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www.cambridge.org/sociology 2005 Sociology General Sociology Social Theory Research Methods Science and Technology Studies Gender Sociology of Religion Race and Ethnicity Social Policy and Welfare Political Sociology Media and Cultural Studies Criminology Journals

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Page 1: Sociologyassets.cambridge.org/052196/8372/full_version/0521968372_pub.pdfSocial Theory 4 Titles by Margaret Archer 5 Cambridge Studies in Social Theory, Religion and Politics 5 Research

www.cambridge.org/sociology 2005

Sociology

General Sociology

Social Theory

Research Methods

Science andTechnology Studies

Gender

Sociology of Religion

Race and Ethnicity

Social Policy andWelfare

Political Sociology

Media and CulturalStudies

Criminology

Journals

Page 2: Sociologyassets.cambridge.org/052196/8372/full_version/0521968372_pub.pdfSocial Theory 4 Titles by Margaret Archer 5 Cambridge Studies in Social Theory, Religion and Politics 5 Research

ContentsGeneral Sociology 1

Social Theory 4Titles by Margaret Archer 5

Cambridge Studies in Social Theory,Religion and Politics 5

Research Methods 6Analytical Methods for Social Research 6

Science and Technology Studies 7Cambridge Studies in Society and the Life Sciences 7

Gender 8

Sociology of Religion 9

Race and Ethnicity 10

Social Policy and Welfare 11

Political Sociology 13Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics 15

Media and Cultural Studies 19Cambridge Cultural Social Studies 19

Criminology 23Cambridge Studies in Criminology 23

Index 26

Cambridge University Press is the printing and publishing house of the University of Cambridge,and is the oldest press in the world. It is a charitable enterprise required by University Statute to devote itself to printing and publishing in the furtherance of the acquisition, advancement,conservation, and dissemination of knowledge in all subjects; to the advancement of education,religion, learning, and research; and to the advancement of literature and good letters.

Highlights

� See page 8

� See page 4

� See page 3

� See page 1

Many of our journal titles are now available online. Each journal entryin this catalogue indicates where the price includes, or will include,

access to the electronic version of the journal during 2005. Full text isavailable FREE to all individuals within the registered domain address

of full rate subscribers. In addition, the service provides all users with FREEaccess to tables of contents and abstracts, and a FREE email alerting service.

Useful contactsBook proposals: Chris Harrison

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For further information about Sociology titles:Lucia Leader ([email protected])

All other enquiries, phone +44 (0) 1223 312393or email [email protected]

Prices and PaymentPrices and publication dates are correct at the time ofgoing to press but are subject to alteration withoutnotice.

www.cambridge.org/sociologyThis catalogue contains a selection of our most recent publishing in this area. Please visit ourwebsite for a full and searchable listing of all our titles in print and also an extensive range ofnews, features and resources. Our online ordering service is secure and easy to use.

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1

GeneralSociology

FORTHCOMING

The CambridgeHandbook of Age andAgeingEdited by Malcolm L. JohnsonUniversity of Bristol

and Vern L. BengtsonUniversity of Southern California

Edited in association with Peter G. ColemanUniversity of Southampton

and Thomas B. L. KirkwoodUniversity of Newcastle upon Tyne

The Cambridge Handbook of Age andAgeing is a state-of-the-art guide to thecurrent body of knowledge, theory,policy and practice relevant to ageresearchers and gerontologists aroundthe world. It contains almost 80 originalchapters, commissioned and written bythe world’s leading gerontologists from16 countries and 5 continents. Thebroad focus of the book is on thebehavioural and social sciences but italso includes important contributionsfrom the biological and medicalsciences. It provides comprehensive,accessible and authoritative accounts ofall the key topics in the field rangingfrom theories of ageing, to demography,physical aspects of ageing, mentalprocesses and ageing, nursing andhealth care for older people, the socialcontext of ageing, cross culturalperspectives, relationships, quality oflife, gender, and financial and policyprovision. This handbook will be a must-have resource for all researchers,students and professionals with aninterest in age and ageing.Contents: List of contributors; ForewordGary R. Andrews; Preface Malcolm L.Johnson; Part I. Introduction and Overview:1.1 Are theories of ageing necessary? VernL. Bengtson, Norella M. Putney, andMalcolm L. Johnson; 1.2 Ageing andchanging: international historicalperspectives on ageing W. AndrewAchenbaum; 1.3 Global ageing: thedemographic revolution in all cultures andsocieties Alexandre Kalache, Sandhi MariaBarreto and Ingrid Keller; 1.4 Thepsychological science of human ageing PaulB. Baltes, Alexandra Freund and Shu-ChenLi; 1.5 The biological science of humanageing Thomas B. L. Kirkwood; Part II. TheAgeing Body: 2.1 Biodemography andepidemiology of longevity Bernard Jeuneand Kaare Christensen; 2.2 Theepidemiology of ageing Christina Victor;2.3 Patterns of illness and mortality acrossthe adult lifespan Edlira Gjonca and

Michael Marmot; 2.4 Sensory impairmentTom H. Margrain and Mike Boulton;2.5 Mobility and falls R. A. Kenny;2.6 The genetics of behavioural ageingGerald E. McClearn and Stephen A. Petrill;2.7 Psychodynamic approaches to the life-course & ageing Simon Biggs; 2.8 Culturalapproaches to the ageing body ChrisGilleard; 2.9 Promoting health and wellbeing in later life Hannes B. Staehelin;Part III. The Ageing Mind: 3.1 Psychologicalapproaches to human development JuttaHeckhausen; 3.2 Cognitive changes acrossthe lifespan Pat Rabbitt; 3.3 Age-relatedchanges in memory Elizabeth A. Maylor;3.4 Intelligence and wisdom Robert J.Sternberg and Elena L. Grigorenko;3.5 Everyday competence in older adults K.Warner Shaie, Julie Blaskewicz and SherryL. Willis; 3.6 The psychology of emotionsand ageing Gisela Labouvie-Vief;3.7 Personality and ageing Ursula M.Staudinger; 3.8 Depression Amy Fiske andRandi S. Jones; 3.9 Dementia Bob Woods;3.10 Dementia in an Asian context JinzhouTian; Part IV. The Ageing Self: 4.1 Self andidentity Freya Dittmann-Kohli;4.2 Stress and coping Linda K. George;4.3 Reminiscence: developmental, socialand clinical perspectives Peter G. Coleman;4.4 The social worlds of old age Jaber F.Gubrium; 4.5 Listening to the past:reminiscence and oral history JoannaBornat; 4.6 Elder abuse in developingnations Lia Susana Daichman; 4.7 The selfin dementia Steven R. Sabat; 4.8 AgeismBill Bytheway; 4.9 Profiles of the oldest-oldLeonard W. Poon, Yuri Jang, Sandra G.Reynolds and Erick McCarthy; 4.10 Imagesof ageing: cultural representations of laterlife Mike Featherstone and Mike Hepworth;4.11 Religion, spirituality and older peopleAlfons Marcoen; 4.12 Quality of life andageing Svein Olav Daatland; 4.13 Thetransformation of dying in old societiesClive Seale; 4.14 The psychology of deathRobert A. Neimeyer and James L. Werth,Jr.; 4.15 Death and spirituality ElizabethMacKinlay; Part V. The Ageing ofRelationships: 5.1 Global ageing andchallenges to families Ariela Lowenstein;5.2 Aging parents and adult children: newperspectives on intergenerationalrelationships Merril Silverstein, RoseannGiarrusso, Daphna Gans and Vern L.Bengtson; 5.3 Grandparenthood SarahHarper; 5.4 Sibling ties across time: themiddle and later years Ingrid ArnetConnidis; 5.5 Filial piety in changing Asiansocieties Akiko Hashimoto and CharlotteIkels; 5.6 Generational memory and familyrelationships Claudine Attias-Donfut andFrançois-Charles Wolff; 5.7 Familycaregivers: increasing demands in thecontext of 21st century Globalization?Neena L. Chappell and Margaret J.Penning; 5.8 Network dynamics in later lifeFleur Thomése, Theo van Tilburg, MarjoleinBroese and Kees Knipscheer; 5.9 Changingfamily relationships in developing nationsIsabella Aboderin; 5.10 Ethnic diversity inaging, multi-cultural societies James S.Jackson, Edna Brown, Toni C Antonucci

and Svein Olav Daatland; 5.11 Gay andlesbian elders Katherine R. Allen;Part VI. The Ageing of Societies: 6.1 Thelifecourse perspective on ageing: linkedlives, timing and history Glen H. Elder, Jr.,Vern L. Bengtson and Norella M. Putney;6.2 The political economy of old age ChrisPhillipson; 6.3 Moral Economy and AgeingJon Hendricks; 6.4 Generational changesand generational equity Martin Kohli;6.5 Gender dimensions of the age shift SaraArber and Jay Ginn; 6.6 Migration andolder people C.F. Longino Jr, and A.M.Warnes; 6.7 Do longevity and healthgenerate wealth? Robert N. Butler;6.8 Women, ageing and inequality: afeminist perspective Carroll L. Estes;Part VII. Policies and Provisions for OlderPeople: 7.1 The social construction of oldage as a problem Malcolm L. Johnson;7.2 Restructuring the life course: work andretirement Victor W. Marshall and PhilipTaylor; 7.3 Ethical dilemmas in old age careHarry R. Moody; 7.4 Wealth, health, andageing: the multiple modern complexities offinancial gerontology Neal E. Cutler;7.5 Formal and informal community care forolder adults Demi Patsios and Adam Davey;7.6 Health policy and old age: aninternational review Jill Quadagno, JenniferReid Keene and Debra Street;7.7 Gerontological nursing: the state of theart Brendan McCormack; 7.8 Deliveringeffective social/long-term care to olderpeople Bleddyn Davies; 7.9 Delivering careto older people at home Kristina Larsson,Merril Silverstein and Mats Thorslund;7.10 Long-term care Robert L. Kane andRosalie A. Kane; 7.11 Managed care in theUnited States and United Kingdom RobertL. Kane and Clive E. Bowman; 7.12 Healthcare rationing: is age a proper criterion?Ruud ter Meulen and Josy Ubachs-Moust;7.13 Adaptation to new technologies NeilCharness and Sara J. Czaja; 7.14 Ageingand public policy in ethnically diversesocieties Fernando M. Torres-Gil.

2005 253 x 304 mm 750pp 54 tables67 figures0 521 82632 2 Hardback c. £75.000 521 53370 8 Paperback c. £30.00Publication September 2005

General Sociology

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org

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2

My Neighbor, MyEnemyJustice and Community in theAftermath of Mass AtrocityEdited by Eric StoverUniversity of California, Berkeley

and Harvey M. WeinsteinUniversity of California, Berkeley

How do societies torn apart by civil warand the attendant horrors of ethniccleansing, genocide, mass rape and thedestruction of the infrastructures of civilsociety begin to rebuild themselves withhelp from the international community?This book is unique in its social scienceperspective and draws on originalresearch by people working within thesocieties involved rather than re-workingexisting data. It also includes acomparative analysis of efforts atreconciliation in Rwanda and the formerYugoslavia. It will be a valuable resourcefor academics and policy makers.

2004 228 x 152 mm 368pp 15 tables14 figures0 521 83495 3 Hardback £40.000 521 54264 2 Paperback £16.99

FORTHCOMING

The Killing TrapGenocide in the TwentiethCenturyManus I. MidlarskyRutgers University, New Jersey

The Killing Trap seeks to understandboth the occurrence and magnitude ofgenocide, based on the conviction thatsuch comparative analysis maycontribute towards prevention ofgenocide in the future. Manus Midlarskycompares socio-economic circumstancesand international contexts and includesin his analysis the Jews of Europe,Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, Tutsiin Rwanda, black Africans in Darfur,Cambodians, Bosnians, and the victimsof conflict in Ireland. He gives equalemphasis to the non-occurrence ofgenocide, a critical element not found inother comparisons.

• Offers a comparative analysis of thegenocides, politicides and ethniccleansings of the twentieth century,which claimed over 40 million victims

• Unique – seeks to explain caseswhere genocide did not occur, as wellas cases where it did

• Examines the Holocaust, Rwanda andArmenia, and comes up-to-date withDarfur and Bosnia

‘Manus Midlarsky, a leading scholar ofwar, has written a book ofmonumental significance. He emergeshere as the pioneering thinker who hasproduced the first truly rigorous and

comparative theory of genocide. Asmust be true of any ground-breakingeffort to understand such afundamental and horrific phenomenon,his book will elicit much deservedpraise and will provoke counterarguments and intelligent debate.However the field of genocide studieswill evolve, this book will be thebenchmark against which all futurework will be compared. Not only is histheory highly original and compelling,but it is also written with a depth offeeling and beauty of language thatrecommends it to any readerconcerned to improve the world and tosave even one human life.’Bruce Bueno de Mesquita. Silver Professor andChair, Department of Politics, New YorkUniversity, and Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution,Stanford University

‘The Killing Trap is a majorcontribution to the field of genocidestudies and deserves to be widelyread. I am impressed by thecombination of analytic rigor andrichness of empirical data, by thebreadth of historical dimensionsincorporated into the discussion, bythe author’s erudition and the elegantparsimony of his comparative frame.’Rene Lemarchand, Emeritus Professor, Universityof Florida

2005 228 x 152 mm 400pp0 521 89469 7 Paperback c. £17.990 521 89469 7 Paperback c. £17.99Publication July 2005

FORTHCOMING

The Moral Significanceof ClassAndrew SayerUniversity of Lancaster

The Moral Significance of Class analysesthe moral aspects of people’s experienceof class inequalities. Class affects not onlyour material wealth but our access tothings, relationships, and practices whichwe have reason to value, including theesteem or respect of others and henceour sense of self-worth. It shapes the kindof people we become and our chances ofliving a fulfilling life. Yet contemporaryculture is increasingly ‘in denial’ aboutclass, finding it embarrassing toacknowledge, even though it can often beblatantly obvious. By drawing uponconcepts from moral philosophy andsocial theory and applying them toempirical studies of class, this fascinatingand accessible study shows how peopleare valued in a context in which their life-chances and achievements are objectivelyaffected by the lottery of birth class, andby forces which have little to do withtheir moral qualities or other merits.

2005 228 x 152 mm 256pp0 521 85089 4 Hardback c. £45.000 521 61640 9 Paperback c. £19.99Publication May 2005

Class PracticesHow Parents Help Their ChildrenGet Good JobsFiona DevineUniversity of Manchester

This is an important new comparativestudy of social mobility based onqualitative interviews with middle-classparents in America and Britain. Itaddresses the key issue of the stabilityof class relations and middle-classreproduction and how parents seek toincrease their children’s chances ofeducational success and occupationaladvancement. With the decline of thequality of state education and increasedjob insecurity in the labour market sincethe 1970s and 1980s, the reproductionof advantage is more difficult than inthe affluent decades of the 1950s and1960s.

2004 228 x 152 mm 298pp 4 tables0 521 00653 8 Paperback £16.99

NEW

AIDS, Rhetoric, andMedical KnowledgeAlex PredaUniversität Konstanz, Germany

This book examines the formation ofscientific knowledge about the AIDSepidemic in the 1980s and shows thebroader cultural assumptions whichgrounded this knowledge. Alex Predahighlights the metaphors, narratives,and classifications which framedscientific hypotheses about the natureof the infectious agent and itstransmission ways and compares thesearguments with those used in thescientific knowledge about SARS.Through detailed rhetorical analysis ofbiomedical publications, the authorshows how knowledge about epidemicsis shaped by cultural narratives andcategories of social thought. Predasituates his analysis in the broaderframe of the world risk society, wherescientific knowledge is called upon tosupport and shape public policies aboutprevention and health maintenance,among others. But can these policiesavoid the influence of cultural narrativesand of social classifications? The bookshows how culture matters forprevention and health policies, as wellas with respect to how scientificresearch is organized and funded.

