Marion Fourcade PROFESSOR Department of Sociology University of California-Berkeley Berkeley CA 94720-1980 USA Tel +1 (510) 643 2707 [email protected]

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Marion Fourcade PROFESSOR Department of Sociology University of California-Berkeley Berkeley CA 94720-1980 USA Tel +1 (510) 643 2707 Fourcade@Berkeley.Edu June 2018 Marion Fourcade PROFESSOR Department of Sociology University of California-Berkeley Berkeley CA 94720-1980 USA Tel +1 (510) 643 2707 [email protected] ASSOCIATE FELLOW Max Planck-Sciences Po Center on Coping with instability in market societies (Maxpo) Education 2000 Ph.D., Sociology, Harvard University. Thesis title: “The National Trajectories of Economic Knowledge.” Committee: Orlando Patterson (chair), Theda Skocpol, Libby Schweber. 1988-92 Student at Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris (France) 1992 M.A., Social Sciences (Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales) 1991 Agrégation, social sciences 1990 B.A., Sociology (Univ. of Paris 7) and Economics (Univ. of Paris 1) Employment Spring 2018 Interim Director, Social Science Matrix, UC Berkeley 2003- Assistant to Associate to Full Professor of Sociology, University of California at Berkeley 2012-13 Director at the Max Planck-Sciences-Po Center on Coping with instability in Market Societies (Maxpo) Professor of Sociology at Sciences-Po Paris and Axa Permanent Research Chair in Economic Sociology. 2013- Associate Fellow, Max Planck-Sciences-Po Center on Coping with instability in Mar- ket Societies (Maxpo) 2002-3 Professional Research Staff Member / Lecturer, Department of Sociology, Princeton University 2001-2 Post-doctoral Research Fellow, Institute of French Studies, New York University 2000-1 Research Associate / Lecturer, Department of Sociology, Princeton University. 1991-2 Lecturer, University of Paris IV-Sorbonne 2 Visiting positions 2014 Berlin Summer School in the Social Sciences, Humboldt University 2011-12 Visiting Researcher, Centre de Sociologie des Organisations, Sciences-Po, Paris. Book 2009 Economists and Societies: Discipline and Profession in the United States, Britain and France, 1890s-1990s. (Princeton University Press) 2011 Ludwik Fleck Prize for best book in science and technology studies, Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S) 2011 Distinguished Book Award for best book in sociology, American Sociological As- sociation 2010 Mary Douglas Prize for best book in the sociology of culture, American Sociologi- cal Association 2010 Honorable Mention, Barrington Moore award for best book in comparative and historical sociology, American Sociological Association 2010 Honorable Mention, Robert K. Merton award for best book in the sociology of science, knowledge and technology, American Sociological Association Reviewed in American Journal of Sociology, Annales, Business History Review, Canadi- an Journal of Sociology, Constitutional Political Economy, Comparative Labor Law and Policy, Contemporary Sociology, Critique Internationale, Economic History Review, European Journal of Sociology, History of Political Economy, Journal of Cultural Economy, Journal of Economic Methodology, Laboratorium, Political Studies Review, Revue d’Anthropologie des Connaissances, Sociologie du Travail, Socio-Economic Re- view, Sociologica, Sociological Forum, Times Higher Education Supplement. On blogs: Inside Story, Marginal Revolution, Orgtheory, Understanding Society. Articles, book chapters and review essays 2018 “La Logique de la note. Les Catégories morales dans l’ordre économique.” In C. Courtet et al. Le Désordre du monde. Paris, ed. CNRS. 2018 “The Will to Progress and the Twofold Truth of Capital.” MaxPo Discussion Paper 18-1. 2018 “Feeling the Numbers.” Contribution to a symposium on Wendy Espeland and Mike Sauder, Engines of Anxiety. Socioeconomic Review. 