ABBREVIATED CURRICULUM VITAE MICHAEL BURAWOY Home

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ABBREVIATED CURRICULUM VITAE MICHAEL BURAWOY Home ABBREVIATED CURRICULUM VITAE MICHAEL BURAWOY Home Address 320 Lee St., Apt. 1002, Oakland, CA 94610. Telephone: 510-839-0475 University Address Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720; Telephone: 510-643-1958 Education B.A. Mathematics, University of Cambridge, England, 1968. M.A. Sociology, University of Zambia, 1972. Ph.D. Sociology, University of Chicago, 1976. Research, Administrative, and Teaching Experience Research Officer 1969-70 Anglo American Corporation, Zambia Lecturer 1975 Department of Political Science, University of Chicago Visiting Fellow 1980 Southern African Research Program, Yale University Assistant Professor 1976-82 Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley Associate Professor 1982-83 Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison Associate Professor 1982-88 Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley Visiting Fellow 1983-87 Institute of Sociology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Professor 1988- Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley Visiting Professor 1995 Department of Sociology, Northwestern University Department Chair 1996-98 Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley Department Chair 2000-02 Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley Research Associate 2001- Sociology of Work Unit, University of Witwatersrand Visiting Scholar 2002-03 Russell Sage Foundation, New York Editorial Experience Associate Editor 1974-5 American Journal of Sociology Associate Book Review Editor 1975-6 American Journal of Sociology Associate Editor 1978-80 American Sociologist Associate Editor 1982-85 American Sociological Review Corresponding Editor 1983-93 Theory and Society Editorial Advisor 1986-93 Work, Employment and Society Editorial Board 1992- Political Power and Social Theory Editorial Board 1992-96 South African Sociological Review Editorial Board 1992- Work and Occupations Editorial Committee 1993-98 Annual Review of Sociology Editorial Board 1994-97 Contemporary Sociology Editorial Board 1999-2000 Ethnography Editorial Board 2000- Qualiative Sociology Corresponding Editor 2000- Ethnography Professional Positions Publications Committee 1998-99 American Sociological Association Member of Council 2000-02 American Sociological Association President-Elect 2002-03 American Sociological Association President 2003-04 American Sociological Association 2 Honors, Awards, Etc. William Harper Rainey Fellowship, University of Chicago, 1975-6 Distinguished Teaching Award, University of California, Berkeley, 1979 National Science Foundation Grant SES-83-09042: 1984-87. Social Science Research Council Fellowships, 1991, 1992 National Science Foundation Grant SES-9212242: 1992-95. MacArthur Foundation Grant, 1993 National Council for Soviet and East European Studies, 1996-97. MacArthur Foundation Grant, 2001 Goldman Distinguished Professor in the Social Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, 2002-2007 Distinguished Teaching Award, American Sociological Association, 2003. MAJOR PUBLICATIONS Books 1972 The Colour of Class on the Copper Mines: From African Advancement to Zambianization. Manchester: Manchester University Press. 1979 Manufacturing Consent: Changes in the Labor Process Under Monopoly Capitalism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. (Translated into Spanish, and Chinese) 1985 The Politics of Production: Factory Regimes Under Capitalism and Socialism. London: Verso. (Translated into Korean) 1992 The Radiant Past: Ideology and Reality in Hungary's Road to Capitalism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. (With János Lukács) Collaborative and Edited Books 1983 Marxist Inquiries: Studies of Labor, Class and States. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Supplement to the American Journal of Sociology edited by Michael Burawoy and Theda Skocpol. 1991 Ethnography Unbound: Power and Resistance in the Modern Metropolis. Berkeley: University of California Press. (With ten coauthors) 1998 Uncertain Transition: Ethnographies of Change in the PostSocialist World. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. Edited with Katherine Verdery. 1999 От Деревянного Парижа к Панельной Орбите: Модель жилищных классов Сыктывкара. [From Timbered Paris to Concrete Orbita: The Structure of Housing Classes in Syktyvkar]. Syktyvkar: Institute of Regional Social Research of Komi. (With Pavel Krotov and Tatyana Lytkina) 2000 Global Ethnography: Forces, Connections and Imaginations in a Postmodern World . Berkeley: University of California Press (With nine coauthors) 3 .
Recommended publications
  • Four Sociologies, Multiple Roles
    The British Journal of Sociology 2005 Volume 56 Issue 3 Four sociologies, multiple roles Stella R. Quah The current American and British debate on public sociology introduced by Michael Burawoy in his 2004 ASA Presidential Address (Burawoy 2005) has inadvertently brought to light once again, one exciting but often overlooked aspect of our discipline: its geographical breadth.1 Sociology is present today in more countries around the world than ever before. Just as in the case of North America and Europe, Sociology’s presence in the rest of the world is manifested in many ways but primarily through the scholarly and policy- relevant work of research institutes, academic departments and schools in universities; through the training of new generations of sociologists in univer- sities; and through the work of individual sociologists in the private sector or the civil service. Michael Burawoy makes an important appeal for public sociology ‘not to be left out in the cold but brought into the framework of our discipline’ (2005: 4). It is the geographical breadth of Sociology that provides us with a unique vantage point to discuss his appeal critically. And, naturally, it is the geo- graphical breadth of sociology that makes Burawoy’s Presidential Address to the American Sociological Association relevant to sociologists outside the USA. Ideas relevant to all sociologists What has Michael Burawoy proposed that is most relevant to sociologists beyond the USA? He covers such an impressive range of aspects of the dis- cipline that it is not possible to address all of them here. Thus, thinking in terms of what resonates most for sociologists in different locations throughout the geographical breadth of the discipline, I believe his analytical approach and his call for integration deserve special attention.