2005 228 x 152 mm 288pp 3 line diagrams 2 tables0 521 83770 7 Hardback £45.00Publication February 2005

General Sociology

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Living and Dying withCancerAngela Armstrong-CosterUniversity of Southampton

‘... allows us a glimpse of some of themost personal and sensitive issues ...there are important messages forthose who work in medical oncologyand palliative care ...’The value of thisbook is in what the patients have tosay. Anyone who works in palliativecare will benefit from listening to themand it should be required reading foranyone training in medical or radiationoncology.’International Association for Hospice andPalliative Care e-Newsletter

2004 228 x 152 mm 208pp0 521 83765 0 Hardback £40.000 521 54667 2 Paperback £15.99

FORTHCOMING

Understanding theDivorce CycleThe Children of Divorce in theirOwn MarriagesNicholas H. WolfingerUniversity of Utah

Growing up in a divorced family leadsto a variety of difficulties for adultoffspring in their own partnerships. Oneof the best known and most powerful isthe divorce cycle, the transmission ofdivorce from one generation to thenext. This book examines how thedivorce cycle has transformed family lifein contemporary America by drawing ontwo national data sets. Compared topeople from intact families, the childrenof divorce are more likely to marry asteenagers, but less likely to wed overall,more likely to marry people fromdivorced families, more likely to dissolvesecond and third marriages, and lesslikely to marry their live-in partners. Yetsome of the adverse consequences ofparental divorce have abated even asdivorce itself proliferated and becamemore socially accepted. Taken together,these findings show how parentaldivorce is a strong force in people’s livesand society as a whole.

2005 228 x 152 mm 192pp 10 line diagrams 5 tables0 521 85116 5 Hardback c. £35.000 521 61660 3 Paperback c. £14.99Publication September 2005

Megaprojects and RiskAn Anatomy of AmbitionBent FlyvbjergAalborg University, Denmark

Nils BruzeliusStockholms Universitet

and Werner RothengatterUniversität Fridericiana Karlsruhe, Germany

A fascinating account of how promotersof multi-billion dollar megaprojectssystematically and self-servinglymisinform parliaments, the public andthe media in order to get projectsapproved and built. The authors notonly explore problems but also suggestpractical solutions drawing on theoryand evidence from the hundreds ofprojects studied.

2003 228 x 152 mm 218pp 13 line diagrams 10 tables0 521 80420 5 Hardback £40.000 521 00946 4 Paperback £15.99

NEW

Social Solidarity andthe GiftAafke E. KomterUniversiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands

This book brings together two traditionsof thinking about social ties:sociological theory on solidarity andanthropological theory on gift exchange.The purpose of the book is to explorehow both theoretical traditions maycomplete and enrich each other, andhow they may illuminatetransformations in solidarity. The mainargument, supported by empiricalillustrations, is that a theory of solidarityshould incorporate some of the coreinsights from anthropological gifttheory. The book presents a theoreticalmodel covering both positive andnegative – selective and excluding –aspects and consequences of solidarity.

2005 228 x 152 mm 246pp 1 line diagram 12 tables0 521 84100 3 Hardback £40.000 521 60084 7 Paperback £14.99

NEW

Legal ReasonThe Use of Analogy in LegalArgumentLloyd L. WeinrebHarvard University, Massachusetts

Legal Reason describes and explains theprocess of analogical reasoning, whichis the distinctive feature of legalargument. It challenges the prevailingview, urged by Edward Levi, CassSunstein, Richard Posner and others,which regards analogical reasoning aslogically flawed or as a defective formof deductive reasoning. It shows thatanalogical reasoning in the law is the

same as the reasoning used by all of usroutinely in everyday life and that it is avalid form of reasoning derived from theinnate human capacity to recognize thegeneral in the particular, on whichthought itself depends. The use ofanalogical reasoning is dictated by thenature of law, which requires theapplication of rules to particular facts.Written for scholars as well as studentsand persons generally who areinterested in law, Legal Reason iswritten in clear, accessible prose, withmany examples drawn from the law andfrom everyday experience.

2005 216 x 138 mm 192pp0 521 84967 5 Hardback £40.000 521 61490 2 Paperback £14.99Publication April 2005

JOURNAL

Archives européennesde sociologie/European Journal ofSociology/Europaeisches Archivfuer SoziologieEditors: Christopher HannMax-Planck Institute for SocialAnthropology

Jacques LautmanUniversity of Aix-en-Provence

Steven LukesNew York University

Claus OffeHumboldt Universität zu Berlin

and Hans JoasUniversität Erfurt

Editorial office supported by the CentreNational de la Recherche Scientifique,Paris

Consolidating its reputation forhistorical and comparative sociology ofthe highest order, European Journal ofSociology publishes original articles ofbroad interdisciplinary scope whichrepresent some of the best writing inthe social sciences today. The journalhas a strongly international perspectiveand now publishes a third issue everyyear exclusively devoted to state-of-the-art surveys, the elucidation of centralconcepts and review essays whichexplore key topics with reference to themost relevant recent publications.Subscriptions

Volume 46 in 2005: April, August andDecemberInstitutions print and electronic: £118/$190Institutions electronic only: £102/$163Institutions print only: £108/$173Individuals print only: £38/$59British Sociological Association, AmericanSociological Association: £24/$35Print ISSN 0003-9756Electronic ISSN 1474-0583

General Sociology

For monthly email alerts visit www.cambridge.org/eservices

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Social Theory

FORTHCOMING

The CambridgeCompanion toDurkheimEdited by Jeffrey C. AlexanderYale University, Connecticut

and Philip SmithYale University, Connecticut

Long recognised as a foundational figurein the development of social scientificthought, Emile Durkheim’s work hasbeen the subject of intense debate overthe years. This authoritative andcomprehensive collection of essays re-examines the impact of Durkheim’sthought, considering the historicalcontexts of his work as well asevaluating his ideas in relation to currentissues and controversies. Eminentauthorities in the field have contributedto this up-to-date overview, giving thereader – both students and academics –a chance to engage directly with leadingfigures in the field about contemporarytrends, ideas and dilemmas. This volumereflects the cross-disciplinary applicationof Durkheim’s theories and will interestscholars of anthropology, politicalscience, cultural studies and philosophy,as well as sociology. This is a landmarkvolume that redefines the relevance ofDurkheim to the human sciences in thetwenty-first century.

Contributors: Jeffrey C. Alexander,Philip Smith, Marcel Fournier, PhilippeBesnard, Robert Alun Jones, RandallCollins, Karen E. Fields, Robert N.Bellah, Chris Shilling, Roger Friedland,Alexander Riley, Edward Tiryakian, DavidB. Grusky, Gabriela Galescu, ZygmuntBaumann, Mark Cladis

2005 228 x 152 mm 464pp 6 tables0 521 80672 0 Hardback c. £45.000 521 00151 X Paperback c. £17.99Publication May 2005

FORTHCOMING

Durkheim’s GhostsCultural Logic and Social ThingsCharles LemertWesleyan University, Connecticut

Durkheim’s Ghosts is a fascinatingpresentation of the tradition of socialtheory influenced by Emile Durkheim’sthinking on the social foundations ofknowledge. From Saussure and Levi-Strauss to Foucault, Bourdieu andDerrida, today’s criticisms of modernpolitics and culture owe an important, ifunacknowledged, debt to Durkheim.These engaging and innovative essaysby leading sociologist Charles Lemertbring together his writings on thecontributions of French social theorypast and present. Rather than merelyinterpret the theories, Lemert uses themto explore the futures of sociology,social theory, and culture studies.Durkheim’s Ghosts offers the readeroriginal insights into Durkheim’s legacyand the wider French traditions for thecultural and social sciences. Of specialnote is the book’s new and excitingtheory of culture and semiotics.Provocative, scholarly, imaginative andambitious this book will be invaluableto anyone interested in social theory,culture, and intellectual history ofmodern times.

2005 228 x 152 mm 300pp 3 figures0 521 84266 2 Hardback c. £40.000 521 60363 3 Paperback c. £16.99Publication July 2005

Durkheim’s PhilosophyLecturesNotes from the Lycée de SensCourse, 1883–1884Edited and translated by Neil GrossHarvard University, Massachusetts

and Robert Alun JonesUniversity of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Foreword by Hans Joas

In these lectures, Emile Durkheim, thefounder of French sociology, sets out tointroduce secondary school students tothe field of philosophy. Moving easilyback and forth between the history ofphilosophy and the contributions ofphilosophers in his own day, Durkheimtakes up topics as diverse asphilosophical psychology, logic, ethics,and metaphysics, and seeks to articulatea unified philosophical position.Intellectual historians, historically-minded philosophers, and Frenchhistorians will all find the lectures avaluable historical document.

2004 228 x 152 mm 358pp 4 line diagrams0 521 63066 5 Hardback £45.00

NEW

Epistemology andPracticeDurkheim’s The ElementaryForms of Religious LifeAnne Warfield RawlsBentley College, Massachusetts

In this original and controversial bookProfessor Rawls argues that Durkheim’sThe Elementary Forms of Religious Lifeis the crowning achievement of hissociological endeavour and that sinceits publication in English in 1915 it hasbeen consistently misunderstood. Ratherthan a work on primitive religion or thesociology of knowledge, Rawls assertsthat it is an attempt by Durkheim toestablish a unique epistemological basisfor the study of sociology and moralrelations. By privileging social practiceover beliefs and ideas, it avoids thedilemmas inherent in philosophicalapproaches to knowledge and moralitythat are based on individualism and thetendency to privilege beliefs and ideasover practices, both tendencies thatdominate western thought. Based ondetailed textual analysis of the primarytext, this book will be an important andoriginal contribution to contemporarydebates on social theory andphilosophy.

2005 228 x 152 mm 364pp0 521 65145 X Hardback £50.00Publication March 2005

The Sociology ofNorbert EliasEdited by Steven LoyalUniversity College Dublin

and Stephen QuilleyUniversity College Dublin

Over recent years there has been asteady upsurge of interest in the workof Norbert Elias. This book provides acomprehensive and accessibleintroduction to the key aspects of Elias’swork and then applies an Eliasianapproach to key topics in contemporarysociology such as race, class, gender,religion, epistemology and nationalism.The editors have brought together adistinguished group of internationalsociologists and this book will not onlychange the course of Elias studies butbe a valuable resource for both studentsand scholars alike.

2004 228 x 152 mm 300pp 1 table2 figures0 521 82786 8 Hardback £50.000 521 53509 3 Paperback £18.99

Social Theory

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FORTHCOMING

Social EmergenceSocieties As Complex SystemsR. Keith SawyerWashington University, St Louis

Can we understand important socialissues by studying individualpersonalities and decisions? Or aresocieties somehow more than thepeople in them? Sociologists have longbelieved that psychology can’t explainwhat happens when people worktogether in complex modern societies.In contrast, most psychologists andeconomists believe that if we have anaccurate theory of how individuals makechoices and act on them, we canexplain pretty much everything aboutsocial life. Social Emergence takes anew approach to these longstandingquestions. Sawyer argues that societiesare complex dynamical systems, andthat the best way to resolve thesedebates is by developing the concept ofemergence, focusing on multiple levelsof analysis – individuals, interactions,and groups – and with a dynamic focuson how social group phenomenaemerge from communication processesamong individual members. This bookmakes a unique contribution not only tocomplex systems research but also tosocial theory.

2005 228 x 152 mm 250pp 9 figures0 521 84464 9 Hardback c. £40.000 521 60637 3 Paperback c. £18.99Publication July 2005

FORTHCOMING

Dissecting the SocialOn the Principles of AnalyticalSociologyPeter Hedstrom

Building on his earlier influentialcontributions to contemporary debateson social theory, Professor Hedstromargues for a systematic development ofsociological theory so that it has theexplanatory power and precision toinform sociological research andunderstanding – qualities lacking inmuch of the grand social theorizing thatis currently fashionable. Combining newapproaches to theory and methodologyand using extensive examples toillustrate how to apply them, thissophisticated and original book willappeal to a broad range of socialscientists.

2005 228 x 152 mm 275pp0 521 79229 0 Hardback c. £50.000 521 79667 9 Paperback c. £18.99Publication October 2005

Titles by MargaretArcher

Structure, Agency and the InternalConversationMargaret S. ArcherUniversity of Warwick

Explores the relationship betweenstructure and agency through humanreflexivity and the internal conversation.

2003 228 x 152 mm 380pp 1 table7 figures0 521 82906 2 Hardback £47.500 521 53597 2 Paperback £17.99

Being HumanThe Problem of AgencyMargaret S. ArcherUniversity of Warwick

A revindication of the concept ofhumanity and the primacy of practiceover language.

2000 228 x 152 mm 333pp 7 line diagrams0 521 79175 8 Hardback £45.000 521 79564 8 Paperback £16.99

Culture and AgencyThe Place of Culture in SocialTheorySecond editionMargaret S. ArcherUniversity of Warwick

Revised edition of 1988 book, highlyinfluential in debates about role ofculture in social theory.

1996 228 x 152 mm 381pp0 521 56441 7 Paperback £20.99

Realist Social TheoryThe Morphogenetic ApproachMargaret S. ArcherUniversity of Warwick

Important new work of social theoryand challenge to Anthony Giddens fromauthor of Culture and Agency.

1995 228 x 152 mm 366pp 21 figures0 521 48176 7 Hardback £50.000 521 48442 1 Paperback £18.99

Cambridge Studies inSocial Theory, Religionand Politics

Sacred and SecularReligion and Politics WorldwidePippa NorrisHarvard University, Massachusetts

and Ronald InglehartUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Sacred and Secular demonstrates that:(1) The publics of virtually all advancedindustrial societies have been movingtoward more secular orientations duringthe past fifty years; but (2) The world asa whole now has more people withtraditional religious views than everbefore – and they constitute a growingproportion of the world’s population.Though these two propositions mayseem contradictory, they are not. Thefact that the first proposition is true,helps account for the second – becausesecularization has a surprisinglypowerful negative impact on humanfertility rates.Contents: Part I. UnderstandingSecularization: 1. The secularization debate;2. Measuring secularization; 3. Comparingsecularization worldwide; Part II. CaseStudies of Religion and Politics: 4. Thepuzzle of religiosity in the United States andWestern Europe; 5. A religious revival inpost-communist Europe?; 6. Religion andpolitics in the Muslim world; Part III. TheConsequences of Secularization: 7. Religion,the Protestant ethic, and moral values;8. Religious organizations and socialcapital; 9. Religious parties and electoralbehavior; Part IV. Conclusions:10. Consequences.Cambridge Studies in Social Theory, Religionand Politics

2004 228 x 152 mm 348pp 33 line diagrams 43 tables0 521 83984 X Hardback £45.000 521 54872 1 Paperback £17.99

Social Theory

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org

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Muslims and the Statein Britain, France, andGermanyJoel S. FetzerPepperdine University, Malibu

and J. Christopher SoperPepperdine University, Malibu

With so many Muslims living in WesternEurope, governments have struggledwith how to make these religiousnewcomers part of life in their country.This question has become all the moreurgent in the aftermath of the terroristattacks of September 11, 2001. Britain,France, and Germany have all dealt withMuslims’ religious practices differently.This book explains why these policiesdiffer and proposes ways to ensure thesuccessful incorporation of practicingMuslims into liberal democracies.Cambridge Studies in Social Theory, Religionand Politics

2004 228 x 152 mm 224pp 2 tables0 521 82830 9 Hardback £35.000 521 53539 5 Paperback £14.99

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Faking ItWilliam Ian MillerUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor

This book is about the intrusive fearthat we may not be what we appear tobe, or worse, that we may be only whatwe appear to be and nothing more. It’sabout the worry of being exposed asfrauds in our profession, cads in ourloves, as less than virtuously motivatedactors when we are being agreeable,charitable, or decent. Why do we sooften mistrust the motives of our owngood deeds, thinking them fake gooddeeds, though the beneficiary of themgives us full credit? We know that manyroles are supposed to be nothing morethan fakery of a sort, playable with onehand tied behind one’s back; we knowthat virtue itself cuts all kinds of dealswith a benign form of hypocrisy thatkeeps us polite, kind, and actingproperly. This book is about the roles weplay and our anxieties of authenticity.‘... learned and deliciously discursivebook ... Miller’s academic, specialty is,wonderfully, blood-feuds. So when itcomes to apology, penance andforgiveness, he speaks with bitter,albeit theoretical, experience.’The Independent

2005 304pp0 521 61370 1 Paperback £14.99Publication March 2005

Also available0 521 83018 4 Hardback £25.00

TEXTBOOK

Making Social ScienceMatterWhy Social Inquiry Fails andHow it Can Succeed AgainBent FlyvbjergAalborg University, Denmark

Translated by Steven Sampson

New approach demonstrating howsocial science can be successful,focusing on context, values, and power.

