Contention and Trust in Cities and States
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Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2014-10-16
- Mått155 x 235 x undefined mm
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor372
- FörlagSpringer
- ISBN9789400799530
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Michael Hanagan is Adjunct Professor of History at Vassar College. He has taught at Vanderbilt University, Columbia University and the New School for Social Research. His books include: The Logic of Solidarity: Artisans and Industrial Workers in Three French Towns (1980), Nascent Proletarians: Class Formation in Post-Revolutionary France, 18400-1880 (1989), Confrontation, Class Consciousness and the Labor Process (1986), Proletarians and Protest: Studies in Class Formation (1986), Expanding Rights, Reconfiguring States (2000), and Challenging Authority: The Historical Study of Contentious Politics. (1999). Global Connections: Politics, Exchange, and Social Life: A World History, (forthcoming), He is currently completing (with Miriam Cohen) a manuscript on the rise of the welfare state in England, France, and the U.S., 1870-1950. Chris Tilly is Professor of Urban Planning at UCLA and Director of the UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment. His research focuses on the determinants of job quality, particularly in lower-level jobs, as well as social movements and urban and regional development. His books include Half a Job: Bad and Good Part-Time-Jobs in a Changing Labor Market (1996), Work Under Capitalism (1998), Stories Employers Tell: Race, Skill, and Hiring in America (2001), Urban Inequality: Evidence from Four Cities (2001), and The Gloves-Off Economy: Labor Standards at the Bottom of America’s Labor Market (2008). Tilly’s most recent work is comparative, building on field research on retail jobs in the United States and Mexico and collaboration with researchers in a number of European countries.
- Michael Hanagan and Chris Tilly, “Introduction” Charles Tilly, “Cities, states, and trust networks: chapter 1 of Cities and States in World History” I. Historicism and Historical Legacies Rod Aya and Lynn Eden, “Historicism, Theory, and Method” Marcel van der Linden, “Unanticipated consequences of “humanitarian intervention”: The British campaign to abolish the slave trade, 1807–1900” Hwa-Ji Shin, “Colonial legacy of ethno-racial inequality in Japan” II. State-Making, Remaking, and Unmaking Sidney Tarrow, “The French Revolution, War, and Statemaking: Making One Tilly Out of Three” Miguel Centeno and Elaine Enriquez, “Legacies of empire?” Fernando Lopez-Alves, “Nation-States and National States: Latin America in Comparative Perspective” Smita Srinivas, “Industrial welfare and the state: nation and city reconsidered” Antonina Gentile, “Party Governments, U.S. Hegemony, and a Tale of Two Tillys’ Weberian State” Jeff Goodwin, “Terrorism” III. City-State Relations Susan Fainstein, “Urban Social Movements, Citizen Participation and Trust Networks” Elisabeth S. Clemens, “From city club to nation state: business networks in American political development” Wim Blockmans, “Inclusiveness and exclusion: trust networks at the origins of European cities” Edward W. Soja, “Cities and states in geohistory” IV. Trust Networks and Commitment Wayne Te Brake, “The Contentious Politics of Religious Diversity” Diane E. Davis, “Irregular armed forces, shifting patterns of commitment, and fragmented sovereignty in the developing world” Javier Auyero, “A Gray Area” Marco Giugni, “Political Opportunity: Still a Useful Concept?” V. Democracy and Inequality Carmenza Gallo, “Institutions and the adoption of rights: political and property rights in Colombia” Patrick Heller and Peter Evans, “Taking Tilly south: durable inequalities, democratic contestation, and citizenship in the Southern Metropolis” Michael B. Katz, “Was government the solution or the problem? The role of the state in the history of American social policy” Peter Marcuse, “The forms of power and the forms of cities: building on Charles Tilly” Ann Mische, “Distrust in Democracy: Complex Civic Networks and the Case of Brazil” VI. Afterword Michael Hanagan and Chris Tilly, “Afterword” Ariel Salzmann, “Is there a moral economy of state formation? Religious minorities and repertoires of regime integration in the Middle East and Western Europe, 600–1614” Marcel van der Linden, “Unanticipated consequences of “humanitarian intervention”: The British campaign to abolish the slave trade, 1807–1900” Hwa-Ji Shin, “Colonial legacy of ethno-racial inequality in Japan” II. State-Making, Remaking, and Unmaking Sidney Tarrow, “The French Revolution, War, and Statemaking: Making One Tilly Out of Three” Miguel Centeno and Elaine Enriquez, “Legacies of empire?” Fernando Lopez-Alves, “Nation-States and National States: Latin America in Comparative Perspective” Smita Srinivas, “Industrial welfare and the state: nation and city reconsidered” Antonina Gentile, “Party Governments, U.S. Hegemony, and a Tale of Two Tillys’ Weberian State” Jeff Goodwin, “Terrorism” III. City-State Relations Susan Fainstein, “Urban Social Movements, Citizen Participation and Trust Networks” Elisabeth S. Clemens, “From city club to nation state: business networks in American political development” Wim Blockmans, “Inclusiveness and exclusion: trust networks at theorigins of European cities” Edward W. Soja, “Cities and states in geohistory” IV. Trust Networks and Commitment Wayne Te Brake, “The Contentious Politics of Religious Diversity” Diane E. Davis, “Irregular armed forces, shifting patterns of commitment, and fragmented sovereignty in the developing world” Javier Auyero, “A Gray Area” Marco Giugni, “Political Opportunity: Still a Useful Concept?” V. Democracy and Inequality Carmenza Gallo, “Institutions and the adoption of rights: political and property rights in Colombia” Patrick Heller and Peter Evans, “Taking Tilly south: durable inequalities, democratic contestation, and citizenship in the Southern Metropolis” Michael B. Katz, “Was government the solution or the problem? The role of the state in the history of American social policy” Peter Marcuse, “The forms of power and the forms of cities: building on Charles Tilly” Ann Mische, “Distrust in Democracy: Complex Civic Networks and the Case of Brazil” VI. Afterword Michael Hanagan and Chris Tilly, “Afterword”
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