Theory and Research in Comparative Social Analysis
Located in Los Angeles, the city that the world watches to detect the shape of the future, UCLA Sociology sets the discipline's pace. Our internationally-renowned faculty spans the entire disciplinary gamut, from conversation analysis and ethnomethodology on one end, to mathematical sociology on the other, and with virtually every other major specialty represented. We study any number of topics, from the past (18th century China) to the future (the internet); from here (Los Angeles) to there (Eastern and Western Europe; southeast Asia; Latin America); from the smallest-scale (two people in conversation) to the largest (world empires). Committed to methodological diversity, we boast the largest contingent of ethnographers of any department, working in friendly co-existence with a very sophisticated group of quantitative researchers. We conduct sociological research in a myriad of ways, whether through direct observation, archival work, recording of naturally occurring data, large-scale sample surveys, experiments, or secondary data analysis.
There are 28 publications in this collection, published between 2003 and 2005.
Cook Martín, David: Proactive Recruitment and Retentionist Patterns of Migration and Nationality Policy in Argentina, Italy, and Spain (1850-1919)., 2005
Healy, Kieran: The Political Economy of Presumed Consent, 2005
Jamison, Angela: Embedded on the left: Aggressive media strategies and their organizational impact on the Immigrant Worker Freedom Ride, 2005
Laitin, David: Civil War Narratives, 2005
Lee, Justin: Investigating the Hybridity of ‘Wellness’ Practices, 2005
Schiller, Nina Glick: Transborder Citizenship: an Outcome of Legal Pluralism within Transnational Social Fields, 2005
Steinmetz, George: From “Native Policy” to Exterminationism: German Southwest Africa, 1904, in Comparative Perspective, 2005
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay: Beyond Incommensurability: Understanding Inter-Imperial Dynamics, 2005
Waldinger, Roger D: The Bounded Community: Turning Foreigners into Americans in 21st Century Los Angeles, 2005
Abbott, Andrew: The Historicality of Individuals, 2004
Bozkurt, Ödül: The Global Corpo-nation?: High-Skilled Workers in Mobile Telecommunications Multinationals, 2004
Chibber, Vivek: Reviving the Developmental State? The Myth of the National Bourgeoisie, 2004
Cohen, Rachel: When it Pays to be Friendly: Employment Relations and Worker-Client Interactions in Hairdressing, 2004
Dobbin, Frank: How Institutions Create Ideas: Railroad Finance and the Construction of Public and Private in France and the United States, 2004
Fitzgerald, David: Ethnographies of Migration, 2004
Fligstein, Neil: The Transformation of the American Economy, 1984-2001, 2004
Gorski, Phil: The Protestant Reformation and Economic Hegemony: Religion and the Rise of Holland and England, 2004
Grant-Friedman, Andrea: Standing in the Mirror of World Capitalism: Economic Globalization, the Soviet Union, and the COMECON, 2004
Jacoby, Sanford: Economic Ideas and the Labor Market: Origins of the Anglo-American Model and Prospects for Global Diffusion, 2004
Ragin, Charles C: Between Complexity and Parsimony: Limited Diversity, Counterfactual Cases, and Comparative Analysis., 2004
Waldinger, Roger: Immigrant "Transnationalism" and the Presence of the Past, 2004
Brubaker, Rogers: Beyond Comparativism?, 2003
Chandra, Kanchan: Why Ethnic Parties Succeed: Patronage and Ethnic Headcounts in India, 2003
Gemici, Kurtulus: Spontaneity in Social Protest: April 2001 Shopkeeper Protests in Turkey, 2003
Kristin Surak: "Ethnic" Practices in Translation: Tea in Japan and the US, 2003
Le Galès, Patrick: The governance of local economies , A french Case Study, 2003
Sabl, Andrew: Why Racial Categories Make No Sense--and Why the Census Bureau is Right not to Care, 2003
Thelen, Kathleen: Institutions and Social Change: The Evolution of Vocational Training in Germany, 2003