2001 228 x 152 mm 214pp0 521 77268 0 Hardback £40.000 521 77568 X Paperback £14.99

ResearchMethods

Analytical Methods forSocial Research

Ecological InferenceNew Methodological StrategiesEdited by Gary KingHarvard University, Massachusetts

Ori RosenUniversity of Pittsburgh

and Martin A. TannerNorthwestern University, Illinois

A diverse group of scholars surveys thelatest strategies for solving ecologicalinference problems, drawing upon therecent explosion of research in the field.The uncertainties and information lost inaggregation make ecological inferenceone of the most difficult areas ofstatistical inference, but these inferencesare required in many academic fields, aswell as by legislatures and the Courts inredistricting, marketing research bybusiness, and policy analysis bygovernments. This wide-rangingcollection of essays offers many freshand important contributions to thestudy of ecological inference.Analytical Methods for Social Research

2004 253 x 177 mm 432pp 451 line diagrams 54 tables0 521 83513 5 Hardback £50.000 521 54280 4 Paperback £23.99

Event HistoryModelingA Guide for Social ScientistsJanet M. Box-SteffensmeierOhio State University

and Bradford S. JonesUniversity of Arizona

Event History Modeling provides anaccessible, up-to-date guide to eventhistory analysis for researchers andadvanced students in the socialsciences. The authors explain thefoundational principles of event-historyanalysis, and analyse numerousexamples which they estimate andinterpret using standard statisticalpackages, such as STATA and S-Plus.They review recent and criticalinnovations in diagnostics, includingtesting the proportional hazardsassumption, identifying outliers, andassessing model fit. They also discusscommon problems encountered withtime-to-event data, and makerecommendations regarding theimplementation of duration modelingmethods.Analytical Methods for Social Research

2004 228 x 152 mm 232pp 18 line diagrams 36 tables0 521 83767 7 Hardback £47.500 521 54673 7 Paperback £17.95

From Words toNumbersNarrative, Data and SocialScienceRoberto FranzosiUniversity of Reading

From Words to Numbers departsradically from traditional contentanalysis approaches to the quantitativestudy of texts. It is based on a rigorouslinguistic theory of narrative, rather thanthe ad-hoc approaches of contextanalysis. Furthermore, it sows wordsthrough an elegant mathematicalthread. Finally, it has engaged narrativestructures dominated by the metaphorsof the ‘journey’ (from words tonumbers) and the ‘alchemy’ (words intonumbers).Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences, 22

2004 228 x 152 mm 500pp0 521 81520 7 Hardback £65.000 521 54145 X Paperback £27.95

Research Methods

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NEW

Exploratory SocialNetwork Analysis withPajekWouter de NooyErasmus Universiteit Rotterdam

Andrej MrvarUniversity of Ljubljana

and Vladimir BatageljUniversity of Ljubljana

This is the first textbook on socialnetwork analysis integrating theory,applications, and professional softwarefor performing network analysis (Pajek).Step by step, the book introduces themain structural concepts and theirapplications in social research withexercises to test the understanding. Anapplication section explaining how toperform the network analyses withPajek software follows each theoreticalsection. Pajek software and datasets forall examples are freely available, so thereader can learn network analysis bydoing it. In addition, each chapter offerscase studies for practising networkanalysis. In the end, the reader has theknowledge, skills, and tools to applysocial network analysis in all socialsciences, ranging from anthropologyand sociology to business administrationand history.Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences, 27

2005 228 x 152 mm 368pp 179 line diagrams0 521 84173 9 Hardback £50.000 521 60262 9 Paperback £22.99Publication March 2005

NEW

GeneralizedBlockmodelingPatrick DoreianUniversity of Pittsburgh

Vladimir BatageljUniversity of Ljubljana

and Anuska FerligojUniversity of Ljubljana

This book provides an integratedtreatment of blockmodeling, the mostfrequently used technique in socialnetwork analysis. It secures itsmathematical foundations and thengeneralizes blockmodeling for theanalysis of many types of networkstructures. Examples are usedthroughout the text and include smallgroup structures, little league baseballteams, intra-organizational networks,inter-organizational networks, baboongrooming networks, marriage ties ofnoble families, trust networks, signednetworks, Supreme Court decisions,journal citation networks, and alliance

networks. Also provided is an integratedtreatment of algebraic and graphtheoretic concepts for network analysisand a broad introduction to clusteranalysis. These formal ideas are thefoundations for the authors’ proposalfor direct optimizational approaches toblockmodeling which yield blockmodelsthat best fit the data, a measure of fitthat is integral to the establishment ofblockmodels, and creates the potentialfor many generalizations and adeductive use of blockmodeling.Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences, 25

2005 228 x 152 mm 402pp 103 line diagrams 117 tables0 521 84085 6 Hardback £45.00

NEW

Models and Methodsin Social NetworkAnalysisEdited by Peter CarringtonUniversity of Waterloo, Ontario

John ScottUniversity of Essex

and Stanley WassermanIndiana University, Bloomington

Models and Methods in Social NetworkAnalysis presents the most importantdevelopments in quantitative modelsand methods for analyzing socialnetwork data that have appearedduring the 1990s. Intended as acomplement to Wasserman and Faust’sSocial Network Analysis: Methods andApplications, it is a collection of originalarticles by leading methodologistsreviewing recent advances in theirparticular areas of network methods.Reviewed are advances in networkmeasurement, network sampling, theanalysis of centrality, positional analysisor blockmodelling, the analysis ofdiffusion through networks, the analysisof affiliation or ‘two-mode’ networks,the theory of random graphs,dependence graphs, exponential familiesof random graphs, the analysis oflongitudinal network data, graphicaltechniques for exploring network data,and software for the analysis of socialnetworks.Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences, 28

2005 253 x 177 mm 344pp 98 line diagrams0 521 80959 2 Hardback £40.000 521 60097 9 Paperback £18.99Publication April 2005

Science andTechnologyStudies

Cambridge Studies inSociety and the LifeSciences

The Politics ofPersonalised MedicinePharmacogenetics in the ClinicAdam HedgecoeUniversity of Sussex

Based on interviews with clinicians,researchers, regulators and companyrepresentatives, this book explores theimpact of pharmacogenetics on clinicalpractice, following two cases ofpersonalised medicine as they maketheir way from the laboratory to theclinic. It highlights the significantdifferences between the views ofsupporters of pharmacogenetics inindustry and those who use thetechnology at the clinical ‘coal face’.Cambridge Studies in Society and the LifeSciences

2004 228 x 152 mm 216pp 1 line diagram0 521 84177 1 Hardback £45.000 521 60265 3 Paperback £19.99

NEW

The Human GenomeDiversity ProjectAn Ethnography of ScientificPracticeAmade M’CharekUniversiteit van Amsterdam

The Human Genome Diversity Project(HGDP) was launched in 1991 by agroup of population geneticists whoseaim was to map genetic diversity inhundreds of human populations bytracing the similarities and differencesbetween them. It quickly becamecontroversial and was accused of racismand ‘bad science’ because of the specialinterest paid to sampling cell materialfrom isolated and indigenouspopulations. The author spent a yearcarrying out participant observation intwo of the laboratories involved andprovides fascinating insights into dailyroutines and technologies used in thoselaboratories and also into issues ofnormativity, standardization andnaturalisation. Drawing on debates andtheoretical perspectives from across thesocial sciences, M’charek explores the

Science and Technology Studies

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relationship between the tools used toproduce knowledge and the knowledgethus produced in a way that illuminatesthe HGDP but also contributes to ourbroader understanding of thecontemporary life sciences and theirsocial implications.Cambridge Studies in Society and the LifeSciences

2005 228 x 152 mm 224pp0 521 83222 5 Hardback £45.000 521 53987 0 Paperback £19.99

NEW

Narrating the NewPredictive GeneticsEthics, Enthnography andScienceMonica KonradUniversity of Cambridge

This book explores the way changes intechnology have altered the relationshipbetween ethics and medicine. For someinherited diseases, new genetic testingtechnologies may provide much moreaccurate diagnostic and predictiveinformation which raises importantquestions about consent, confidentialityand use of the information by familymembers and other third parties. Whatare the implications of this knowledgefor individuals and their families? Andfor society more widely? How shouldthis new information be used? How dopeople deal with the choices that newknowledge and technologies offer?Drawing on extensive ethnographicresearch with families affected byHuntington’s Disease, and usingperspectives from medical and culturalanthropology, the author explores thehuge disparity between the experienceof living with the results of genetictesting and the knowledge andexpertise which are drawn on todevelop policy and clinical services.Cambridge Studies in Society and the LifeSciences

2005 228 x 152 mm 215pp 1 half-tone0 521 83314 0 Hardback £45.000 521 54066 6 Paperback £19.99

Marginal toMainstreamAlternative Medicine in AmericaMary RuggieHarvard University, Massachusetts

Most users of complementary andalternative medicine (CAM) approach itdifferently from physicians. Ordinarypeople employ informal knowledge,based on their experiences, beliefs, andvalues. One chapter elaborates whypeople use CAM, another whyphysicians are becoming interested in it.Physicians also use informal knowledge,based on their experiences as clinicians,to understand patients and their needs.Physicians use formal knowledge, basedon science, to understand medicine. IfCAM is going to become a legitimatepart of health care, physicians insistscientific research must prove its safetyand efficacy.

2004 228 x 152 mm 248pp 12 tables0 521 83429 5 Hardback £47.500 521 54222 7 Paperback £17.95

Biotechnology – theMaking of a GlobalControversyEdited by M. W. BauerLondon School of Economics and PoliticalScience

and G. GaskellLondon School of Economics and PoliticalScience

A series of studies exploring the originsof the current controversy overbiotechnology.

2002 228 x 152 mm 430pp 9 line diagrams 30 tables 22 graphs0 521 77317 2 Hardback £55.000 521 77439 X Paperback £20.99

Cellular Phones, PublicFears, and a Culture ofPrecautionAdam BurgessUniversity of Bath

The first account of the health panicsurrounding cellular phones thatdeveloped in the 1990s.

2003 228 x 152 mm 312pp 10 line diagrams 7 half-tones 1 table0 521 81759 5 Hardback £45.000 521 52082 7 Paperback £17.99

Gender

NEW

Making Sense ofMotherhoodA Narrative ApproachTina MillerOxford Brookes University

Becoming a mother changes lives inmany ways and this original andaccessible book explores how womentry to make sense of, and narrate theirexperiences of first-time motherhood inthe Western world. Tina Miller paysclose attention to women’s ownaccounts, over time, of their experiencesof transition to motherhood and showshow myths of motherhood continuebecause women do not feel able tovoice their early (often difficult)experiences of mothering. The bookcharts the social, cultural and moralcontours of contemporary motherhoodand engages with sociological andfeminist debates on how selves areconstituted, maintained and narrated.Drawing on original research andnarrative theory, the book also exploresthe disjuncture that often existsbetween personal experience and publicdiscourse and the cultural dimensions ofexpert knowledge.

2005 228 x 152 mm 184pp0 521 83572 0 Hardback £40.000 521 54364 9 Paperback £16.99

Making Men intoFathersMen, Masculinities and theSocial Politics of FatherhoodEdited by Barbara HobsonStockholms Universitet

Prominent gender studies scholarsconsider how institutional settings andpolicy shape new models of fatherhood.

2002 228 x 152 mm 338pp 9 line diagrams 2 half-tones 7 tables0 521 80927 4 Hardback £42.500 521 00612 0 Paperback £16.99

Gender

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NEW

Being Together,Working ApartDual-Career Families and theWork-Life BalanceEdited by Barbara SchneiderUniversity of Chicago

and Linda J. WaiteUniversity of Chicago

Despite the fact that most parents areemployed, how work affects the livesand well-being of parents and theirchildren remains relatively unexplored. Arecent study of 500 dual-career familiesin 8 communities across the US providesa holistic view of the complexities ofwork and family life experienced byparents and their children. Drawing onthe study, this book explores how dual-earner families cope with the stressesand demands of balancing work andfamily life, whether the time parentsspend working is negatively affectingtheir children, how mothers feelmanaging both work and householdresponsibilities, and what role fathersare taking in family life. In answeringthese questions the authors argue for anew balance between work and familylife. The book with its rich data, findings,and commentary from aninterdisciplinary group of scholarsprovides a valuable resource foracademics, policy makers, and workingparents.

2005 228 x 152 mm 577pp 71 tables12 figures0 521 84571 8 Hardback £40.000 521 60789 2 Paperback £16.99Publication February 2005

The Politics ofProstitutionWomen’s Movements,Democratic States and theGlobalisation of Sex CommerceEdited by Joyce OutshoornUniversiteit Leiden

This book shows how women’smovements in Western Europe, NorthAmerica and Australia have affectedpolitics on prostitution and trafficking ofwomen since the 1970s, asking whatmade them successful in some countriesbut a failure in others. Written by aninternational team of experts and basedon original sources, all chapters followthe same framework to ensurecomparability. The final chapter offers anoverall comparison identifying whatmakes women’s movements successfuland women’s agencies effective,presenting the case for ‘state feminism’.

2004 228 x 152 mm 346pp 12 tables3 figures0 521 83319 1 Hardback £50.000 521 54069 0 Paperback £18.99

Separate Roads toFeminismBlack, Chicana, and WhiteFeminist Movements inAmerica’s Second WaveBenita RothState University of New York, Binghamton

This is about the development of whitewomen’s liberation, Black feminism andChicana feminism in the 1960s and1970s, the era known as the ‘secondwave’ of US feminist protest. The authorexplores the ways that feministmovements emerged from the CivilRights/Black Liberation movement, theChicano movement, and the white left,and the processes that went intopolitical decisions made by feminists toorganize autonomously, and in theirown racial/ethnic organizations.

2004 228 x 152 mm 286pp 5 tables0 521 82260 2 Hardback £50.000 521 52972 7 Paperback £18.99

Sociology ofReligion

Handbook of theSociology of ReligionEdited by Michele DillonUniversity of New Hampshire

This handbook showcases currentresearch and thinking in the sociologyof religion.

2003 228 x 152 mm 496pp0 521 80624 0 Hardback £65.000 521 00078 5 Paperback £21.99

Social Theory andReligionJames A. BeckfordUniversity of Warwick

Explores the links between social theoryand the social scientific study ofreligion.

2003 228 x 152 mm 262pp0 521 77336 9 Hardback £45.000 521 77431 4 Paperback £16.99

FORTHCOMING

A Sociological Historyof Christian WorshipMartin StringerUniversity of Birmingham

In this book the 2000 year history ofChristian worship is viewed from asociological perspective. Martin Stringerdevelops the idea of discourse as a wayof understanding the place of Christianworship within its many and diversesocial contexts. Beginning with theBiblical material the author provides abroad survey of changes over 2000years of the Christian church, togetherwith a series of case studies thathighlight particular elements of theworship, or specific theoreticalapplications. Stringer does not simplyexamine the mainstream traditions ofChristian worship in Europe andByzantium, but also gives space tolesser-known traditions in Armenia,India, Ethiopia and elsewhere. Offeringa contribution to the ongoing debatethat breaks away from a purely textualor theological study of Christianworship, this book provides a greaterunderstanding of the place of worshipin its social and cultural context.

2005 228 x 152 mm 276pp0 521 81955 5 Hardback c. £40.000 521 52559 4 Paperback c. £16.99Publication May 2005

CulturalTransformation andReligious PracticeGraham WardUniversity of Manchester

What is the relationship betweenChristian theology as a set of variouspractices – liturgies, Bible readings,academic research, doctrinalcommissions – and what goes on inculture more generally? Graham Wardexamines how cultural transformationtakes place and how the practices oftheology might inform thattransformation in particular ways. Thisprogrammatic essay in methodologyoffers a new approach to the nature oftheological interpretation as a culturalactivity.

2004 228 x 152 mm 194pp0 521 83326 4 Hardback £40.000 521 54074 7 Paperback £18.99

Sociology of Religion

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org

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Church, State and CivilSocietyDavid FergussonUniversity of Edinburgh

At a time when secular liberalism is incrisis and when the civic contribution ofreligion is being re-assessed, the richtradition of Christian political theologydemands renewed attention. This book,based on the 2001 Bampton Lectures,explores the relationship of the churchboth to the state and civil institutions.Arguing that theological approaches tothe state were often situated within thecontext of Christendom and aretherefore outmoded, the author claimsthat a more differentiated approach canbe developed by attention to theconcept of civil society. The book offersa critical assessment of the effect of theFirst Amendment in the USA and, in aconcluding chapter, it defends the casefor continuing disestablishment inEngland and Scotland.