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    Morrow, Raymond A. "Rethinking Burawoy's Public Sociology: A Post-Empiricist Critique." In The Handbook of Public Sociology, edited by Vincent Jeffries, 47-70. Lantham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2009. 3 Rethinking Burawoy’s Public Sociology: A Post-Empiricist Reconstruction Raymond A. Morrow Following Michael Burawoy’s ASA presidential address in August 2004, “For Public Sociology,” an unprecedented international debate has emerged on the current state and future of sociology (Burawoy 2005a). The goal here will be to provide a stock-taking of the resulting commentary that will of- fer some constructive suggestions for revising and reframing the original model. The central theme of discussion will be that while Burawoy’s mani- festo is primarily concerned with a plea for the institutionalization of pub- lic sociology, it is embedded in a very ambitious social theoretical frame- work whose full implications have not been worked out in sufficient detail (Burawoy 2005a). The primary objective of this essay will be to highlight such problems in the spirit of what Saskia Sassen calls “digging” to “detect the lumpiness of what seems an almost seamless map” (Sassen 2005:401) and to provide suggestions for constructive alternatives. Burawoy’s proposal has enjoyed considerable “political” success: “Bura- woy’s public address is, quite clearly, a politician’s speech—designed to build consensus and avoid ruffling too many feathers” (Hays 2007:80). As Patricia Hill Collins puts it, the eyes of many students “light up” when the schema is presented: “There’s the aha factor at work. They reso- nate with the name public sociology. Wishing to belong to something bigger than themselves” (Collins 2007:110–111).
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    SOCIOLOGY: GOING PUBLIC, GOING GLOBAL Michael Burawoy [Introduction to Public Sociology against Market Fundamentalism and Global Inequality in German] The essays in this book were written in the decade between 2004 and 2014. The opening essay is my address to the American Sociological Association and the closing essay my address to the International Sociological Association. They represent a movement from public sociology to global sociology. In 2004 when I laid out an agenda for public sociology I did not anticipate the controversy it would generate, and therefore I did not appreciate its historical significance. What was significant about the moment and the context? The essays that follow are my attempt to situate public sociology in relation to the transformation of the university, and beyond that in relation to what I call third-wave marketization that has devastated so much of the planet. Such broader movements affecting sociology and other disciplines called for self-examination as to the meaning of our endeavors. These essays are part of such a reflection, pointing to new directions for sociology in particular. Here sociology is defined by its standpoint, specifically the standpoint of civil society. It contrasts with economics that takes the standpoint of the market and political science that takes the standpoint of the state. Public sociology then is a critical engagement with civil society against the over-extension of market and state. It stands opposed to third-wave marketization whose differential impact across the world calls for a global sociology – one that has to recognize the continuing importance of the nation state and takes its point of departure in the social movements of our era.
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  • Manufacturing Consent Thirty Years Later
    ANOTHER THIRTY YEARS1 Michael Burawoy It is now exactly 30 years since I began working at Allied Corporation, which in turn was 30 years after the great Chicago ethnographer, Donald Roy, began working there in 1944. I recently returned to my old stomping ground to see what had become of the engine division of Allis Chalmers – I can now reveal the company’s real name. The physical plant is still there in the town of Harvey, south of Chicago. Its grounds are overgrown with weeds, its buildings are dilapidated. It has a new owner. Allis Chalmers, then the third biggest corporation in the production of agricultural equipment after Caterpillar and John Deere, entered dire financial straights and was bought out by K-H-Deutz AG of Germany in 1985. The engine division in Harvey also shut down in 1985. Soon, thereafter, it became the warehouse of a local manufacturer of steel tubes – Allied Tubes. Thus, in yet another quirk of sociological serendipity the alias that I gave Allis Chalmers turned out to be the actual name of the company that bought it up! Even more interesting, in 1987, Allied Tubes was taken over by Tyco -- the scandal-fraught international conglomerate. In the last year Tyco’s two top executives have made headline news, charged with securities fraud, tax evasion and looting hundreds of millions of dollars from the conglomerate. Warehousing, conglomeration and corporate looting well capture the fall out of the Reagan era that began in 1980, five years after I left Allis. South Chicago had been 1 To appear as a special preface to the Chinese edition of Manufacturing Consent.
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  • Comments on Burawoy on Public Sociology
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