[movimenti.bicocca] broadening the study of contentious poli…

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Author: Tommaso Vitale
Date:  
To: ML movimenti Bicocca
Subject: [movimenti.bicocca] broadening the study of contentious politics to cover non-public controversies
Polarization and convergence in academic controversies

Author(s)        Sidney Tarrow
DOI        10.1007/s11186-008-9065-1
Online since        June 07, 2008
Page        513 - 536


Volume 37 Number 6 of Theory and Society

Sidney Tarrow1
(1)     Government Dept., Cornell University, 202A White Hall, Ithaca, NY  
14853-3501, USA
Published online: 7 June 2008


Abstract Not many years ago both anthropology and political science
experienced internal disputes—in the first case over the publication
of a book accusing a noted anthropologist of endangering indigenous
subjects and in the second over the nature of the field. While the
first led to polarization, the second produced a partial convergence
and modest reforms. This article examines the two processes and seeks
the key mechanisms that produced those differences, closing with a
call for broadening the study of contentious politics to cover non-
public controversies like the ones examined in this article.

    Sidney Tarrow
Email: sgt2@???
Sidney Tarrow   teaches Political Science and Sociology at Cornell  
University, where he specializes in social movements and contentious  
politics. Tarrow’s first book was Peasant Communism in Southern Italy  
(Yale, 1967). His next project on contentious politics was a  
reconstruction of Italian protest cycle of the late 1960s, Democracy  
and Disorder (Oxford, 1989). With Cambridge Press, he published Power  
in Movement (1998), Dynamics of Contention (2001, along with Doug  
McAdam and Charles Tilly), and The New Transnational Activism (2005).  
His latest book (with Charles Tilly) isContentious Politics (Paradigm,  
2007). Tarrow is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and  
Sciences. He is currently working on a project on “human rights at war.”


----------------------------------------
Tommaso Vitale
Dipartimento di Sociologia e della Ricerca Sociale
Università di Milano Bicocca
via Bicocca degli Arcimboldi, 8
20126 Milano
tel: ++39.02 6448 7477
fax: ++39.02 6448 7561
skype: tomvita

http://homepage.mac.com/tommaso.vitale/