2004 216 x 138 mm 222pp0 521 82239 4 Hardback £40.000 521 52959 X Paperback £16.99

FORTHCOMING

The Bible and EmpirePostcolonial ExplorationsR. S. SugirtharajahUniversity of Birmingham

At a time of renewed interest in Empire,this stimulating volume explores thecomplex relationship between the Bibleand the colonial enterprise, andexamines some overlooked aspects ofthis relationship. These includeunconventional retellings of the gospelstory of Jesus by Thomas Jefferson andRaja Rammohun Roy; the fate of biblicaltexts when marshalled by Victorianpreachers to strengthen British imperialintentions after the India uprising of1857; the cultural-political use of theChristian Old Testament, first by theinvaders to attack temple practices andrituals, then by the invaded to endorsethe temple heritage scorned bymissionaries; the dissident hermeneuticsof James Long and William Colensoconfronting and compromising withcolonial ambitions; and finally the subtlyseditious deployment of biblicalcitations in two colonial novels. Thisinnovative book offers both practicaland theoretical insights and providescompelling evidence of the continuingimportance of postcolonial discourse forbiblical studies.

2005 228 x 152 mm 259pp0 521 82493 1 Hardback c. £40.000 521 53191 8 Paperback c. £17.99Publication June 2005

An Introduction toChristianityLinda WoodheadUniversity of Lancaster

‘The only thing misleading about LindaWoodhead’s Introduction to Christianityis its over-modest title. While it doesindeed provide a highly readable over-view of the religion for beginners, italso has a huge amount to offerreaders who already know a good dealabout the topic. Dr Woodheadimpresses by her knowledge of historyand politics as well as theology andconventional ‘religious studies’approaches – not to mention heradmirable sense of fairness throughout.This lucidly written Introductiondeserves the widest possible audience.’Philip Jenkins, Distinguished Professor of Historyand Religious Studies, Pennsylvania StateUniversityIntroduction to Religion

2004 228 x 152 mm 448pp 27 half-tones7 maps0 521 45445 X Hardback £45.000 521 78655 X Paperback £16.99

Race andEthnicity

FORTHCOMING

White Backlash andthe Politics ofMulticulturalismRoger HewittGoldsmiths College, University of London

The murder of Stephen Lawrence led tothe widest review of institutional racismseen in the UK. Sections of the whiteworking-class communities in southLondon near to the scene of the murder,however, displayed deep hostility to theequalities and multiculturalist practice ofthe local state and other agencies.Drawing on extensive ethnographicresearch, this book relates thesephenomena to the ‘backlash’ tomulticulturalism evident during the1990s in the USA, Australia, Canada, theUK and other European countries. Itexamines these within the unfoldingsocial and political responses to raceequalities in the UK and the USA fromthe 1960s to the present in the contextof changes in social class and nationalpolitical agendas. This book is unique inlinking a detailed study of a communityat a time of its critical importance tonational debates over racism andmulticulturalism, to historically widerinternational economic and social trends.

2005 228 x 152 mm 169pp 2 maps0 521 81768 4 Hardback c. £40.000 521 52089 4 Paperback c. £17.99Publication June 2005

Ethnicity, Nationalism,and Minority RightsEdited by Stephen MayUniversity of Waikato, New Zealand

Tariq ModoodUniversity of Bristol

and Judith SquiresUniversity of Bristol

This interdisciplinary collection addressesthe position of minorities in democraticsocieties, with a particular focus onminority rights and recognition. For thefirst time, it brings together leadinginternational authorities on ethnicity,nationalism and minority rights from bothsocial and political theory, with the aim offostering further interdisciplinary debate.Topics addressed include the constructednature of ethnicity, class and the ‘newracism’, different forms of nationalism,self determination and indigenouspolitics, the politics of recognition versusthe politics of redistribution, and the re-emergence of cosmopolitanism.

2004 228 x 152 mm 274pp 5 tables1 figure0 521 84229 8 Hardback £45.000 521 60317 X Paperback £19.99

FORTHCOMING

Ethnicity, SocialMobility, and PublicPolicyComparing the US and UKEdited by Glenn C. LouryBoston University

Tariq ModoodUniversity of Bristol

and Steven M. TelesBrandeis University, Massachusetts

This major comparative study of thesocial mobility of ethnic minorities in theUS and UK argues that social mobilitymust be understood as a complex andmulti-dimensional phenomenon,incorporating the wealth and income ofgroups, but also their political power andsocial recognition. Written by leadingsociologists, economists, politicalscientists, geographers, and philosophersin both countries, the volume addressesissues as diverse as education, work andemployment, residential concentration,political mobilisation, public policy andsocial networks, while drawing largerlessons about the meaning of race andinequality in the two countries. Whilefinding that there are importantsimilarities in the experience of ethnic,and especially immigrant, groups in thetwo countries, the volume also concludesthat the differences between the US andUK, especially in the case of Americanblacks, are equally important.

2005 228 x 152 mm 654pp 67 tables25 figures0 521 82309 9 Hardback £60.000 521 53001 6 Paperback £30.00Publication May 2005

Race and Ethnicity

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Analyzing Race TalkMultidisciplinary Perspectives onthe Research InterviewEdited by Harry van den BergVrije Universiteit, Amsterdam

Margaret WetherellThe Open University, Milton Keynes

and Hanneke Houtkoop-SteenstraUniversiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands

The interview is one of the mostimportant sources of social scientificdata yet there has been little researchon the way interviews are conductedand interpreted. By askinginternationally respected scholars from arange of traditions in discourse studiesto respond to the same material thisexciting new book sheds light on somekey differences in methodology andtheoretical perspective. The use ofinterviews exploring attitudes to raceallows the contributors to exploresensitive issues around the constructionand interpretation of interviews oncontroversial topics.

2004 228 x 152 mm 334pp 1 figure0 521 82118 5 Hardback £50.000 521 52802 X Paperback £18.99

NEW

Minorities withinMinoritiesEquality, Rights and DiversityEdited by Avigail EisenbergUniversity of Victoria, British Columbia

and Jeff Spinner-HalevUniversity of Nebraska, Lincoln

Most discussions of multiculturalism andgroup rights focus on the relationshipbetween the minority and the majority.This volume advances ourunderstanding of minority rights byfocusing on conflicts that arise withinminority groups and by examining thedifferent sorts of responses that theliberal state might have to theseconflicts. Groups around the world areincreasingly successful in maintaining orwinning autonomy. In light of this trend,a crucial question emerges: whathappens to individuals within groupswho find that their group discriminatesagainst them? This volume bringstogether distinguished scholars whoexamine this question by weavingtogether normative political theory withcase studies drawn from South Africa,the United States, India, Canada, andBritain. Classical liberalism, deliberativedemocracy, feminism, and associativedemocracy are among the theoreticalframeworks used to offer solutions tothe complex set of issues raised byminorities within minorities.

2005 228 x 152 mm 402pp0 521 84314 6 Hardback £40.000 521 60394 3 Paperback £17.99

JOURNAL

Du Bois Review: SocialScience Research onRaceEditors: Lawrence BoboHarvard University

and Michael DawsonHarvard University

Published for the W.E.B. Du BoisInstitute for African and AfricanAmerican Research, Harvard University

This new peer-reviewed journal isdevoted to research and criticism onrace in the social sciences. It provides aforum for discussion and increasedunderstanding of race and society froma range of disciplines, including but notlimited to economics, political science,sociology, anthropology, law,communications, public policy,psychology, and history. Each issuecontains an editorial overview, invitedlead essays, original research papers,and review essays covering currentbooks, controversies, and researchthreads. The first volume will containsuch noted authors as Claude Steele on“The Psychology of Race”, WilliamDarity on “Blacks in the GlobalEconomy”, Mary Waters on “Immigrantsand the Civil Rights Revolution”, CathyCohen on “Gender, Sexuality, andPolitics”, Claire Kim on “Race andPolitics”, and review essays by EduardoBonilla-Silva, Glenn Loury, AliceO’Connor, Adolph Reed, Jr., RogersSmith, and Barbara Ransby.Subscriptions

Volume 2 in 2005: Spring and FallInstitutions print and electronic: £85/$138Institutions electronic only: £72/$115Institutions print only: £75/$125Individuals print only: £40/$65Print ISSN 1742-058XElectronic ISSN 1742-0598

Social Policyand Welfare

Insecurity and WelfareRegimes in Asia, Africaand Latin AmericaSocial Policy in DevelopmentContextsIan GoughUniversity of Bath

Geof WoodUniversity of Bath

Armando BarrientosUniversity of Manchester

Philippa BevanUniversity of Bath

Peter DavisUniversity of Bath

and Graham RoomUniversity of Bath

This is the book that social policyscholars have been awaiting a verylong time. Thanks to Ian Gough, GeofWood and their collaborators, we nowhave a rigorous, comprehensive, andextraordinarily nuanced and subtleanalysis of social protection systems inthe Third World. The scholarlychallenge is truly formidable, and theyhave met it with courage and aplomb.Insecurity and Welfare Regimes inAsia, Africa and Latin America is oneof those rare books that no welfarestate scholar or practicioner canignore.Gosta Esping-Andersen

2004 228 x 152 mm 384pp 17 tables19 figures 2 maps0 521 83419 8 Hardback £50.00

NEW

A Sociology of Work inJapanRoss MouerMonash University, Victoria

and Hirosuke KawanishiWaseda University, Japan

What shapes the decisions of employeesin Japan? The authors of thiscomprehensive and up-to-date survey ofthe relationship between work andsociety in Japan argue that individualdecisions about work can only beunderstood through the broader socialcontext. Many factors combine to affectsuch choices including the structuring oflabour markets, social policy and, ofcourse, global influences which havecome increasingly to impinge on theorganisation of work and life generally.By considering labour markets, socialpolicy and relationships between labourand management, the book offerspenetrating insights into contemporaryJapanese society and glimpses of whatmight come in the future. Underlying

Social Policy and Welfare

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the discussion is a challenge to thecelebration of Japanese managementpractices which has dominated theliterature for the last three decades. Thisis an important and groundbreakingbook for students of sociology andeconomics.Contemporary Japanese Society

2005 228 x 152 mm 323pp 56 tables7 figures0 521 65120 4 Hardback £40.000 521 65845 4 Paperback £18.99Publication April 2005

NEW

Europe and the Politicsof CapabilitiesEdited by Robert Salaisand Robert Villeneuve

The social agenda of the EuropeanUnion is shifting towards broad socialinitiatives that align social andeconomic objectives with the promotionof employment. This calls for an actionframework that allows social dialogueand political deliberation to inform andcomplement legislative action at alllevels. The debate however has beendominated by advocates of market-based solutions and their opponents,the supporters of traditional welfarestates. This book, to break with thissterile stalemate, demonstrates how anemployment-oriented social policy inEurope can develop from a new,different set of policy principles,specifically ‘a capability approach’.Taking inspiration from the work ofAmartya Sen, this book focuses on theeffective freedom people need toachieve their goals in life and work. Theresult of ongoing collaboration betweenresearchers and social actors, it willappeal to social scientists, students,policy makers and all those concernedwith the building of Europe.

2005 228 x 152 mm 328pp 10 tables10 graphs 3 figures0 521 83604 2 Hardback £50.00

Generational IncomeMobility in NorthAmerica and EuropeEdited by Miles Corak

Labour markets in North America andEurope have changed tremendously inthe face of increased globalization andtechnical progress, raising importantchallenges for policy makers concernedwith equality of opportunity. This bookexamines the influence of both changesin income inequality and of socialpolicies on the degree to whicheconomic advantage is passed onbetween parents and children in richcountries. Twenty contributors fromNorth America and Europe offercomparable estimates of the degree ofmobility, how it has changed throughtime, and the impact of governmentpolicy.

2004 228 x 152 mm 340pp 63 tables11 figures0 521 82760 4 Hardback £45.00

JOURNAL

Journal of Social PolicyEditors: Jan PahlUniversity of Kent

and Emma WincupUniversity of Leeds

The Journal of the Social PolicyAssociation

Journal of Social Policy carries articleson all aspects of social policy in aninternational context. It places particularemphasis upon articles which seek tocontribute to debates on the futuredirection of social policy, to advancetheories or to identify and analyseissues in the making andimplementation of social policies. A newonline resource, the ‘Social PolicyDigest’, was launched in 2004. This isan invaluable, fully-searchable andregularly updated source of informationabout current events across the wholesocial policy field. The Digest provides acommentary on changes in socialwelfare legislation and a review of themajor reports and surveys published bygovernment departments, leading thinktanks and voluntary bodies. Furtherenhancements to the resource will beadded in 2005, such as full searchfacilities and a news section.

Journal of Social Policy is part of the‘Social Policy Package’ – also includingSocial Policyand Society.

SubscriptionsVolume 34 in 2005: January, April, July andOctoberInstitutions print and electronic: £224/$349Institutions electronic only: £183/$318Institutions print only: £224/$349Special arrangements exist for members ofSocial Policy Association.Print ISSN 0047-2794Electronic ISSN 1469-7823

JOURNAL

Social Policy andSocietyManaging Editor: Tony MaltbyUniversity of Birmingham

A Journal of the Social PolicyAssociation

Social Policy and Society is a newlyestablished international journalsponsored by the UK Social PolicyAssociation. Its intended audience aresocial policy specialists andpractitioners, although those within theother social science related fields,particularly sociology, politics andeconomics will find much of interest tothem. It brings discussion ofcontemporary social policy issues to awider audience and provides a valuableteaching and research resource to theworldwide social and public policycommunity. The journal welcomesstimulating original articles that drawupon contemporary policy-relatedresearch, teaching and learning issuesand wider developments in the socialsciences. Each issue contains shortrefereed articles reflecting the topicaldebates and issues within social policyand uniquely, a themed section, editedby a Guest Editor, containing refereedarticles, an article reviewing the keyliterature plus a guide to key sources inthe themed area. Articles are warmlywelcomed and should be sent to theManaging Editor in the first instance.

Social Policy and Society is part of the‘Social Policy Package’ – also includingthe Online Digest and the Journal ofSocial PolicySubscriptions

Volume 1 in 2005: January, April, July andOctoberInstitutions print and electronic: £224/$349Institutions electronic only: £203/$318Institutions print only: £183/$288Individuals print only: £26/$40: £22/$33Print ISSN 1474-7464Electronic ISSN 1475-3073

Social Policy and Welfare

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JOURNAL

Ageing & SocietyEditor: Tony WarnesUniversity of Sheffield

The Journal of The Centre forPolicy on Ageing and The British Societyof Gerontology

Ageing & Society is an interdisciplinaryand international journal devoted topublishing papers which further theunderstanding of human ageing in thewider social and cultural context. Itdraws contributions and readers from abroad spectrum of subject areas. Inaddition to original articles, Ageing &Society features an extensive bookreview section and a regular updatingon specified research areas. There areoccasional review symposia and specialissues on important topics.Subscriptions

Volume 25 in 2005: January, March, May, July,September and NovemberInstitutions print and electronic: £177/$280Institutions electronic only: £147/$233Institutions print only: £154/$245Individuals print plus electronic: £57/$89Centre for Policy on Ageing, British GeriatricsSociety, American Psychological Association,American Sociological Association,Gerontological Society of America: £36/$53Special arrangements exist for members ofBritish Society of Gerontology.Print ISSN 0144-686XElectronic ISSN 1469-1779

JOURNAL

Health Economics,Policy and LawEditors: Gregg BlocheGeorgetown University, Washington

William HsiaoHarvard University, Cambridge MA

Martin KnappLondon School of Economics and PoliticalScience

Elias MossialosLondon School of Economics and PoliticalScience

Adam OliverLondon School of Economics and PoliticalScience

and Thomas RiceUniversity of California, Los Angeles

International trends highlight theconfluence of economics, politics andlegal considerations in the health policyprocess. Health Economics, Policy andLaw will serve as a forum forscholarship on health policy issues fromthese perspectives, and will be of use toacademics, policy makers and healthcare managers and professionals. HEPLwill be international in scope, willpublish both theoretical and appliedwork, and will contain articles on allaspects of health policy. Considerableemphasis will be placed on rigorous

conceptual development and analysis,and on the presentation of empiricalevidence that is relevant to the policyprocess.

