[movimenti.bicocca] Charles Tilly: "Grudging Consent" (80th …

Nachricht löschen

Nachricht beantworten
Autor: Tommaso Vitale
Datum:  
To: ML movimenti Bicocca
Betreff: [movimenti.bicocca] Charles Tilly: "Grudging Consent" (80th anniversary of his birth, May 27, 2009)
>
> Today, Chuck Tilly would have turned 80 years old. On this occasion,
> the Social Science Research Council republishes his essay "Grudging
> Consent" from 2007, with special thanks to The American Interest for
> the permission. This essay is particularly fitting to remember Chuck
> on the 80th anniversary of his birth. The essay seeks to reach a
> broader audience beyond academia, practicing public social science
> by telling what he called "superior stories" of social processes -
> in this case, the processes of democratization, de-democratization
> and democracy promotion.
>
> If you like to read "Grudging Consent", you can download it here:
> http://www.ssrc.org/essays/tilly/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/tilly-grudging-consent.pdf
>
> For more context:
> http://www.ssrc.org/essays/tilly/charles-tilly-as-public-social-scientist
>
> Last year, the SSRC republished another Tilly essay from The
> American Interest - "Memorials to Credit & Blame," as a prelude to
> the memorial conference:
> http://www.ssrc.org/essays/tilly/creditblame
>
> "Grudging Consent" presents the core arguments he presented in his
> book Democracy (2007) which he regarded as the culmination and
> synthesis of all his work on the subject. In just a few pages, Chuck
> lays out the core of his theory of democratization, de-
> democratization and democracy promotion. He likens the process of
> citizens offer grudging consent (not to be presumed automatic) to
> Albert O. Hirschman’s notion of employing “voice” backed by the
> threat of “exit.”
>
> As Craig Calhoun said at the Hirschman Prize ceremony: Chuck Tilly
> both studied how voice could matter and exemplified it at the same
> time. Below, you can find a list of the memorial conference links
> and of related webpages in memory of Chuck - if you like to look
> through them again today.
>
> Andreas Koller, SSRC and NYU
>
> Tilly Fund for Social Science History: http://www.ssrc.org/donate/tillyfund
> Annotated Links to Charles Tilly Resources: http://www.ssrc.org/essays/tilly/resources
> Tributes to Charles Tilly: http://www.ssrc.org/essays/tilly
> Charles Tilly: “Memorials to Credit & Blame” (2008): http://www.ssrc.org/essays/tilly/creditblame
> Hirschman Prize Ceremony Speeches and Conference Papers: http://www.ssrc.org/hirschman/event/2008
> Images from the Hirschman Prize Ceremony: http://www.ssrc.org/essays/tilly/hirschmanaward
> Slide Shows from the Memorial Conference: http://www.ssrc.org/essays/tilly/memorialconference
> Memorial Slide Show: http://www.ssrc.org/essays/tilly/memorial-presentation-1
>