2018 “Economics: The View from Below.” Swiss Journal of Economics and Statistics 154(5). 2017 “The Fly and the Cookie: On the Moral Economy of 21st Century Capitalism.” (SA- SE Presidential address). Socio-Economic Review 15(3): 661-678. 2017 “The Social Trajectory of a Finance Professor and the Common Sense of Capital” (with Rakesh Khurana). History of Political Economy 49(2): 347-381. Page 2 3 2017 “State Metrology: The Rating of Sovereigns and the Judgment of Nations.” In Kim- berly Morgan and Ann Orloff (eds.), The Many Hands of the State. Cambridge Uni- versity Press. 2017 “Seeing like a Market.” (with Kieran Healy) Socio-Economic Review 15(1): 9-29. 2017 “Categories all the Way Down.” (with Kieran Healy) Historical Social Research 42(1): 286-296. 2016 “Undoing the Undoing of the Demos.” (Contribution to a symposium on Wendy Brown's Undoing the Demos. Neoliberalism’s Stealth Revolution.) European Journal of So- ciology 57(3): 453-459. 2016 “Ordinalization” (Lewis Coser lecture) Sociological Theory 34(3): 175-195. 2016 “Political Structures and Political Mores: Varieties of Politics in Comparative Per- spective” (with Evan Schofer). Sociological Science 3: 413-443. 2016 “Earmarking, Matching, and Social Order.” La Vie des Idées, in Dossier "L'argent et la valeur: La sociologie économique après Viviana Zelizer." January 19. 2016 “Political Space and the Space of Polities. Doing Politics Across Nations” (with Bri- an Lande and Evan Schofer) Poetics 55: 1-18. 2015 “The Superiority of Economists.” (with Yann Algan and Etienne Ollion) Journal of Economic Perspectives 29(1): 89-114. Spanish translation: Revista de Economía Institucional 17(33) (2015) Russian translation: Voprosy ekonomiki 7 (2015) Swedish translation: Fronesis (2016) 2013 “Classification Situations: Life Chances in the Neoliberal Economy.” (with Kieran Healy) Accounting, Organizations and Society 38: 559-572 2015 Granovetter article prize (Honorable mention), Section on economic sociology of the American Sociological Association. 2015 Star-Nelkin award (Honorable mention), Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology (SKAT) of the American Sociological Association. Reprinted in Historical Social Research 2017 42 (1): 23-51. 2013 “Moral Categories in the Financial Crisis” (editor, with Cornelia Woll, and with con- tributions by Philippe Steiner, Wolfgang Streeck, Cornelia Woll, and self) Socio- Economic Review 11(3): 601-627. 2013 “The Material and Symbolic Construction of the BRICs.” Review of International Political Economy 20(2): 256-267. 2013 “From Social Control to Financial Economics: The Linked Ecologies of Economics and Business in Twentieth-Century America.” (with Rakesh Khurana) Theory and Society 42: 121-159. Page 3 4 2012 “The Moral Sociology of Viviana Zelizer” - Review essay on Viviana Zelizer, Econom- ic Lives: How Culture Shapes the Economy (Princeton University Press 2011). Sociologi- cal Forum 27(4): 1055-1061. 2012 “The Vile and the Noble: On the Relationship between Natural and Social Classifica- tions in the French Wine World.” The Sociological Quarterly 53: 524-545. 2012 “The Socialization of Capitalism, or the Neoliberalization of Socialism?” Contribu- tion to a Symposium on Erik O. Wright, Envisioning Real Utopias (Verso 2010). Socio- Economic Review 10: 369-375. 2011 “Cents and Sensibility: Economic Values and the Nature of ‘Nature.’” American Journal of Sociology 116(6): 1721-77. 2012 Clifford Geertz Best Article Award, Section on the Sociology of Culture of the American Sociological Association. Spanish translation in Apuntes de Investigación 27: 68-125. (2016) 2011 “Price and Prejudice: On Economics, and the Enchantment (or Disenchantment) of Nature.” In Jens Beckert and Patrick Aspers (eds.) The Worth of Goods. Oxford University Press. 2010 “The Problem of Embodiment in the Sociology of Knowledge” Qualitative Sociolo- gy 33(4): 569-574. 