This article takes its point of departure from the intellectual milieu in the mid-1980s that gave rise to Luc Boltanski and Laurent Thévenot’s book, On Justification: Economies of Worth. It shows how exposure to ideas and concepts in that book came to take varied forms as they were elaborated and modified in the work of an American sociologist across several decades of research in diverse empirical settings
Results of the 2014 Research Excellence Framework have, in some quarters, been interpreted as eviden...
In The Scopus Diaries and the (Il)Logics of Academic Survival, Abel Polese helps to demystify many o...
The UK government recently announced its intention to reduce funding for ‘low value’ degrees in the ...
Eugenics and sociology are often considered polar opposites, with the former seen as a pseudo-scienc...
The article discusses the varying conceptions of the faculty of ‘the understanding’ in 18th-century ...
This is an interview with Professor John Clammer of Jindal Global University, Dehli, India. He is a ...
The literature review is a staple of the scholarly article. It allows authors to summarise previous ...
We appreciate the careful and thoughtful commentary on Schermann et al. (2016) by Lacity and Khan (2...
Board members of the Journal of Extension (JOE) are rethinking and reconsidering the journal\u27s cr...
With The Sociology of Intellectuals: After 'The Existentialist Moment', Simon Susen and Patrick Baer...
For many of us in Extension, our comfort is in the quantitative research realm, with only forays int...
This article offers a review of shifts in feminist legal theory since the early 1990s. We first use ...
In British Social Theory: Recovering Lost Traditions Before 1950, John Scott revisits the history of...
This paper presents a vision of a future “Vision 2030” in which business schools and scholars worldw...
In this article, we show what insights can be gained by considering the relationship between expert ...
Results of the 2014 Research Excellence Framework have, in some quarters, been interpreted as eviden...
In The Scopus Diaries and the (Il)Logics of Academic Survival, Abel Polese helps to demystify many o...
The UK government recently announced its intention to reduce funding for ‘low value’ degrees in the ...
Eugenics and sociology are often considered polar opposites, with the former seen as a pseudo-scienc...
The article discusses the varying conceptions of the faculty of ‘the understanding’ in 18th-century ...
This is an interview with Professor John Clammer of Jindal Global University, Dehli, India. He is a ...
The literature review is a staple of the scholarly article. It allows authors to summarise previous ...
We appreciate the careful and thoughtful commentary on Schermann et al. (2016) by Lacity and Khan (2...
Board members of the Journal of Extension (JOE) are rethinking and reconsidering the journal\u27s cr...
With The Sociology of Intellectuals: After 'The Existentialist Moment', Simon Susen and Patrick Baer...
For many of us in Extension, our comfort is in the quantitative research realm, with only forays int...
This article offers a review of shifts in feminist legal theory since the early 1990s. We first use ...
In British Social Theory: Recovering Lost Traditions Before 1950, John Scott revisits the history of...
This paper presents a vision of a future “Vision 2030” in which business schools and scholars worldw...
In this article, we show what insights can be gained by considering the relationship between expert ...
Results of the 2014 Research Excellence Framework have, in some quarters, been interpreted as eviden...
In The Scopus Diaries and the (Il)Logics of Academic Survival, Abel Polese helps to demystify many o...
The UK government recently announced its intention to reduce funding for ‘low value’ degrees in the ...