Available on subscription from 2006. Tosubscribe please contact customerservices on [email protected]

PoliticalSociology

FORTHCOMING

Taking PowerOn the Origins of Third WorldRevolutionsJohn ForanUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

Taking Power analyzes the causesbehind some three dozen revolutions inthe Third World between 1910 and thepresent. It advances a new theory thatseeks to integrate the political,economic, and cultural factors thatbrought these revolutions about, andlinks structural theorizing with originalideas on culture and agency. Itattempts to explain why so fewrevolutions have succeeded, while somany have failed. The book is dividedinto chapters that treat particular sets ofrevolutions including the great socialrevolutions of Mexico 1910, China1949, Cuba 1959, Iran 1979, andNicaragua 1979, the anticolonialrevolutions in Algeria, Vietnam, Angola,Mozambique, and Zimbabwe from the1940s to the 1970s, and the failedrevolutionary attempts in El Salvador,Peru, and elsewhere. It closes withspeculation about the future ofrevolutions in an age of globalization,with special attention to Chiapas, thepost-September 11 world, and theglobal justice movement.

2005 228 x 152 mm 400pp 2 line diagrams 12 tables0 521 62009 0 Hardback c. £45.000 521 62984 5 Paperback c. £19.99Publication August 2005

FORTHCOMING

The Handbook ofPolitical SociologyStates, Civil Societies andGlobalizationEdited by Thomas JanoskiUniversity of Kentucky

Robert AlfordCity University of New York

Alexander HicksEmory University, Atlanta

and Mildred SchwartzUniversity of Illinois, Chicago

This handbook provides the firstcomplete survey of the vibrant field ofpolitical sociology. Part I explores thetheories of political sociology. Part IIfocuses on the formation, transitions,and regime structure of the state. PartIII takes up various aspects of the statethat respond to pressures from civilsociety.

2005 234 x 156 mm 832pp0 521 81990 3 Hardback £60.000 521 52620 5 Paperback £30.00Publication May 2005

FORTHCOMING

Bonds of CivilityAesthetic Networks and thePolitical Origins of JapaneseCultureEiko IkegamiNew School University, New York

In this path breaking book, Eiko Ikegamiuncovers a complex history of social lifein which aesthetic images becamecentral to Japan’s cultural identities. Thepeople of premodern Japan built onearlier aesthetic traditions in part fortheir own sake, but also to find spacefor self-expression in the increasinglyrigid and tightly controlled Tokugawapolitical system. In so doing, theyincorporated the world of the beautifulwithin their social life which led to newmodes of civility. They exploredhorizontal and voluntary ways ofassociating while immersing themselvesin aesthetic group activities. Combiningsociological insights in organizationswith prodigious scholarship on culturalhistory, this book explores such wide-ranging topics as networks ofperforming arts, tea ceremony andhaiku, the politics of kimono aesthetics,the rise of commercial publishing, thepopularization of etiquette andmanners, the vogue for androgyny inkabuki performance, and the rise oftacit modes of communication.Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences, 26

2005 228 x 152 mm 480pp 25 line diagrams 4 colour plates 1 table0 521 80942 8 Hardback £45.000 521 60115 0 Paperback £20.99Publication June 2005

Political Sociology

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NEW IN PAPERBACK

Between Politics andMarketsFirms, Competition, andInstitutional Change in Post-MaoChinaYi-min LinHong Kong University of Science and Technology

Between Politics and Markets examineshow the decline of central planning inpost-Mao China was related to the riseof two markets – an economic marketfor the exchange of products andfactors, and a political market for thediversion to private interests of stateassets and authorities. Lin reveals theirconcurrent development through anaccount of how industrial firmscompeted their way out of the planthrough exchange relations with oneanother and with state agents. Heargues that the two markets weremutually accommodating, that thepolitical market grew also from a decayof the state’s self-monitoring capacity,and that economic actors’ competitionfor special favors from state agentsconstituted a major driving force ofeconomic institutional change.‘Between Politics and Markets is anexcellent book. It pushes us beyondthe conventional dichotomy of stateand market and, in exploring theinteraction of the two, tells us a greatdeal about the process of economicdevelopment in China.’Journal of Economic LiteratureStructural Analysis in the Social Sciences, 18

2004 228 x 152 mm 270pp 3 line diagrams 17 tables0 521 60404 4 Paperback £16.99

Also available0 521 77130 7 Hardback £45.00

Global Crises, GlobalSolutionsEdited by Bjorn LomborgAarhus Universitet, Denmark

A unique publication exploring theopportunities for addressing ten of themost serious challenges facing theworld today: Climate Change,Communicable Diseases, Conflicts,Education, Financial Instability,Corruption, Migration, Malnutrition andHunger, Trade Barriers, Access to Water.In a world fraught with problems andchallenges, we need to gauge how toachieve the greatest good with ourmoney. Global Crises, Global Solutionsprovides a rich set of arguments anddata for prioritising our response mosteffectively. Each problem is introducedby a world-renowned expert definingthe scale of the problem and describingthe costs and benefits of a range ofpolicy options to improve the situation.Each challenge is evaluated byeconomists from North America, Europeand China who attempt a ranking ofthe most promising options. Whetheryou agree or disagree with the analysisor conclusions, Global Crises, GlobalSolutions provides a serious, yetaccessible, springboard for debate anddiscussion.The Economist selected Global Crises,Global Solutions as one of ‘the year’sbest books, as picked by our reviewers’in the November 27th – Dec. 3rd issue

‘A hugely sensible book about globalhealth and environmental problems,based on the ‘Copenhagen Consensus’project documented in The Economist.Its authors, eminent economists,recognise that the resources to tacklesuch problems are finite and need tobe applied where they are most likelyto be effective. Better, for instance, tospend resources on the immediateproblem of AIDS in Africa than themore distant one of global warming.This book is a healthy antidote to thenarrow views of single-issue pressuregroups.’ The Economist

2004 247 x 174 mm 670pp 80 tables60 graphs0 521 84446 0 Hardback £45.000 521 60614 4 Paperback £19.99

FORTHCOMING

Modernization,Cultural Change, andDemocracyThe Human DevelopmentSequenceRonald InglehartUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor

and Christian WelzelUniversität Bremen

This book demonstrates that people’sbasic values and beliefs are changing, inways that affect their political, sexual,economic, and religious behavior. Thesechanges are roughly predictable: to alarge extent, they can be interpreted onthe basis of a revised version ofmodernization theory presented here.Drawing on a massive body of evidencefrom societies containing 85 percent ofthe world’s population, the authorsdemonstrate that modernization is aprocess of human development, inwhich economic development gives riseto cultural changes that make individualautonomy, gender equality, anddemocracy increasingly likely. Theauthors present a model of socialchange that predicts how the valuesystems play a crucial role in theemergence and flourishing ofdemocratic institutions – and thatmodernization brings coherent culturalchanges that are conducive todemocratization.

2005 234 x 156 mm 372pp 57 line diagrams 28 tables0 521 84695 1 Hardback c. £40.000 521 60971 2 Paperback c. £16.99Publication August 2005

NEW

Popular Intellectualsand Social MovementsFraming Protext in Asia, Africa,and Latin AmericaEdited by Michiel BaudUniversiteit van Amsterdam

and Rosanne RuttenUniversiteit van Amsterdam

All forms of popular protest include aspecific category of ‘popularintellectuals’, who reflect on socialreality, speak in the name of popularclasses and who articulate ideas thatinspire collective action. This volumefocuses on these individuals from anoriginal angle: it looks at theexperiences of popular intellectuals innon-western societies, who operatewithin social-movement networks thatlink local, regional, and internationalarenas, and connect to a global flow ofideas. Eight case studies on differentsocieties in twentieth-century Asia,

Political Sociology

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Africa, and Latin America highlightspecific activist intellectuals and theirrole in collective action. They cover awide terrain, including framing contestsamong Muslim activists and culturalbrokerage in an ecological movement.The collection provides fresh insightsinto the cultural dynamics of socialcontention and widens the geographicscope of current debates on this theme.International Review of Social HistorySupplements, 12

2005 228 x 152 mm 222pp 5 half-tones0 521 61348 5 Paperback £15.95

World Cities beyondthe WestGlobalization, Development andInequalityEdited by Josef GuglerUniversity of Connecticut

This study is the first systematically tocover those cities beyond the core thatmost clearly can be considered worldcities: Bangkok, Cairo, Hong Kong,Jakarta, Johannesburg, Mexico City,Moscow, Mumbai, Sao Paulo, Seoul,Shanghai, and Singapore. Fourteenleading authorities from diversebackgrounds bring their expertise tobear on these cities across fourcontinents and consider the majorregional and global roles they play ineconomic, political, and cultural life.Conveying how these cities havefollowed various pathways to theirpresent position, they offer multipleperspectives on the interplay of internaland external forces and demonstratethat any comprehensive discussion ofworld cities has to engage a multiplicityof perspectives. With an introduction byJosef Gugler and an afterword fromSaskia Sassen, this substantial volumemakes a major contribution to the worldcities literature and provides animportant new impetus for furtheranalysis.

2004 228 x 152 mm 412pp 29 tables11 figures 24 maps0 521 83003 6 Hardback £45.000 521 53685 5 Paperback £19.99

NEW

Emotions in FinanceDistrust and Uncertainty inGlobal MarketsJocelyn PixleyUniversity of New South Wales, Sydney

Fear and greed are terms that makelight of the uncertainty in the financeworld. Huge global financial institutionsrely on emotional relations of trust anddistrust to suppress the uncertainties.Many financial firms develop policiestowards risk, rather than accepting thereality of an uncertain future. Theyamass data in the futile hope of gainingcertainty and to claim their options aremore ‘risk-free’ than competitors.Emotions in Finance examines the viewsof experienced elites in the internationalfinancial world. It argues the currentfinancial era is driven by a utopianism– a hope – that the future can becollapsed into the present. It points outpolicy implications of this short-termview at the unstable peak of globalfinance. This book provides a timelyaccount of the influence of emotion andspeculation on the world’s increasinglyvolatile financial sector . The authorincludes absorbing interview materialfrom public and private bankers in theUnited States, UK and Australia.

2005 228 x 152 mm 228pp 3 figures0 521 82785 X Hardback £50.00

FORTHCOMING

The Moral VetoFraming Contraception,Abortion, and Cultural Pluralismin the United StatesGene Burns

Why have legislative initiatives occurredon such controversial issues ascontraception and abortion at timeswhen activist movements haddemobilized and the public seemedindifferent? Why did the South –currently a region where anti-abortionsentiment is stronger than in most ofthe country-liberalize its abortion lawsin the 1960s at a faster pace than anyother region? Why have abortion andcontraception sometimes been framedas matters of medical practice, and atother times as matters of moralsignificance? These are some of thequestions addressed in The Moral Veto:Framing Contraception, Abortion, andCultural Pluralism in the United States.Based on archival and sociologicalresearch, and speaking to issues in the

study of culture, social movements, andlegal change, The Moral Veto examineswhat the history of controversies oversuch morally charged issues tells usabout cultural pluralism in the UnitedStates.

2005 228 x 152 mm 352pp0 521 55209 5 Hardback £45.000 521 60984 4 Paperback £16.99Publication May 2005

Cambridge Studies inContentious Politics

FORTHCOMING

The Marketing ofRebellionInsurgents, Media, andInternational ActivismClifford BobDuquesne University, Pittsburgh

How do a few political movementschallenging Third World states becomeglobal causes célèbres, while mostremain isolated and obscure? This bookrejects dominant views that needygroups readily gain help from selflessnongovernmental organizations (NGOs).Instead, they face a Darwinian strugglefor scarce international resources – andto succeed, they must aggressivelymarket themselves. To make thisargument, this book compares tworecent movements that attracted majorNGO support, Mexico’s Zapatista rebelsand Nigeria’s Ogoni ethnic group,against similar ones that failed to do so.Based on primary document analysisand over 60 interviews with localactivists and NGO leaders, it shows thatsupport goes to the savviest, not theneediest. The Marketing of Rebellion,unlike others, develops a realistic,organizational perspective on socialmovements, NGOs, and ‘global civilsociety’. It will change how the weaksolicit help, the powerful pick clients,and how we think about contemporaryworld politics.Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics

2005 228 x 152 mm 249pp 2 tables2 maps0 521 84570 X Hardback c. £42.500 521 60786 8 Paperback c. £15.99Publication August 2005

Political Sociology

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FORTHCOMING

Social Movements andOrganization TheoryEdited by Gerald DavisUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Doug McAdamCenter for Advanced Study in the BehavioralSciences, Stanford, California

W. Richard ScottStanford University, California

and Mayer ZaldUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Although the fields of organizationtheory and social movement theoryhave long been viewed as belonging todifferent worlds, recent events haveintervened, reminding us thatorganizations are becoming moremovement-like – more volatile andpoliticized – while movements are morelikely to borrow strategies fromorganizations. Organization theory andsocial movement theory are two of themost vibrant areas within the socialsciences. This collection of originalessays and studies both calls for acloser connection between these fieldsand demonstrates the value of thisinterchange. Three introductory,programmatic essays by leadingscholars in the two fields are followedby eight empirical studies that directlyillustrate the benefits of this type ofcross-pollination. The studies variouslyexamine the processes by whichmovements become organized and therole of movement processes within andamong organizations. The topics coveredrange from globalization andtransnational social movementorganizations to community recyclingprograms.Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics

2005 228 x 152 mm 456pp 16 line diagrams 23 tables0 521 83949 1 Hardback £45.000 521 54836 5 Paperback £20.99Publication June 2005

NEW

Political Movementsand Violence inCentral AmericaCharles D. BrockettUniversity of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee

This book offers an in-depth analysis ofthe confrontation between popularmovements and repressive regimes inCentral America during the threedecades beginning in 1960, particularlyin El Salvador and Guatemala.Examining both urban and rural groupsas well as both nonviolent socialmovements and revolutionarymovements, this study has two primarytheoretical objectives. First, to clarify theimpact of state violence on contentiouspolitical movements. Under whatconditions will escalating repressionprovoke challengers to even greateractivity (perhaps even the use ofviolence themselves) and under whatconditions will it intimidate them backinto passivity? Second, to defend theutility of the political process model forstudying contentious movements,indeed, finding in this model the key toresolving the repression-protestparadox. The study is based on the mostthorough set of events data oncontentious political activities collectedfrom Latin American countries.Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics

2005 228 x 152 mm 408pp 35 line diagrams 7 tables 2 maps0 521 84083 X Hardback £45.000 521 60055 3 Paperback £19.99Publication March 2005

FORTHCOMING

Contesting Citizenshipin Latin AmericaThe Rise of IndigenousMovements and the PostliberalChallengeDeborah J. YasharPrinceton University, New Jersey

Indigenous people in Latin Americahave mobilized in unprecedented ways– demanding recognition, equalprotection, and subnational autonomy.These are remarkable developments in aregion where ethnic cleavages wereonce universally described as weak.Recently, however, indigenous activistsand elected officials have increasinglyshaped national political deliberations.Deborah Yashar explains thecontemporary and uneven emergence ofLatin American indigenous movements– addressing both why indigenousidentities have become politically salientin the contemporary period and whythey have translated into significantpolitical organizations in some placesand not others. She argues that ethnicpolitics can best be explained through acomparative historical approach thatanalyzes three factors: changingcitizenship regimes, social networks, andpolitical associational space. Herargument provides insight into thefragility and unevenness of LatinAmerica’s third wave democracies andhas broader implications for the ways inwhich we theorize the relationshipbetween citizenship, states, identity, andsocial action.

2005 228 x 152 mm 392pp 21 tables0 521 82746 9 Hardback £50.000 521 53480 1 Paperback £24.99Publication May 2005

FascistsMichael MannUniversity of California, Los Angeles

‘Mann’s master-class in thecomparative study of fascism …Fascist is a scholarly and highly‘recommendable’ text book … Mannhas done comparative fascist studies agreat service by applying hiscompendious sociological knowledgeto the major movements ofrevolutionary ultra-nationalism ininter-war Europe.’History Today

2004 228 x 152 mm 440pp 18 tables6 maps0 521 83131 8 Hardback £40.000 521 53855 6 Paperback £15.99

Political Sociology

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NEW

The Dark Side ofDemocracyExplaining Ethnic CleansingMichael MannUniversity of California, Los Angeles

A new theory of ethnic cleansing basedon the most terrible cases (colonialgenocides, Armenia, the Nazi Holocaust,Cambodia, Yugoslavia, Rwanda) andcases of lesser violence (early modernEurope, contemporary India, andIndonesia). Murderous cleansing ismodern, ‘the dark side of democracy’. Itresults where the demos (democracy) isconfused with the ethnos (the ethnicgroup). Danger arises where two rivalethno-national movements each claims‘its own’ state over the same territory.Conflict escalates where either theweaker side fights because of aid fromoutside, or the stronger side believes itcan deploy sudden, overwhelming force.Escalation is not simply the work of ‘evilelites’ or ‘primitive peoples.’ It resultsfrom complex interactions betweenleaders, militants, and ‘coreconstituencies’ of ethno-nationalism.Understanding this complex processhelps us devise policies to avoid ethniccleansing in the future.Contents: 1. The argument; 2. Ethniccleansing in former times; 3. Two versionsof ‘we, the people’; 4. Genocidaldemocracies in the New World; 5. Armenia,I: into the danger zone; 6. Armenia, II:genocide; 7. Nazis, I: radicalization;8. Nazis, II: fifteen hundred perpetrators;9. Nazis, III: genocidal careers;10. Germany’s allies and auxiliaries;11. Communist cleansing: Stalin, Mao, PolPot; 12. Yugoslavia, I: into the danger zone;13. Yugoslavia, II: murderous cleansing;14. Rwanda, I: into the danger zone;15. Rwanda, II: genocide;16. Counterfactual cases: India andIndonesia; 17. Combating ethnic cleansingin the world today.