2010 “The United States: An Economists’ Economy” in John Markoff and Veronica Montecinos (eds.) Economists in the Americas. Edward Elgar. 2009 “The Political Valuation of Life.” Regulation and Governance 3:291-297. 2008 “On the Social Regulation of Wealth Transfers.” Contribution to a symposium on Jens Beckert, Inherited Wealth (Princeton University Press 2007). Socio-Economic Re- view 7(1):150-155. 2007 “The Politics of Method and its Agentic, Performative and Ontological Others.” So- cial Science History. 31(1):107-114. 2007 “Moral Views of Market Society.” (with Kieran Healy) Annual Review of Sociology 33: 285-311. Russian translation in Symbolic Power: Social Sciences and Politics (Moscow: Naouka, 2011). 2007 “Theories of Markets and Theories of Society.” American Behavioral Scientist. 50(8): 1015-1034. German translation (in Jens Maeße, ed. 2013. Ökonomie, Diskurs, Regierung. Springer verlag.) 2006 “Global Processes, National Institutions, Local Bricolage: Shaping Law in an Era of Globalization.” (with Joachim Savelsberg) Law and Social Inquiry 31(3): 513-519. 2006 “The Construction of a Global Profession: The Transnationalization of Economics.” American Journal of Sociology. 112(1): 145-195. Page 4 5 Reprinted in Alessandro Lanteri and Jack Vroemen, The Economics of Economists. Cambridge University Press. 2006 “Culture and Economy.” In George Ritzer (ed.) Encyclopedia of Sociology. London, Basil Blackwell. 2005 “The Sociology of Economics.” In Jens Beckert and Milan Zafirovski (eds.) Interna- tional Encyclopedia of Economic Sociology. London, Routledge. 2002 “The Rebirth of the Liberal Creed: Paths to Neoliberalism in Four Countries.” American Journal of Sociology. 107(9): 533-579. (with Sarah Babb) 2002 “Les économistes et leurs discours: traditions nationales et science universelle.” Sci- ences de la Société. February. 2001 “The Structural Contexts of Civic Engagement: Voluntary Association Membership in Comparative Perspective.” American Sociological Review. 66(6): 806-828. (with Evan Schofer) 2002 Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship (Best Article) Award, Section on Politi- cal Sociology of the American Sociological Association. 2001 “Politics, Institutional
Recommended publications
  • Inside 21St Century Trends E
    Volume 41 • Number 7 • November 2013 Congressional Briefing on Aging in Rural America: inside 21st Century Trends E. Helen Berry, Utah State University and when one in Nina Glasgow, Cornell University five Americans STEM at the Mall 3 nce rural America was young; are expected to ASA participated in the Onow it is a lot older, result- be of retire- grown-up version of a ing in opportunities and chal- ment age. A science fair hoping to spark lenges for nonmetropolitan majority of the young people’s interest in areas. The Consortium of Social retirees will be science. Science Associations (COSSA) women. Rural hosted a congressional briefing in places will be Public Engagement: Washington, DC, on June 20, 2013, more affected 4 by aging than U.S. vs. UK that addressed those prospects. In an overview at the briefing, urban areas, not The United States is better at only because Nina Glasgow (Cornell University) (From left to right) E. Helen Berry, Joachim Singelmann, Nina Glasgow, writing for audiences other rural areas are than peer reviewers. observed that, in 2012, nearly 17 Douglas Gurak, Howard Silver, Kenneth Johnson percent of the nonmetropolitan demographi- population was age 65 or older com- cally older rural counties, primarily in the 5 Rural Sociology’s pared with only 13 percent in met- but because rural older residents South and West, receive internal in- Historian ropolitan areas. The last of the baby receive lower Social Security and migration from well-to-do retirees At the age of 103, Olaf boomers will reach age 65 by 2030 pension benefits than urban elders.
