Search

Showing total 127 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Topic social theory Remove constraint Topic: social theory Journal british journal of sociology Remove constraint Journal: british journal of sociology Publisher wiley-blackwell Remove constraint Publisher: wiley-blackwell
127 results

Search Results

1. Dwelling in epistemic disobedience: A reply to Go.

2. After inclusion. Thinking with Julian Go's 'Thinking against empire: Anticolonial thought as social theory'.

3. Standpoint theory and middle‐range theorizing in International Sociology.

4. Fetishes and factishes: Durkheim and Latour.

5. The cosmopolitan contradictions of planetary urbanization.

6. The dialectics of universality: The heterodox critical social theory of Robert Fine.

7. Paradoxes of late‐modern autonomy imperatives: Reconciling individual claims and institutional demands in everyday practice.

8. Successful societies: Decision‐making and the quality of attentiveness.

9. Interrogating the tribal: the aporia of 'tribalism' in the sociological study of the Middle East.

10. Beyond the racist/hooligan couplet: race, social theory and football culture.

11. Visions in monochrome: families, marriage and the individualization thesis.

12. The temporal gaze: the challenge for social theory in the context of GM food.

13. Is Bauman's bureau Weber's bureau?: a comment.

14. Homology and isomorphism: Bourdieu in conversation with New Institutionalism.

15. The sociologist and the state. An assessment of Pierre Bourdieu's sociology.

16. Guanxi, social capital theory and beyond: toward a globalized social science Guanxi, social capital theory and beyond: toward a globalized social science.

17. 'The whole is always smaller than its parts' - a digital test of Gabriel Tardes' monads.

18. 'Small change of the universal': beyond modernity?

19. Political power beyond the State: problematics of government.

20. Symbolic interactionism and the concept of power.

21. Smith'sSentiments(1759) and Wright'sPassions(1601): the beginnings of sociology.

22. Weberian perspectives on science, technology and the economy.

23. Critical realism and the dialectic.

24. The authority of complexity.

25. Spencer is dead, long live Spencer: individualism, holism, and the problem of norms.

26. Sociology after the postcolonial: Response to Julian Go's 'thinking against empire'.

27. Thinking against empire: Anticolonial thought as social theory.

28. Foucault, Foucauldians and sociology.

29. Theorizing the interview.

30. Political power beyond the State: Problematics of government.

31. Class theory and gender.

32. Settling accounts: action, accounts and sociological explanation.

33. Making sense of postmodern sociology.

34. Values in deviancy theory and society.

35. On the relevance of the philosophy of the social sciences.

36. Remarks on "relations of extraction, relations of redistribution: Empire, nation, and the construction of the British welfare state." Gurminder K. Bhambra.

37. Beck, Asia and second modernity.

38. The cosmopolitan imagination: critical cosmopolitanism and social theory.

39. Lorenz von Stein and the paradigmatic bifurcation of social theory in the nineteenth century.

40. Meeting or mis-meeting? The dialogical challenge to Verstehen.

41. Reproduction and resistance in Canadian high schools: An empirical examination of the Willis Thesis.

42. Economic and sociological theories of the enterprise and industrial democracy.

43. The structure of closure: a critique and development of the theories of Weber, Collins, and Parkin.

44. E.P. Thompson and 'poor' theory.

45. Critical social theory: an introduction and critique.

46. Max Weber's 'Interpretive Sociology': a comparison of conception and practice.

47. The structure of support in social movements: an analysis of organization and resource mobilization in the youth contra-culture.

48. Illness and the sick role: an evaluation in three communities.

49. The fate of the 'functional requisites' in Parsonian sociology.

50. Back to Hegel? On Gillian Rose's critique of sociological reason.