2005 228 x 152 mm 590pp 11 tables3 maps0 521 83130 X Hardback £45.000 521 53854 8 Paperback £17.99

NEW

The Dynamics of Socio-EconomicDevelopmentAn IntroductionAdam SzirmaiTechnische Universiteit Eindhoven, Holland

Advance praise:‘Now in a new Cambridge UniversityPress edition, the Szirmai text offers ascholarly and comprehensive treatmentof development economics that isaccessible to a wide range of socialscience and development studiesstudents. Its treatment of healthissues, education policy, and ruraldevelopment, along with itscomprehensive data tables, areunsurpassed in the developmenteconomics field.’Kenneth A. Reinert, Associate Professor of PublicPolicy, George Mason University

2005 247 x 174 mm 744pp 75 tables20 graphs0 521 81763 3 Hardback £60.000 521 52084 3 Paperback £30.00

The Politics of High-Tech GrowthDevelopmental Network Statesin the Global EconomySean O’RiainNational University of Ireland, Maynooth

This book argues that the state played acentral role in developing the CelticTiger economy, and particularly theincreasingly important Irish high techindustry. Typically seen as an example ofsuccessful market-led globalization, hightech growth in Ireland has beenpromoted by a new form of stateintervention in the economy – fosteringlocal networks of learning andinnovation through decentralized stateinstitutions which draw on local,national and global resources andrelationships.Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences, 23

2004 228 x 152 mm 288pp 7 line diagrams 27 tables0 521 83073 7 Hardback £45.00

FORTHCOMING

Power and the Nationin European HistoryEdited by Len ScalesUniversity of Durham

and Oliver ZimmerUniversity of Durham

Few would doubt the centralimportance of the nation in the makingand unmaking of modern politicalcommunities. The long history of ‘thenation’ as a concept and as a name forvarious sorts of ‘imagined community’likewise commands such acceptance.But when did the nation first become afundamental political factor? This is aquestion which has been, and continuesto be, far more sharply contested. Adeep rift still separates ‘modernist’perspectives, which view the politicalnation as a phenomenon limited tomodern, industrialised societies, fromthe views of scholars concerned withthe pre-industrial world who insist,often vehemently, that nations werecentral to pre-modern political life also.This book represents the first attempt toengage with these questions by drawingon the expertise of leading medieval,early modern and modern historians.

2005 228 x 152 mm 368pp0 521 84580 7 Hardback c. £45.000 521 60830 9 Paperback c. £19.99Publication May 2005

FORTHCOMING

Israel’s Holocaust andthe Politics ofNationhoodIdith ZertalHebrew University of Jerusalem

‘Idith Zertal’s recent book, a pathbreaking analysis of how the memoryof the Holocaust has been used inIsrael not only to equate Palestinianswith Nazis and justify the West Bankoccupation and the building ofsettlements there but also to providethe rationale for nuclear weaponssystems.’ Amos Elon, New York Review of BooksCambridge Middle East Studies, 21

2005 228 x 152 mm 280pp0 521 85096 7 Hardback c. £19.00Publication July 2005

Political Sociology

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Contention andDemocracy in Europe,1650–2000Charles TillyColumbia University, New York

Contention and Democracy in Europe,1650–2000 is an analysis of therelationship between democratizationand contentious politics that buildsupon the model set forth in thepathbreaking book, Dynamics ofContention. Boldly comparing the LowCountries, Iberia, France, the BritishIsles, the Balkans, Russia, and otherEuropean regions over three and a halfturbulent centuries, this book showshow similar recurrent casualmechanisms in different combinations,sequences, and initial conditionsproduced contrasting trajectories towardand away from democracy in differentparts of the continent.Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics

2004 228 x 152 mm 320pp 11 line diagrams0 521 83008 7 Hardback £45.000 521 53713 4 Paperback £16.99

The Search forAmerican PoliticalDevelopmentKaren OrrenUniversity of California, Los Angeles

and Stephen SkowronekYale University, Connecticut

Recently, American politicaldevelopment has claimed the attentionof a growing band of political scientists,and ‘APD’ is emerging as a subfieldwithin the discipline. This book providesjustification for studying politicshistorically, not only for what it revealsabout the roots of political affairs at thepresent time but what it teaches aboutpolitics as an ongoing activity in time,anytime. Placing the character ofpolitical institutions at the center ofanalysis, the authors survey past andcurrent scholarship, attempting tooutline a course of study for the future.

2004 228 x 152 mm 246pp0 521 83894 0 Hardback £45.000 521 54764 4 Paperback £16.99

Japan’s NetworkEconomyStructure, Persistence, andChangeJames R. LincolnUniversity of California, Berkeley

and Michael L. GerlachUniversity of California, Berkeley

This book considers the Japaneseeconomy as a network of banks,corporations, and ministries. It usesquantitative and historical methods totrace the evolution of that network fromthe prewar period to the late 90s. Havethe controversial ‘keiretsu’ enterprisegroupings outlived their usefulness,withering away in the face ofderegulation, globalization, and marketliberalization? Our conclusion is thatrelationships are still central to theJapanese way of business, but they aremuch more subordinated to thestrategies of individual enterprises thanthe Japanese network economy of thepast.Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences, 24

2004 228 x 152 mm 430pp 25 line diagrams 40 tables0 521 45304 6 Hardback £50.00

Discipline andDevelopmentMiddle Classes and Prosperity inEast Asia and Latin AmericaDiane E. DavisMassachusetts Institute of Technology

The key to successful economicdevelopment in late industrializers restsin the state’s capacity to disciplinecapitalists in the service of nationaleconomic growth. What gives certaincountries (South Korea and Taiwan) thecapacity to discipline capitalists, whileothers (Mexico and Argentina) findthemselves unable to do so? Theanswer rests in a closer examination ofmiddle classes, especially rural middleclasses, and the extent to which theyachieve sufficient sway in politics,society, and thus the state, in order toimpose such discipline.

2004 228 x 152 mm 436pp 6 tables0 521 80748 4 Hardback £55.000 521 00208 7 Paperback £19.95

Markets in HistoricalContextsIdeas and Politics in the ModernWorldEdited by Mark BevirUniversity of California, Berkeley

and Frank TrentmannBirkbeck College, University of London

What ways of thinking about marketscan we recover from the past? In thisbook leading academics explore diverseconstructions and operations of marketsin different traditions. In doing so, theyrange over European and non-Europeansocieties from the eighteenth century tothe present, from the greattransformation to globalisation. Thisvolume challenges today’s neoliberalorthodoxy by suggesting that marketsare always embedded in traditions andpractices and it recovers a range ofalternative modes of thought that areoften neglected in contemporarydebates.

2004 228 x 152 mm 268pp 4 tables0 521 83355 8 Hardback £45.00

JOURNAL

Journal of PublicPolicyEditor: Richard RoseUniversity of Strathclyde

Journal of Public Policy publishesresearch that applies social scientifictheories and concepts to significantpolitical, economic and social issues andto the ways in which public policies aremade. Its articles thus deal with topicsof relevance to social scientists andpolicy-makers in America, Europe, Japanand other advanced industrial nations.Journal of Public Policy gives particularemphasis to articles that cut acrossdisciplines, such as studies in nationaland international political economy, andpolitics and policy-making in theEuropean Union. Its peer reviewerscome from more than half a dozensocial science disciplines and are drawnfrom a dozen countries across threecontinents, thus ensuring both analyticrigour and accuracy in reference tonational and policy context.Subscriptions

Volume 25 in 2005: May, August andDecemberInstitutions print and electronic: £127/$206Institutions electronic only: £106/$171Institutions print only: £113/$182Individuals print only: £40/$65American Political Science Association,American Historical Association: £30/$49Print ISSN 0143-814XElectronic ISSN 1469-7815

Political Sociology

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JOURNAL

International Reviewof Social HistoryExecutive Editor: Marcelvan der LindenInternationaal Instituut voor SocialeGeschiedenis

Published for the Internationaal Instituutvoor Sociale Geschiedenis

International Review of Social History, aleading journal in its field, aims tocombine theoretical innovation withthorough research, with an emphasis oncomparative, transnational perspectives.The oldest scholarly journal of its kind, itis distinguished for the quality, depthand originality of its articles. It alsopublishes book reviews, a annotatedbibliography of social history titles, andan annual supplement of speciallycommissioned essays on a current topic.Subscriptions

Volume 50 in 2005: April, August andDecember, plus supplementInstitutions print and electronic: £109/$172Institutions electronic only: £91/$144Institutions print only: £101/$160Individuals print only: £42/$64American Sociological Association, AmericanHistorical Association, American PoliticalScience Association: £33/$53Canadian Labour History Association,Australian Labour History Association, BritishSociety for the Study of Labour History,Subscribers to Labour/Le Travail: £24/$39Print ISSN 0020-8590Electronic ISSN 1469-512X

Media andCultural Studies

NEW

Community MediaPeople, Places andCommunication TechnologiesKevin HowleyDePauw University, Indiana

While transnational conglomeratesconsolidate their control of the globalmediascape, local communities struggleto create democratic media systems. Thisgroundbreaking study of communitymedia combines original research withcomparative and theoretical analysis inan engaging and accessible style. KevinHowley explores the different ways inwhich local communities come to makeuse of various technologies such asradio, television, print and computernetworks for purposes of communitycommunication and considers the waysthese technologies shape, and areshaped by, the everyday livedexperience of local populations. He alsoaddresses broader theoretical andphilosophical issues surrounding therelationship between communicationand community, media systems and thepublic sphere. Case studies illustrate thepivotal role community media play inpromoting cultural production andcommunicative democracy within andbetween local communities. This bookwill make a significant contribution toexisting scholarship in media andcultural studies on alternative,participatory and community-basedmedia.

2005 228 x 152 mm 275pp 15 figures0 521 79228 2 Hardback c. £40.000 521 79668 7 Paperback c. £13.99Publication April 2005

Cambridge CulturalSocial Studies

Right Wing Populismin a Changing EuropeA Cultural and SociologicalAnalysisMabel BerezinCornell University, New YorkCambridge Cultural Social Studies

2006 0 521 83913 0 Hardback0 521 54784 9 PaperbackPublication June 2006

Matters of CultureCultural Sociology in PracticeEdited by Roger FriedlandUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

and John MohrUniversity of California, Santa Barbara

American sociology is in the midst of acultural turn. Where sociologists oncespurned culture, today they embraceand explore it. Matters of Culture is anintroduction to some of the besttheorizing in cultural sociology, focusingin particular on questions of power, thesacred and cultural production. With amajor theoretical introduction that laysout the internal structure of the fieldand contributions from leadingacademics Matters of Culture offersstudents and professors alike arepresentative range of the types ofcultural sociological analysis available.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2004 228 x 152 mm 424pp 6 half-tones2 tables0 521 79162 6 Hardback £55.000 521 79545 1 Paperback £19.99

Challenging DiversityRethinking Equality and theValue of DifferenceDavina CooperUniversity of Kent, Canterbury

What challenges are presented by theclaim that diversity should becelebrated? How should equality politicsrespond to controversial constituencies,such as smokers and sports hunters,when they position themselves asdisadvantaged? Challenging Diversitybrings a new and original approach tokey issues facing social, political andcultural theory. Critically engaging withfeminist, radical democratic and liberalscholarship, the book addresses fourmajor challenges confronting a radicalequality politics. Namely, what doesequality mean for preferences andchoices that appear harmful; areequality’s subjects individuals, groups orsomething else; what power dodominant norms have to undermineequality-oriented reforms; and canradical practices endure when theycollide with the mainstream? Takingexamples from religion, gender,sexuality, state policy-making andintentional communities, ChallengingDiversity maps new ways ofunderstanding equality, explores thepolitics of its pursuit, and asks whatkinds of diversity does a radical versionof equality engender.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2004 228 x 152 mm 246pp0 521 83183 0 Hardback £40.000 521 53954 4 Paperback £16.99

Media and Cultural Studies

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The Making of EnglishNational IdentityKrishan KumarUniversity of Virginia

A fascinating exploration of Englishnessand what it means to be English ratherthan British.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2003 228 x 152 mm 382pp0 521 77188 9 Hardback £47.500 521 77736 4 Paperback £17.99

Cultural TraumaSlavery and the Formation ofAfrican American IdentityRon EyermanUppsala Universitet, Sweden

Ron Eyerman explores the formation ofAfrican American identity through thecultural trauma of slavery.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2001 228 x 152 mm 312pp0 521 80828 6 Hardback £45.000 521 00437 3 Paperback £16.99

The UnfinishedRevolutionSocial Movement Theory and theGay and Lesbian MovementStephen M. Engel

Compares the post-Second World Warhistories of the American and British gayand lesbian movements.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2001 228 x 152 mm 254pp 11 line diagrams 4 tables0 521 80287 3 Hardback £42.500 521 00377 6 Paperback £16.99

Intellectual Discourseand the Politics ofModernizationNegotiating Modernity in IranAli MirsepassiHampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts

Examines modernity in the context ofIslamic Fundamentalism and the IranianRevolution.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2000 228 x 152 mm 241pp 5 tables0 521 65000 3 Hardback £45.000 521 65997 3 Paperback £16.99

Race, Media, and theCrisis of Civil SocietyFrom Watts to Rodney KingRonald N. JacobsState University of New York, Albany

Charts the history, development andinfluence of the African-American Press.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2000 228 x 152 mm 202pp0 521 62360 X Hardback £47.500 521 62578 5 Paperback £16.99

Race, Media, and theCrisis of Civil SocietyFrom Watts to Rodney KingRonald N. JacobsState University of New York, Albany

Charts the history, development andinfluence of the African-American Press.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2000 228 x 152 mm 202pp0 521 62360 X Hardback £47.500 521 62578 5 Paperback £16.99

RethinkingComparative CulturalSociologyRepertoires of Evaluation inFrance and the United StatesEdited by Michèle LamontPrinceton University, New Jersey

and Laurent ThévenotEcole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales,Paris

This book provides a powerful newtheoretical framework for understandingcross-national cultural differences.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2000 228 x 152 mm 392pp 9 tables0 521 78263 5 Hardback £45.000 521 78794 7 Paperback £17.99

TrustA Sociological TheoryPiotr SztompkaJagiellonian University, Krakow

A major theoretical and empirical workof social theory, defining trust andexamining it in post-communist Poland.Cambridge Cultural Social Studies

2000 228 x 152 mm 226pp 12 figures0 521 59144 9 Hardback £45.000 521 59850 8 Paperback £16.99

Love OnlineEmotions on the InternetAaron Ben-Ze’evUniversity of Haifa, Israel

‘This clearly written and dryly wittybook, though avowedly a work ofscholarship, is also packed withanecdotes and smart quotes, anddisplays an evident empathy for itskeyboard-clattering subjects.’The Independent

2004 216 x 138 mm 302pp0 521 83296 9 Hardback £18.99

NEW

Conversation andCognitionEdited by Hedwig te MolderWageningen Universiteit, The Netherlands

and Jonathan PotterLoughborough University

Written by some of the leading figuresin the fields of conversation analysis,discursive psychology andethnomethodology, this book looks atthe challenging implications of newdiscourse-based approaches to the topicof cognition. Up to now, cognition hasprimarily been studied in experimentalsettings. This volume shows howcognition can be reworked usinganalyses of engaging examples of reallife interaction such as conversationsbetween friends, relationshipcounselling sessions, and legal hearings.It includes an extended introductionthat overviews the history and contextof cognitive research and its basicassumptions to provide a frame forunderstanding the specific examplesdiscussed, as well as surveying cuttingedge debates about discourse andcognition. This comprehensive andaccessible book opens up importantnew ways of understanding the relationbetween language and cognition.