    [Show full text]
  • Can the Invisible Welfare State Redistribute?
    A Service of Leibniz-Informationszentrum econstor Wirtschaft Leibniz Information Centre Make Your Publications Visible. zbw for Economics Martin, Isaac William Article Can the invisible welfare state redistribute? economic sociology_the european electronic newsletter Provided in Cooperation with: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (MPIfG), Cologne Suggested Citation: Martin, Isaac William (2020) : Can the invisible welfare state redistribute?, economic sociology_the european electronic newsletter, ISSN 1871-3351, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (MPIfG), Cologne, Vol. 21, Iss. 2, pp. 3-11 This Version is available at: http://hdl.handle.net/10419/223114 Standard-Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Die Dokumente auf EconStor dürfen zu eigenen wissenschaftlichen Documents in EconStor may be saved and copied for your Zwecken und zum Privatgebrauch gespeichert und kopiert werden. personal and scholarly purposes. Sie dürfen die Dokumente nicht für öffentliche oder kommerzielle You are not to copy documents for public or commercial Zwecke vervielfältigen, öffentlich ausstellen, öffentlich zugänglich purposes, to exhibit the documents publicly, to make them machen, vertreiben oder anderweitig nutzen. publicly available on the internet, or to distribute or otherwise use the documents in public. Sofern die Verfasser die Dokumente unter Open-Content-Lizenzen (insbesondere CC-Lizenzen) zur Verfügung gestellt haben sollten, If the documents have been made available under an Open gelten abweichend von diesen Nutzungsbedingungen die in der dort Content Licence (especially Creative Commons Licences), you genannten Lizenz gewährten Nutzungsrechte. may exercise further usage rights as specified in the indicated licence. www.econstor.eu 3 dies are “invisible” in the sense that they often escape notice does not make them less real.
    [Show full text]
  • CURRICULUM VITAE ANDREW ABBOTT 15 April 2019 OFFICE
    CURRICULUM VITAE ANDREW ABBOTT 15 April 2019 OFFICE: Department of Sociology 773 702 4545, fax 773 702 4849 University of Chicago [email protected] 1126 E. 59th St. Chicago IL 60637 EDUCATION: Ph.D. University of Chicago 1982 (sociology) M.A. University of Chicago 1975 (sociology) B.A. Harvard University 1970 (history and literature) PRESENT POSITION: 2001- Gustavus F. and Ann M. Swift Distinguished Service Professor, Department of Sociology and the College, University of Chicago PRIOR POSITIONS: 2005-2018 Senior Fellow, Computation Institute, Argonne National Laboratory/ University of Chicago 1997-2000 Ralph Lewis Professor, Department of Sociology and the College, University of Chicago 1991-1997 Professor, Department of Sociology and the College, University of Chicago 1978-1991 Instructor to Associate Professor (1986), Rutgers University, Department of Sociology 1973-1978 Research and Evaluation Department Manteno State Hospital, Manteno, Illinois & Illinois Department of Mental Health 1967-1971 Research Assistant, Harvard University Center for Population Studies, Professor Roger Revelle ADMINISTRATIVE POSITIONS: 2008-2010 Summer Acting Chair, Department of Sociology, University of Chicago 1999-2002 Chair, Department of Sociology University of Chicago 1993-1996 Master, Social Sciences Collegiate Division Deputy Dean, Division of Social Sciences Associate Dean of the College University of Chicago PUBLICATION: BOOKS: The System of Professions: An Essay on the Division of Expert Labor University of Chicago Press. xvi+435pp. 1988. Winner, ASA Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award, 1991. Chinese translation, Commercial Press, 2016. Department and Discipline: Chicago Sociology at 100 University of Chicago Press, xii+249pp. 1999. Japanese translation, 2011. Translation into Chinese (forthcoming, April 2019) Chaos of Disciplines University of Chicago Press, xvi+252pp.
