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The Blackwell Companion to Political Sociology Wiley Blackwell Companions to Sociology Series

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Nash Kate, Scott Alan

Couverture de l’ouvrage The Blackwell Companion to Political Sociology

The Blackwell Companion to Political Sociology brings together thirty-eight original essays covering the wide inter-disciplinary field of political sociology.

  • Represents the most comprehensive overview available in the field of political sociology
  • Covers traditional questions as well as emerging topics including recent debates on gender, citizenship, and political identity
  • Includes detailed editorial introduction, abstracts, further reading lists, and a consolidated bibliography.
List of Contributors.

Acknowledgments.

Introduction (Kate Nash and Alan Scott).

Part I: Approaches to Power and The Political.

1. Marxist Approaches to Power (Bob Jessop, University of Lancaster).

2. Pluralism and Elitism (Richard Bellamy, University of Reading).

3. Rational Choice Approaches to Analyzing Power (Keith Dowding, London School of Economics).

4. Power, Government, Politics (Barry Hindess, Australian National University).

5. Society, Morality and Law: Jurgen Habermas (Max Pensky, SUNY Binghampton).

6. A Political Sociology for Complex Societies (Niklas Luhmann, Stefan Lange and Uwe Schimank, Fernuniversität, Hagen, Germany).

7. "Postmodern" Political Sociology (David Owen, University of Southampton).

8. Studying Power (John Scott, University of Essex).

Part II: The State and Governance.

Formation and Form.

9. Theories of State Formation (Gianfranco Poggi, European University Institute, Florence).

10. Political Legitimacy (David Beetham, University of Leeds).

11. Gender and the State (Robert W. Connell, University of Sydney).

Political Processes.

12. Administration, Civil Service and Bureaucracy (Antonino Palumbo, University of Palermo).

13. Policy Networks (Peter John, University of London).

14. Parties and Interest Intermediation (Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University).

15. Social Movements and Political Process (David Meyer, University of California-Irvine).

16. The Media and Politics (John B. Thompson, University of Cambridge).

Violence and the State.

17. The Political Sociology of War (Alan Scott, University of Innsbruck, Austria).

18. Revolution (Michael Drake, University of East Anglia).

19. Terror Against the State (Donatella della Porta, University of Florence).

Part III: The Political and The Social.

State and Civil Society.

20. Civil Society and the Public Sphere (Larry Ray, University of Kent).

21. Trust and Social Capital (Arnaldo Bagnasco, University of Turin, Italy).

22. The State and the Market (Colin Crouch, European University Institute, Florence).

23. Markets Against States: Neo-Liberalism (Fran Tonkiss, University of London).

The Politics of Collective Identity and Action.

24. Beyond New Social Movements: Social Conflicts and Institutions (Pierre Hamel and Louis Maheu, University of Montreal).

25. The Politics of Ethnicity and Identity (Aletta Norval, University of Essex).

26. Imagined Communities Alan Finlayson (University of Wales, Swansea).

27. Political Rituals (Sigrid Baringhorst, University of Technology at Sydney).

28. The Politics of Popular Culture (John Street, University of East Anglia).

29. Body Politic (Roberta Sassatelli, University of East Anglia).

Citizenship.

30. Citizenship and Gender (Ruth Lister, Loughborough University).

31. Post-National Citizenship: Reconfiguring the Familiar Terrain (Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex).

32. Government and Citizenship (Giovanna Procacci, University of Milan).

Part IV: Political Transformations.

Democratization.

33. Transformation, Transition, Consolidation: Democratization in Latin America (Joe Foweraker, University of Essex).

34. Feminism and Democracy (Judith Squires, University of Bristol).

Postmodernization, Fragmentation, Globalization.

35. Postmodernization of Politics (Jan Pakulski, University of Tasmania).

36. Nationalism and Fragmentation Since 1989 (John Schwarzmantel, University of Leeds).

37. A New Phase of the State Story in Europe (Patrick Le Gales, CEVIPOF (Sciences Po Paris)).

38. The "Singapore Model": Democracy, Communication, and Globalization (Danilo Zolo, University of Florence).

Index.

Kate Nash is Lecturer in Sociology at Goldsmiths College, University of London. Her publications include Universal Difference: Feminism and the Liberal Undecidability of "Women" (1998) and Contemporary Political Sociology: Globalization, Politics, and Power (Blackwell, 2000), and editor of Readings in Contemporary Political Sociology (Blackwell, 2000).

Alan Scott is Professor of Sociology at the University of Innsbruck, Austria. He is the author of Ideology and the New Social Movements (1990) and editor of The Limits of Globalization (1997). He has recently completed co-editing and co-translating (with Helmut Staubmann) Georg Simmel’s Rembrandt: a Philosophical Essay (2004).

Date de parution :

Ouvrage de 496 p.

17.3x24.8 cm

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