation, and the Moral Politics of Credit.”

  • Winter 2017 Newsletter

    Winter 2017 Newsletter

    This issue features remarks from the 2017 Gaidar Economic Forum on “Global Transformation in the Context of Historical Sociology” by Georgi Derluguian, Wolfgang Streeck, Ho-Fung Hung, Mishaal Al-Gergawi, and Monica Prasad. The printed version of their remarks first appeared on our section’s blog, Policy Trajectories, edited by Fiona Greenland. (http://policytrajectories.asa-comparative-historical.org/); a book symposium on Ho-Fung Hung’s China Boom (Columbia University Press) with comments from Jack Goldstone, Richard Lachmann, James Mahoney, Dingxin Zhao, and a reply from Ho-Fung Hung; a conference report from Laura Nelson and Kim Voss on “Digitized (Big) Data and Comparative Historical Sociology” with essays by Charles Seguin, Bart Bonikowski, Christopher Muller, and Laura Nelson; an op-ed corner on “Trump, Trade, and Economic Nationalism” organized by Victoria Reyes and with contributions from Peter Evans, Jon Shefner, and Francesco Duina; a spotlight organized by Marilyn Grell-Brisk on the section’s working group on “Terrorism”; and a tribute to William H. McNeill(1917-2016)  with contributions from David Christian and Patrick Manning.

    Trajectories Vol 28 No 2 (Winter 2017) can be accessed from here.

  • Fall 2016 Newsletter

    This issue features a letter from our new chair, Kim Voss; a book symposium on Jonathan Wyrtzen’s Making Morocco (Cornell University Press) with comments from George Steinmetz, Julian Go, Mary Lewis, Mounira Maya Charrad, and a reply from Johnathan Wyrtzen; a book symposium on Caroline Lee’s Do-it-Yourself Democracy (Oxford University Press) with comments from Lyn Spillman, Margaret O’Mara, Philip Lewin, William Hoynes, and a reply from Caroline Lee; a book symposium on Martin Ruef’s Between Slavery and Capitalism (Princeton University Press) with comments from Tera Hunter, Amy Kate Bailey, and a reply from Martin Ruef; an op-ed corner on “Understanding Trump’s Election” organized by Victoria Reyes and with contributions from Barry Eidlin, Marcus Anthony Hunter, and Stephanie Mudge; an Identities essay by Harold Kerbo; a tribute to Georges Balandier (1920-2016) written by George Steinmetz; a policy brief on the constitutional crisis in Poland by Iga Kozlowska (organized by Natalia Forrat and Jensen Sass); and a list of new publications by section members as well as other news and announcements.

    You can access Trajectories Vol 28 No 1 ( Fall 2016) from here