    [Show full text]
  • Monica-Prasad-Cv.Pdf
    Monica Prasad Department of Sociology Northwestern University 1810 Chicago Avenue Evanston, IL 60208 847-491-3899 [email protected] CURRENT POSITION Professor, Department of Sociology, and Faculty Fellow, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University MAJOR PROFESSIONAL INTERESTS Comparative-historical sociology; economic sociology; political sociology EDUCATION Ph.D. University of Chicago, 2000 (Sociology) M.A. University of Chicago, 1995 (Sociology) M.A. Johns Hopkins University, 1993 (Writing Seminars) B.A. Yale University, 1991 (English and Religious Studies), summa cum laude SCHOLARSHIP Books Forthcoming, Problem-Solving Sociology, Oxford University Press 2018 Starving the Beast: Ronald Reagan and the Tax Cut Revolution, Russell Sage Foundation Press 2012 The Land of Too Much: American Abundance and the Paradox of Poverty, Harvard University Press Chinese translation 过剩之地: 美式富足与贫困悖论, Shanghai People’s Publishing House, 2018 2009 (co-edited with Isaac Martin and Ajay Mehrotra) The New Fiscal Sociology: Taxation in Comparative and Historical Perspective, Cambridge University Press 2006 The Politics of Free Markets: The Rise of Neoliberal Economic Policies in Britain, France, Germany, and the United States, University of Chicago Press Journal Articles Forthcoming “Bureaucratic Quality and Social Development,” Sociology of Development (co-author, with Marina Zaloznaya) 2019 “Approaches to Corruption: A Synthesis of the Scholarship,” Studies in Comparative International Development 54(1): 96-132 (first author, with Mariana Borges and Andre Nickow) 2016 “Mechanisms of the ‘Aid Curse’: Lessons from South Korea and Pakistan,” Journal of Development Studies 52(11): 1612-1627 (first author, with Andre Nickow) 2016 “Walking the Line: The White Working Class and the Economic Consequences of Morality,” Politics and Society 44(2): 281-304 (first author, with Steve G.
    [Show full text]
  • Mudge CURRENT
    Current as of 09/09/19 STEPHANIE L. MUDGE University of California-Davis, Department of Sociology, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA email: [email protected] website: http://sociology.ucdavis.edu/people/mudge Professional appointments (post-PhD) 2018-present Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, Davis, 2009-2018 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, Davis 2013 -2014 Research Fellow, Sheffield Political Economy Research Institute (SPERI), UK 2008-2009 Postdoctoral Fellow, Max Planck Institute (MPIfG), Cologne, Germany 2007-2008 Max Weber Fellow, European University Institute (EUI), Florence, Italy Visiting affiliations 2018 [Fall] Visiting Scholar, MaxPo/Sciences Po, Paris, France 2018 [July] Visiting Scholar, Max Planck Institute (MPIfG), Cologne, Germany Education 2007 PhD, Sociology, University of California, Berkeley (Chair: Neil Fligstein) 2001 MA, Sociology, University of California, Berkeley (Chair: Ann Swidler) 1995 BA, Urban Studies and Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA Books Mudge, Stephanie L. 2018. Leftism Reinvented: Western Parties from Socialism to Neoliberalism. Harvard University Press. Awards: • 2019 Barrington Moore Award, Comparative Historical Sociology, American Sociological Association (ASA) • 2019 Distinguished Contribution Book Award, Political Sociology, ASA • 2019 Viviana Zelizer Award, Honorable Mention, Economic Sociology, ASA Reviews: • Amenta, Edwin. May 2019. American Journal of Sociology 124, 6: 1850-1852. https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/704023. • Manwaring, Rob. May 2019. British Journal of Sociology 0, 0: 1-2. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/1468-4446.12675. • Hatherley, Owen. April 9, 2019. New Humanist, Spring Edition. https://newhumanist.org.uk/articles/5438/book-review-leftism-reinvented. • Block, Fred. November 9, 2018.