2005 228 x 152 mm 315pp0 521 79020 4 Hardback £45.000 521 79369 6 Paperback £19.99Publication April 2005

The SocialConstruction ofIntellectual DisabilityMark RapleyMurdoch University, Western Australia

‘The book presents a timely challengeto our profession. Mark Rapley’swriting just gets better: make sure youget the chance to learn from him.’Clinical Psychology

2004 228 x 152 mm 258pp0 521 80900 2 Hardback £40.000 521 00529 9 Paperback £17.99

Media and Cultural Studies

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The Disappearance ofthe Social in AmericanSocial PsychologyJohn D. GreenwoodCity University of New York

The Disappearance of the Social inAmerican Social Psychology is a criticalconceptual history of American socialpsychology. John Greenwooddemarcates the original conception ofthe social dimensions of cognition,emotion and behaviour, and of thediscipline of social psychology itself, thatwas embraced by early twentiethcentury American social psychologists.He documents how this fertileconception of social psychologicalphenomena came to be progressivelyneglected as the century developed, tothe point that scarcely any trace of theoriginal conception of the social remainsin contemporary American psychology.

2004 228 x 152 mm 328pp0 521 83014 1 Hardback £47.50

NEW

The Public SphereAn IntroductionAlan McKeeUniversity of Queensland

What is happening to public debate inWestern cultures? Is our public spheredisintegrating? In the face of populartabloid newspapers, new forms ofreality television and an increasing lackof respect for traditional authorities,many critics are concerned that oursociety no longer has a rational,informed and unified space whereeveryone can communicate about theissues that affect us all. In this bookAlan McKee answers these questions byproviding an introduction to the conceptof the public sphere, the history of theterm and the philosophical argumentsabout its function. By drawing on manyexamples from contemporary mediatedculture, McKee looks at how wecommunicate with each other in public– and how we decide whether changingforms of communication are a goodthing for the ‘public sphere’.

2005 215 x 136 mm 276pp0 521 54990 6 Paperback £15.99

NEW

Epidemiology andCultureTheme BookJames A. TrostleTrinity College, Hartford, Connecticut

This book shows how practitioners inthe emerging field of ‘culturalepidemiology’ describe human health,communicate with diverse audiences,and intervene to improve health andprevent disease. It uses textual andstatistical portraits of disease todescribe past and present collaborationsbetween anthropology andepidemiology. Interpreting epidemiologyas a cultural practice helps to reveal theways in which measurement, causalthinking, and intervention design are allinfluenced by belief, habit, and theoriesof power. By unpacking many commondisease risks and epidemiologiccategories, this book revealsunexamined assumptions and showshow sociocultural context influencesmeasurement of disease. Examplesinclude studies of epilepsy, cholera,mortality on the Titanic, breastfeeding,and adolescent smoking. The bookdescribes methods as varied asobserving individuals, measuring socialnetworks, and compiling data fromdeath certificates. It argues thateffective public health interventionsmust work more often and better at thelevel of entire communities.Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology,13

2005 228 x 152 mm 224pp 10 tables0 521 79050 6 Hardback £40.000 521 79389 0 Paperback £15.99Publication April 2005

Medical Interpretingand Cross-culturalCommunicationClaudia V. AngelelliSan Diego State University

When healthcare providers and patientsdo not speak the same language,medical interpreters are called in tohelp. In this book, Claudia Angelelliexplores the role of medical interpreters,drawing on data from over 300 medicalencounters and interviewing theinterpreters themselves about thepeople for whom they interpret, theirchallenges, and how they characterizetheir role. Bringing together literaturefrom social theory, social psychology,and linguistic anthropology, this bookwill appeal to anyone wanting todiscover the intricacies of medicalinterpreting; particularly researchers,communication specialists, policymakers, and practitioners.

2004 228 x 152 mm 168pp 8 tables8 figures0 521 83026 5 Hardback £48.00

NEW

Language and Societyin JapanNanette GottliebUniversity of Queensland

Language and Society in Japan dealswith issues important to anunderstanding of language in Japantoday, among them multilingualism,language and nationalism, and literacyand reading habits. It is organisedaround the theme of language andidentity, in particular how language isused to construct national, internationaland personal identities. Contrary topopular stereotypes, Japanese is farfrom the only language used in Japan,and does not function in a vacuum, butcomes with its own particular culturalimplications. Language has played animportant role in Japan’s cultural andforeign policies, and language issues areintimately connected both withtechnological advance and with minoritygroup experiences. Nanette Gottlieb is aleading authority in this field. Her bookbuilds on and develops her previouswork, and promises to be essentialreading for students, scholars, and allthose wishing to understand the roleplayed by language in Japanese society.Contemporary Japanese Society

2005 228 x 152 mm 180pp 3 figures0 521 82577 6 Hardback £40.000 521 53284 1 Paperback £15.99

Media and Cultural Studies

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org

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NEW

Modernism and theCulture of CelebrityAaron JaffeUniversity of Louisville, Kentucky

Aaron Jaffe investigates the relationshipbetween two phenomena that arrivedon the historical stage in the firstdecades of the twentieth century:modernist literature and moderncelebrity culture. Jaffe systematicallytraces and theorizes the deeperdependencies between these twoinfluential forms of cultural value. Heexamines the paradox that modernistauthors, while rejecting mass culture infavor of elite cultural forms, reflectedthe economy of celebrity culture in theirstrategies for creating a market for theirwork. Through collaboration,networking, reviewing and editing eachother’s works, T. S. Eliot, James Joyce,Ezra Pound and Wyndham Lewis, amongothers, constructed their literaryreputations and publicized the project ofmodernism. Jaffe uses substantialarchival research to show how literaryfame was made by exploiting the verymarket forces that modernists claimedto reject. This innovative study alsoilluminates the cultural impact andcontinued relevance of the modernistproject.

2005 228 x 152 mm 262pp 10 half-tones0 521 84301 4 Hardback £45.00Publication March 2005

NEW

The CambridgeCompanion to ModernIrish CultureEdited by Joe ClearyNational University of Ireland, Maynooth

and Claire ConnollyCardiff University

This Companion provides anauthoritative introduction to thehistorical, social and stylisticcomplexities of modern Irish culture.Readers will be introduced to Irishculture in its widest sense and helped tofind their way through the cultural andtheoretical debates that inform ourunderstanding of modern Ireland. Thevolume combines cultural breadth andhistorical depth, supported by achronology of Irish history and arts. Awide selection of essays on a richvariety of Irish cultural forms andpractices are complemented by a seriesof in-depth analyses of key themes inIrish cultural politics. The range of topicscovered will enable a comprehensiveunderstanding of Irish culture, while theauthors gathered here – allacknowledged experts in their fields –provide stimulating new essays thattogether amount to an invaluable guideto the shaping of modern Ireland.Cambridge Companions to Culture

2005 228 x 152 mm 418pp 9 half-tones1 map0 521 82009 X Hardback £45.000 521 52629 9 Paperback £16.99

National Identity inRussian CultureAn IntroductionEdited by Simon FranklinUniversity of Cambridge

and Emma WiddisUniversity of Cambridge

What is Russia? Who are Russians?What is ‘Russianness’? The question ofnational identity has long been a vexedone in Russia, and is particularlypertinent in the post-Soviet period. For athousand years these questions havebeen central to the work of Russianwriters, artists, musicians, film-makers,critics, politicians and philosophers.Questions of national self-identitypermeate Russian cultural self-expression. This wide-ranging study,designed for students of Russianliterature, culture, and history, exploresaspects of national identity in Russianculture from medieval times to thepresent day.

2004 228 x 152 mm 256pp 29 half-tones1 map0 521 83926 2 Hardback £45.00

FORTHCOMING

The Social Life ofOpium in ChinaZheng YangwenNational University of Singapore

‘A forthcoming book by YangwenZheng, The Social Life of Opium(Cambridge University Press) makes aperfect complement to this one, as itconcentrates much more on the 1500-1911 period …’.History Today

2005 228 x 152 mm 320pp 14 half-tones6 tables 2 maps0 521 84608 0 Hardback c. £45.000 521 60856 2 Paperback c. £16.99Publication June 2005

A War of WordsLanguage and Conflict in theMiddle EastYasir SuleimanUniversity of Edinburgh

‘Yasir Suleiman’s book is a seminalwork on the linguistic situation in theMiddle East, its socio-political andcultural roots, and its implications fornationhood and the study of conflict.This is a well-crafted, well organized,and eloquent book. ‘Karin Ryding, Georgetown UniversityCambridge Middle East Studies, 19

2004 228 x 152 mm 286pp 18 half-tones13 tables 1 figure0 521 83743 X Hardback £45.000 521 83743 X Hardback £45.00

Remote ControlNew Media, New EthicsEdited by Catharine LumbyUniversity of Sydney

and Elspeth ProbynUniversity of Sydney

This timely book examines the ethicalchallenges posed by new mediaformats, technologies and audiences. Itconsiders how these emerging genresand technologies work, how they arereshaping the public sphere, and howthe connections between product andviewer, and producer and mediaconsumer, are being changed by newshows and formats. With so muchinterest in contemporary media forms,and so many heated debates aboutmedia ethics, this book will be a mustfor journalists, media practitioners,watchers and students.

2004 228 x 152 mm 270pp0 521 53427 5 Paperback £22.99

Media and Cultural Studies

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The ‘I’ of the CameraEssays in Film Criticism, History,and AestheticsSecond editionWilliam RothmanUniversity of Miami

Originally published in 1988, The ‘I’ ofthe Camera has become a classic in theliterature of film. Offering alternatives tothe viewing and criticism of film,William Rothman challenges readers tothink about film in adventurous waysthat are more open to movies and ourexperience of them. In a series ofeloquent essays examining the‘Americanness’ of American film,Rothman argues compellingly thatmovies have inherited the philosophicalperspective of Americantranscendentalism. This second editionincludes fourteen new essays, writtenafter the book’s first publication, as wellas a new foreword.Cambridge Studies in Film

2004 228 x 152 mm 424pp 373 half-tones0 521 82022 7 Hardback £55.000 521 52724 4 Paperback £27.00

Horror Film andPsychoanalysisFreud’s Worst NightmareEdited by Steven Jay SchneiderNew York University and Harvard University,Massachusetts

‘Who can resist a volume which,apropos the most popular movie genre– horror, stages the debate betweenthe main orientations of contemporarypsychoanalytic film theory? And whyshould we resist a unique combinationof top theory and fascinating topic?Everyone in cinema and culturalstudies should just grab this collection,sit down and learn!’Slavoj Zizek (University of Ljubljana, Slovenia)Cambridge Studies in Film

2004 228 x 152 mm 318pp0 521 82521 0 Hardback £45.00

The Invention of theWestern FilmA Cultural History of the Genre’sFirst Half CenturyScott SimmonUniversity of California, Davis

The Invention of the Western Filmranges across literature, visual arts,social history, ideology and legend toprovide, for the first time, an in-depthexploration of the early Western, fromshort kinetoscopes of the 1890sthrough the ‘classic’ features of the1940s. In this pioneering study, ScottSimmon silhouettes the Western’sevolution, including the rise and demiseof the American Indian during the silentera, the ‘B-Westerns’ of the 1930s, andthe Westerns of the 1940s, whenaspects of film noir were adapted to thegenre.

2004 228 x 152 mm 410pp 112 half-tones0 521 55473 X Hardback £65.000 521 55581 7 Paperback £33.00

Kids and Media inAmericaDonald F. RobertsStanford University, California

and Ulla G. FoehrStanford University, California

With Victoria J. Rideoutand Mollyanne Brodie

This is the first comprehensive nationalsample study of US young people’smedia use.

2003 228 x 152 mm 406pp 73 line diagrams 228 tables0 521 82102 9 Hardback £50.000 521 52790 2 Paperback £18.99

Criminology

Cambridge Studies inCriminology

FORTHCOMING

Police InnovationContrasting Approaches andPerspectivesEdited by David WeisburdHebrew University of Jerusalem

and Anthony A BragaHarvard University, MassachusettsCambridge Studies in Criminology

2006 0 521 83628 X Hardback0 521 54483 1 PaperbackPublication June 2006

FORTHCOMING

Prisoner Reentry andPublic Safety inAmericaEdited by Jeremy Travisand Christy Visher

Public Safety and Prisoner Reentry inAmerica is intended to shed light on aquestion that fuels the public’s concernabout the number of returningprisoners. What are the public safetyconsequences of the fourfold increase inthe number of individuals entering andleaving the nation’s prisons each year?Many have speculated about the nexusbetween prisoner reentry and publicsafety. Journalistic accounts of thereentry phenomenon have painted apicture of a tidal wave of hardenedcriminals coming back home to resumetheir destructive lifestyles. Lawenforcement officials have attributedincreases in violence in theircommunities to the influx of returningprisoners. Politicians have recommendedpolicies that keep former prisoners outof high crime neighborhoods in thebelief that crime would be reduced. Thechapters in this book address theseissues and suggest policies that willkeep released prisoners fromcommitting new crimes.Cambridge Studies in Criminology

2005 216 x 138 mm 280pp0 521 84916 0 Hardback c. £40.000 521 61386 8 Paperback c. £14.99Publication October 2005

Criminology

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FORTHCOMING

Third Party PolicingLorraine MazerolleGriffith University, Queensland

and Janet RansleyGriffith University, Queensland

This book is the first comprehensiveexploration of a major change in crimecontrol whereby responsibility no longerrests primarily with state agencies, but isshared with a wide range oforganisations and individuals. As a resultthe role of the state has been describedas increasingly regulatory rather thanactually controlling policing and criminaljustice functions. Exactly how third partypolicing works, practical issues andethical implications, are all integratedwith original research and theory toprovide a valuable resource for students,academics and policy makers.Cambridge Studies in Criminology

2005 228 x 152 mm 250pp 10 tables10 figures0 521 82783 3 Hardback c. £45.000 521 53507 7 Paperback c. £16.99Publication September 2005

NEW

Economic Espionageand Industrial SpyingHedieh NasheriKent State University, Ohio

This book provides an analytic overviewand assessment of the changing natureof crime in the burgeoning informationsociety. Bringing together views fromleading national and internationalauthorities, Hedieh Nasheri explains thehistorical and theoretical backgroundsurrounding issues of economicespionage, trade secret theft andindustrial spying and its impact onsociety. She looks at legislative history,the progression of electronic andcorporate criminal behavior byintroducing the concept of informationtheft and computer crimes, exploring itsdefinition, its identification and itsdevelopment within criminology.Nasheri presents an assessment of thestate of economic espionage activitieswithin a criminological context andbased on that assessment addressesareas where additional action isrequired. The book also draws attentionto a variety of issues raised by economicespionage and technologicaldevelopment. It draws on a variety ofdisciplines, including criminology,criminal justice, sociology, law andsociety, economics and political science.Cambridge Studies in Criminology

2005 228 x 152 mm 286pp0 521 83582 8 Hardback £45.000 521 54371 1 Paperback £16.99

NEW

Marking Time in theGolden StateWomen’s Imprisonment inCaliforniaCandace KruttschnittUniversity of Minnesota

and Rosemary GartnerUniversity of Toronto

In recent decades, the nature of criminalpunishment has undergone change in theUnited States. This case study of womenserving time in California in the 1960sand 1990s examines key points in thisrecent history. The authors begin with alook at imprisonment at the CaliforniaInstitution for Women in the early 1960s,when the rehabilitative model dominatedofficial discourse. They compare women’sexperiences in the 1990s, at theCalifornia Institution for Women and theValley State Prison, when the recent ‘gettough’ era was near its peak. Drawing onarchival data, interviews, and surveys,their analysis considers the relationshipsamong official philosophies and practicesof imprisonment, women’s responses tothe prison regime, and relations betweenwomen prisoners. The experiences ofwomen prisoners reflected thetransformations Americans havewitnessed in punishment over recentdecades, but they also mirrored thedeprivations and restrictions ofimprisonment.Cambridge Studies in Criminology

2005 228 x 152 mm 216pp 3 line diagrams 16 tables0 521 82558 X Hardback £40.000 521 53265 5 Paperback £16.99