    [Show full text]
  • Monica Prasad Department of Sociology Northwestern University 1810 Chicago Avenue Evanston, IL 60208 847-491-3899 [email protected]
    Monica Prasad Department of Sociology Northwestern University 1810 Chicago Avenue Evanston, IL 60208 847-491-3899 [email protected] CURRENT POSITION Professor, Department of Sociology, and Faculty Fellow, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University MAJOR PROFESSIONAL INTERESTS Comparative-historical sociology; economic sociology; political sociology EDUCATION Ph.D. University of Chicago, 2000 (Sociology) • Divisional Dissertation Award for best doctoral thesis in the social sciences in 2000, University of Chicago Division of Social Sciences, awarded 2001 M.A. University of Chicago, 1995 (Sociology) M.A. Johns Hopkins University, 1993 (Writing Seminars) B.A. Yale University, 1991 (English and Religious Studies), summa cum laude, with distinction in both majors SCHOLARSHIP Books 2012 The Land of Too Much: American Abundance and the Paradox of Poverty, Harvard University Press • American Sociological Association Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award for best book in sociology, 2014 • Allan Sharlin Memorial Award, Social Science History Association, 2013 • European Academy of Sociology Prize for Best Book, 2013 • Barrington Moore Book Award, Comparative Historical Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association, 2013 • Viviana Zelizer Award, Economic Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association, 2013 • Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Award, Political Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association, 2013 2009 (co-edited with Isaac Martin and Ajay Mehrotra) The New Fiscal
    [Show full text]
  • Why Is France So French? Culture, Institutions, and Neoliberalism, 1974–1981 Author(S): Monica Prasad Source: the American Journal of Sociology, Vol
    Why Is France So French? Culture, Institutions, and Neoliberalism, 1974–1981 Author(s): Monica Prasad Source: The American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 111, No. 2 (September 2005), pp. 357-407 Published by: The University of Chicago Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/432778 . Accessed: 06/05/2011 18:53 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at . http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=ucpress. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. The University of Chicago Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The American Journal of Sociology. http://www.jstor.org Why Is France So French? Culture, Institutions, and Neoliberalism, 1974– 19811 Monica Prasad Northwestern University French capitalism has changed in many ways in the last two decades, but France has not seen the extreme neoliberalism of Britain and the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae
    DANIEL DRISCOLL Department of Sociology University of California San Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0533 Email: [email protected] EDUCATION Ph.D., Sociology, University of California San Diego, 2022 (expected) M.A., Sociology, University of California San Diego, 2017 B.A., Environmental Studies, University of Redlands, 2014 summa cum laude, Departmental Honors, Phi Beta Kappa VISITING APPOINTMENTS Visiting Researcher, École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris, France, Fall 2019 Visiting Researcher, Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung, Köln, Germany, Spring 2019 DISSERTATION “Pricing Carbon: Globalism, Growth, and Populism” Committee: Jeffrey Haydu (co-chair), Lane Kenworthy (co-chair), Isaac Martin, Harvey Goldman, Mark Jacobsen (Economics), Monica Prasad (Northwestern University) RESEARCH INTERESTS Environmental Sociology, Climate Change, Comparative Political Economy, Political Sociology, Social Movements, Economic Sociology, Europe, Methods PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS Driscoll, Daniel. 2021. “Populism and Carbon Tax Justice: The Yellow Vest Movement in France.” Social Problems. Online first. • Coverage in Financial Times Driscoll, Daniel. 2021. “Drivers of Carbon Price Adoption in Wealthy Democracies: International or Domestic Forces?” Socius 7:1-11. Driscoll, Daniel. 2020. “When Ignoring the News and Going Hiking Can Help You Save the World: Environmental Activist Strategies for Persistence.” Sociological Forum 35(1):189–206. Driscoll, Daniel. 2020. “Do Carbon Prices Limit Economic Growth?” Socius 6:1-3. • Featured in the American Sociological Association’s January 2020 Member News and Notes • Listed on Socius journal’s top 50 most read articles after publication Driscoll, Daniel. 2019. “Assessing Sociodemographic Predictors of Climate Change Concern, 1994–2016.” Social Science Quarterly 100(5):1699–1708. Driscoll, Daniel. 2018. “Beyond Organizational Ties: Foundations of Persistent Commitment in Environmental Activism.” Social Movement Studies 17(6):697–715.
    [Show full text]
  • Taxing Inequality and Fiscal Sociology Fiscal Sociology by Akos Rona-Tas Akos Rona-Tas 3 Can the Invisible Welfare State Redistribute? by Isaac William Martin
    Volume 21 · Number 2 · March 2020 economic econsoc.mpifg.de sociology _the european electronic newsletter 21.2 Note from the editor Content Taxing inequality and 1 Note from the editor Taxing inequality and fiscal sociology fiscal sociology by Akos Rona-Tas Akos Rona-Tas 3 Can the invisible welfare state redistribute? by Isaac William Martin 12 On the sociological approach to public finance by Sarah Quinn 15 Switzerland as a laboratory for fiscal federalism and global fiscal governance n recent years, fiscal sociology fiction. Redistribution does not by Gisela Huerlimann has grown to become one of the displace market forces but provides most vibrant subfields in eco- necessary infrastructure that en- 26 The politics of subnational taxation Inomic sociology. For a long time, ables markets to function. He dis- in comparative perspective its core topic – public finance – tinguishes between redistribution by Josh Pacewicz was considered to lie beyond the as a process and as an outcome, discipline of sociology, despite the making the important point that 36 OpEd contributions of Rudolph Gold- redistribution can be achieved in by Monica Prasad scheid, Fritz Karl Mann, and Jo- many different ways, including by seph Schumpeter, the founders the imposition of price controls or 39 Book reviews of fiscal sociology over a century regulations, without necessarily ago, who established that there is deploying policies aimed directly at Editor an essential connection between altering the distribution of in- Akos Rona-Tas, University of California, state finances and the wider social comes, as taxation does. It is even San Diego order. New fiscal sociology is re- more absurd to assume that redis- Book reviews editor claiming this connection at a time tribution necessarily increases Lisa Suckert, Max Planck Institute when the role of the state in the equality.
    [Show full text]
  • GRETA R. KRIPPNER Department of Sociology Email: University of Michigan [email protected] 4146 LSA Building Phone: 500 S
    CURRICULUM VITAE GRETA R. KRIPPNER Department of Sociology Email: University of Michigan [email protected] 4146 LSA Building Phone: 500 S. State Street 734-764-0341 Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1382 Fax: 734-763-6887 EMPLOYMENT 2012 – Present Associate Professor, Sociology Department, University of Michigan. 2017 – 2020 Associate Chair, Sociology Department, University of Michigan. 2007 – 2012 Assistant Professor, Sociology Department, University of Michigan. 2003 – 2006 Assistant Professor, Sociology Department, UCLA. EDUCATION December 2003 Ph.D. Degree Conferred, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Sociology. Dissertation: “The Fictitious Economy: Financialization, the State, and Contemporary Capitalism” (Jane Collins and Erik Olin Wright, Thesis Advisers). Winner of the 2004 American Sociological Association Dissertation Award. December 1995 M.S. Degree Conferred, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Sociology. May 1993 B.A. Degree Conferred, University of Iowa, Anthropology and History. RESEARCH INTERESTS Economic Sociology, Political Sociology, Sociology of Law, Comparative/Historical Sociology, Social Theory. BOOK Greta R. Krippner. 2011. Capitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Krippner Vitae August 2020 Awards: • 2013 Distinguished Scholarly Book Award from the American Sociological Association. • 2012 Viviana Zelizer Award from the Economic Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association. • 2012 Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Award from the Political Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association. • 2009 President’s Book Award from the Social Science History Association. Reviews: American Historical Review, American Journal of Sociology, Business Ethics Quarterly, Choice, Contemporary Sociology, Financial Times, Journal of American History, Naked Capitalism (blog), New York Review of Books, Political Studies Review, Public Books, Socio-Economic Review (review symposium).
    [Show full text]
  • 'Government & Markets' Contributors
    1 ‘Government & Markets’ Contributors Edward J. Balleisen is associate professor of history at Duke University, where he teaches American business history and American legal history, as well as a senior fellow at the Kenan Institute for Ethics and an international fellow of Oxford University’s Center for Corporate Reputation. He specializes in the evolving “culture of American capitalism” – the institutions, values, and practices that both structured and limited commercial activity. He is the author of Navigating Failure: Bankruptcy and Commercial Society in Antebellum America and Scenes from a Corporate Makeover: Columbia /HCA and Healthcare Fraud, 1992–2001 . His work has been published in numerous journals, including Business History Review , Australian Journal of Legal History , and Reviews in American History . In 2005, he was awarded the Howard D. Johnson Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. The recipient of an ACLS Burkhardt Fellowship in 2009-10, he is currently working on a history of commercial fraud in the United States, and especially organizational fraud against consumers and investors from the early nineteenth century to the present. Yochai Benkler is the Berkman Professor of Entrepreneurial Legal Studies at Harvard and faculty co-director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society. Before joining the faculty at Harvard Law School, he was Joseph M. Field ’55 Professor of Law at Yale. He writes about the Internet and the emergence of networked economy and society, as well as the organization of infrastructure, such as wireless communications. In the 1990s he played a role in characterizing the centrality of information commons to innovation, information production, and freedom in both its autonomy and democracy senses.
    [Show full text]
  • Amphibious Entrepreneurs and the Emergence of Organizational Forms
    Amphibious Entrepreneurs and the Emergence of Organizational Forms Walter W. Powell Kurt W. Sandholtz Stanford University Key words: Emergence, imprinting, models of organizing, recombination, transposition Forthcoming, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal. We are grateful to Andrew Abbott, Steve Barley, Diane Burton, Michael Cohen, Daisy Chung, Neil Fligstein, Hokyu Hwang, Sarah Kaplan, Joachim Lyon, John Levi Martin, Maja Lotz, Cal Morrill, Jason Owen-Smith, James Mahoney, John Padgett, Paolo Parigi, Charles Perrow, Monica Prasad, Craig Rawlings, and Lourdes Sosa for helpful comments, as well as audiences at the Academy of Management meetings, the University of Chicago, Cornell, London Business School, the University of Mannheim, Northwestern, Brigham Young University, Sciences Po, UC – Berkeley, UC – Davis, and the Networks and Organizations workshop at Stanford. Siddharth Mishra provided valuable research assistance. Two anonymous reviewers and special issue editors Alan Meyer and Kathy Eisenhardt made many useful suggestions. Author order is alphabetical as a matter of convention. This paper was a fully collaborative effort. Direct correspondence to Woody Powell at [email protected]. ABSTRACT: We study the emergence of new organizational forms, focusing on two mechanisms – reconfiguration and transposition – that distinguish the founding models of the first 26 biotechnology companies, all created in the industry’s first decade, between 1972 and 1981. We analyze rich archival data using hierarchical cluster analysis, revealing four organizational variants of the dedicated biotech firm (DBF). Three were products of reconfiguration, as executives from Big Pharma used past practices to incorporate new science. One DBF variant resulted from “amphibious” scientists who imported organizing ideas from the academy into their VC-funded start-ups.
    [Show full text]