The Virtual PrisonCommunity Custody and theEvolution of ImprisonmentJulian V. RobertsUniversity of Ottawa

The last twenty-five years have seendramatic rises in the prison populationsof most industrialised nations. Unable tokeep up with increased numbers ofconvicted offenders, governments andcriminal justice systems have beenseeking new ways to control and punishoffenders. One sanction adopted inCanada and some parts of Europe andthe US is community custody whichattempts to recreate the punitive natureof prison but without incarceration. Thisbook analyses the effectiveness of thisapproach and explores its implicationsfor offenders and society as a whole.Cambridge Studies in Criminology

2004 228 x 152 mm 220pp 20 tables2 figures0 521 82959 3 Hardback £45.000 521 53644 8 Paperback £19.99

Understanding PoliceUse of ForceOfficers, Suspects, andReciprocityGeoffrey P. AlpertUniversity of South Carolina

and Roger G. DunhamUniversity of Miami

Whenever police officers come intocontact with citizens there is a chancethat the encounter will digress to one inwhich force is used on a suspect.Fortunately, most police activities do notinvolve the use of force. But those thatdo reflect important patterns ofinteraction between the officer and thecitizen. This book examines thosepatterns. It begins with a brief survey ofprior research, and then goes on topresent new data and findings. Amongthe new data are the force factorapplied – that is, the level of force usedrelative to suspect resistance – and dataon the sequential order of incidents offorce. The authors also examine policeuse of force from the suspect’sperspective. In analyzing this data theyput forward a new conceptualframework, the Authority MaintenanceTheory, for examining and assessingpolice use of force.Cambridge Studies in Criminology

2004 228 x 152 mm 202pp 10 line diagrams 24 tables0 521 83773 1 Hardback £40.000 521 54675 3 Paperback £15.99

AWARD WINNER

Gangs andDelinquency inDevelopmentalPerspectiveTerence P. ThornberryState University of New York, Albany

Marvin D. KrohnState University of New York, Albany

Alan J. LizotteState University of New York, Albany

Carolyn A. SmithState University of New York, Albany

and Kimberly TobinWestfield State College

This book examines how membership inadolescent street gangs influenceshuman development.Cambridge Studies in Criminology

2003 228 x 152 mm 262pp 20 line diagrams 55 tables0 521 81439 1 Hardback £45.000 521 89129 9 Paperback £16.99

Criminology

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Early Prevention ofAdult AntisocialBehaviourEdited by David P. FarringtonInstitute of Criminology, Cambridge

and Jeremy W. CoidSt Bartholomew’s and Royal London School ofMedicine

Examines the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of early preventionprogrammes on levels of adult antisocialbehaviour.Cambridge Studies in Criminology

2003 228 x 152 mm 394pp 8 tables14 figures0 521 65194 8 Hardback £48.00

NEW TEXTBOOK

PunishmentA Comparative HistoricalPerspectiveTerance D. MietheUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas

and Hong LuUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas

Punishment is the common response tocrime and deviance in all societies.However, its particular form andpurpose are also linked to specificfeatures of the structure of thesesocieties at a particular time and place.Through a comparative historicalanalysis of punishment, this book isdesigned to identify and examine thesources of similarity and differences intypes of economic punishments,incapacitation devices and structures,and lethal and non-lethal forms ofcorporal punishment over time andplace. We will look closely atpunishment responses to crime anddeviance across different regions of theworld and in specific countries like theUnited States, China, and Saudi Arabia.It is hoped that the reader will gain anappreciation for both the universal andcontext-specific nature of punishmentand its use for purposes of socialcontrol, social change, and theelimination of threat to the prevailingauthorities.

2005 253 x 177 mm 252pp 11 line diagrams 10 tables0 521 84407 X Hardback £45.000 521 60516 4 Paperback £15.99

Capital PunishmentStrategies for AbolitionEdited by Peter HodgkinsonUniversity of Westminster

and William A. SchabasNational University of Ireland, Galway

What are the critical factors thatdetermine whether a country replaces,retains or restores the death penalty?Why do some countries maintain thedeath penalty in theory but in realityrarely invoke it? By asking thesequestions, the editors hope to isolatethe core issues that influence theformulation of legislation so that theycan be incorporated into strategies foradvising governments consideringchanges to their policy on capitalpunishment. As well as the USA thereare chapters on South Korea, Lithuania,Georgia, Japan and the BritishCaribbean Commonwealth.

2004 228 x 152 mm 388pp 10 tables10 graphs0 521 81590 8 Hardback £50.00

Errors of JusticeNature, Sources and RemediesBrian ForstAmerican University, Washington DC

‘Brian Forst tackles the topic of errorsof justice in a balanced manner thathas been absent from the scholarlydebate on the effects of the criminaljustice policy on outcomes … no otherbook that addresses such a range ofimportant criminal justice topics usingthe critical yardstick of analysis, andthat is indeed the book’s majorstrength … long overdue. The bookprovides a blueprint for the kinds ofdata we need to better estimate theextent and costs of real errorsassociated with criminal justice policy.Dr Forst is ideally suited to write thisbook. His expertise on statisticalinference, criminal justice informationsystems, policing, prosecution, and thedeath penalty is put to powerful usehere. The book is immensely readable,rigorous and thorough, yet it will beaccessible to non-technical readers.This is a valuable scholarlycontribution. I loved it!’Joan Petersilia, Professor of Law & Society,University of California, IrvineCambridge Studies in Criminology

2004 228 x 152 mm 272pp 2 linediagrams 13 tables0 521 82130 4 Hardback £42.500 521 52882 8 Paperback £16.99

Rethinking HomicideExploring the Structure andProcess Underlying DeadlySituationsTerance D. MietheUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas

and Wendy C. RegoecziCleveland State University

With Kriss A. Drass

Using multiple data sources andmethods, this book involves a micro-historical analysis of the nature ofchange and stability in homicidesituations over time. It focuses on thehomicide situation as the unit ofanalysis, and explores similarities anddifferences in the context of homicidefor different social groups. The analysisof over 400,000 US homicides issupplemented with qualitative analysisof narrative accounts of homicide eventsto more fully investigate the structureand process underlying these lethalsituations.Cambridge Studies in Criminology

2004 228 x 152 mm 344pp 26 linediagrams 19 tables0 521 83299 3 Hardback £50.000 521 54058 5 Paperback £18.99

FORTHCOMING

Criminals and theirScientistsThe History of Criminology inInternational PerspectiveEdited by Peter Beckerand Richard F. Wetzell

This book presents recent research onthe history of criminology from the lateeighteenth to the mid-twentieth centuryin Western Europe (Austria, Britain,France, Germany, Italy) and inArgentina, Australia, Japan, and theUnited States. Approaching the historyof criminology as a history of scienceand practice, the essays examine thediscourse on crime and criminals thatsurfaced as part of different discoursesand practices, including the activities ofthe police and the courts, parliamentarydebates, media reports, as well as thewritings of moral statisticians, jurists,and medical doctors. In addition, thebook seeks to elucidate the relationshipbetween criminological discourse andpolitics, society, and culture by providinga comparative study of the worldwidereception of Cesare Lombroso’scriminal-anthropological ideas.Publications of the German HistoricalInstitute

2005 228 x 152 mm 512pp 3 linediagrams 6 half-tones 1 table0 521 81012 4 Hardback £60.00Publication October 2005

Criminology

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org

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26

AAIDS, Rhetoric, and Medical Knowledge ..2Ageing & Society ..................................13Alexander, Jeffrey C.................................4Alford, Robert .......................................13Alpert, Geoffrey P..................................24Analyzing Race Talk ..............................11Angelelli, Claudia V. ..............................21Archer, Margaret S. .................................5Archives européennes de sociologie ........3Armstrong-Coster, Angela .......................3

BBarrientos, Armando .............................11Batagelj, Vladimir....................................7Baud, Michiel........................................14Bauer, M. W. ...........................................8Becker, Peter .........................................25Beckford, James A...................................9Being Human..........................................5Being Together, Working Apart ................9Ben-Ze'ev, Aaron ..................................20Bengtson, Vern L.....................................1Berezin, Mabel......................................19Between Politics and Markets ...............14Bevan, Philippa.....................................11Bevir, Mark ...........................................18Bevir, Mark ...........................................18Bible and Empire, The ...........................10Biotechnology - the Making of a Global

Controversy .........................................8Bloche, Gregg .......................................13Bob, Clifford .........................................15Bobo, Lawrence ....................................11Bonds of Civility....................................13Box-Steffensmeier, Janet M. ....................6Braga, Anthony A..................................23Brockett, Charles D. ..............................16Brodie, Mollyanne .................................23Bruzelius, Nils .........................................3Burgess, Adam........................................8Burns, Gene..........................................15

CCambridge Companion to Durkheim, The 4Cambridge Companion to Modern Irish

Culture, The .......................................22Cambridge Handbook of Age and Ageing,

The ......................................................1Capital Punishment...............................25Carrington, Peter ....................................7Cellular Phones, Public Fears, and a

Culture of Precaution ...........................8Challenging Diversity ............................19Church, State and Civil Society..............10Class Practices ........................................2Cleary, Joe ............................................22Coid, Jeremy W. ....................................25Coleman, Peter G....................................1Community Media ................................19Connolly, Claire ....................................22Contention and Democracy in Europe,

1650–2000 .......................................18Contesting Citizenship in Latin America.16Conversation and Cognition..................20Cooper, Davina .....................................19Corak, Miles .........................................12Criminals and their Scientists ................25

Cultural Transformation and ReligiousPractice................................................9

Cultural Trauma ....................................20Culture and Agency ................................5

DDark Side of Democracy, The .................17Davis, Diane E.......................................18Davis, Gerald ........................................16Davis, Peter...........................................11Dawson, Michael ..................................11de Nooy, Wouter.....................................7Devine, Fiona..........................................2Dillon, Michele........................................9Disappearance of the Social in American

Social Psychology, The ........................21Discipline and Development ..................18Dissecting the Social ...............................5Doreian, Patrick ......................................7Drass, Kriss A. .......................................25Du Bois Review: Social Science Research

on Race .............................................11Dunham, Roger G. ................................24Durkheim, Emile .....................................4Durkheim's Ghosts..................................4Durkheim's Philosophy Lectures ..............4Dynamics of Socio-Economic Development,

The ....................................................17

EEarly Prevention of Adult Antisocial

Behaviour ..........................................25Ecological Inference ................................6Economic Espionage and Industrial Spying

24Eisenberg, Avigail .................................11Emotions in Finance..............................15Engel, Stephen M. ................................20Epidemiology and Culture .....................21Epistemology and Practice ......................4Errors of Justice ....................................25Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Minority Rights

10Ethnicity, Social Mobility, and Public Policy

.........................................................10Europeaeisches Archiv für Soziolgie.........3Europe and the Politics of Capabilities ..12European Journal of Sociology ................3Event History Modeling...........................6Exploratory Social Network Analysis with

Pajek ...................................................7Eyerman, Ron .......................................20

FFaking It .................................................6Farrington, David P................................25Fascists.................................................16Fergusson, David ..................................10Ferligoj, Anuska ......................................7Fetzer, Joel S. ..........................................6Flyvbjerg, Bent ....................................3, 6Foehr, Ulla G.........................................23Foran, John...........................................13Forst, Brian ...........................................25Franklin, Simon .....................................22Franzosi, Roberto ....................................6Friedland, Roger ...................................19From Words to Numbers .........................6

GGangs and Delinquency in Developmental

Perspective.........................................24Gartner, Rosemary ................................24Gaskell, G. ..............................................8Generalized Blockmodeling .....................7Generational Income Mobility in North

America and Europe...........................12Gerlach, Michael L. ...............................18Global Crises, Global Solutions..............14Gottlieb, Nanette ..................................21Gough, Ian ...........................................11Greenwood, John D. .............................21Gross, Neil ..............................................4Gugler, Josef .........................................15

HHandbook of Political Sociology, The .....13Handbook of the Sociology of Religion....9Hann, Christopher...................................3Health Economics,. Policy amd Law.......13Hedgecoe, Adam.....................................7Hedstrom, Peter ......................................5Hewitt, Roger .......................................10Hicks, Alexander ...................................13Hobson, Barbara.....................................8Hodgkinson, Peter.................................25Horror Film and Psychoanalysis .............23Houtkoop-Steenstra, Hanneke ...............11Howley, Kevin .......................................19Hsiao, William.......................................13Human Genome Diversity Project, The .....7

II' of the Camera, The ............................23Ikegami, Eiko ........................................13Inglehart, Ronald ..............................5, 14Insecurity and Welfare Regimes in Asia,

Africa and Latin America ....................11Intellectual Discourse and the Politics of

Modernization ...................................20International Review of Social History ...19Introduction to Christianity, An .............10Invention of the Western Film, The ........23Israel's Holocaust and the Politics of

Nationhood .......................................17

JJacobs, Ronald N. .................................20Jaffe, Aaron ..........................................22Janoski, Thomas....................................13Japan's Network Economy ....................18Joas, Hans ..........................................3, 4Johnson, Malcolm L. ...............................1Jones, Bradford S. ...................................6Jones, Robert Alun ..................................4Journal of Public Policy .........................18Journal of Social Policy,.........................12

KKawanishi, Hirosuke..............................11Kids and Media in America ...................23Killing Trap, The.......................................2King, Gary ..............................................6Kirkwood, Thomas B. L............................1Knapp, Martin.......................................13Komter, Aafke E. .....................................3

Author and Title Index

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27

Konrad, Monica ......................................8Krohn, Marvin D. ..................................24Kruttschnitt, Candace............................24Kumar, Krishan......................................20

LLamont, Michèle ...................................20Language and Society in Japan .............21Lautman, Jacques ...................................3Legal Reason ..........................................3Lemert, Charles.......................................4Lin, Yi-min ............................................14Lincoln, James R. ..................................18Living and Dying with Cancer..................3Lizotte, Alan J. ......................................24Lomborg, Bjorn.....................................14Loury, Glenn C. .....................................10Love Online ..........................................20Loyal, Steven ..........................................4Lu, Hong...............................................25Lukes, Steven..........................................3Lumby, Catharine..................................22

MM'Charek, Amade...................................7Making Men into Fathers ........................8Making of English National Identity, The20Making Sense of Motherhood.................8Making Social Science Matter .................6Maltby, Tony .........................................12Mann, Michael................................16, 17Marginal to Mainstream .........................8Marketing of Rebellion, The...................15Markets in Historical Contexts...............18Marking Time in the Golden State .........24Matters of Culture ................................19May, Stephen........................................10Mazerolle, Lorraine ...............................24McAdam, Doug ....................................16McKee, Alan..........................................21Medical Interpreting and Cross-cultural

Communication .................................21Megaprojects and Risk............................3Midlarsky, Manus I..................................2Miethe, Terance D. ................................25Miller, Tina ..............................................8Miller, William Ian ...................................6Minorities within Minorities ..................11Mirsepassi, Ali ......................................20Models and Methods in Social Network

Analysis ...............................................7Modernism and the Culture of Celebrity22Modernization, Cultural Change, and

Democracy .........................................14Modood, Tariq ......................................10Mohr, John ...........................................19Moral Significance of Class, The ..............2Moral Veto, The.....................................15Mossialos, Elias.....................................13Mouer, Ross..........................................11Mrvar, Andrej ..........................................7Muslims and the State in Britain, France,

and Germany .......................................6My Neighbor, My Enemy .........................2

NNarrating the New Predictive Genetics ....8Nasheri, Hedieh ....................................24National Identity in Russian Culture ......22Norris, Pippa...........................................5

OOffe, Claus..............................................3Oliver, Adam .........................................13O'Riain, Sean........................................17Orren, Karen.........................................18Outshoorn, Joyce ....................................9

PPahl, Jan...............................................12Pixley, Jocelyn .......................................15Police Innovation ..................................23Political Movements and Violence in

Central America .................................16Politics of High-Tech Growth, The ..........17Politics of Personalised Medicine, The ......7Politics of Prostitution, The ......................9Popular Intellectuals and Social

Movements........................................14Potter, Jonathan....................................20Power and the Nation in European History

.........................................................17Preda, Alex .............................................2Prisoner Reentry and Public Safety in

America .............................................23Probyn, Elspeth.....................................22Public Sphere, The.................................21Punishment ..........................................25

QQuilley, Stephen......................................4

RRace, Media, and the Crisis of Civil Society

20Ransley, Janet .......................................24Rapley, Mark ........................................20Rawls, Anne Warfield ..............................4Realist Social Theory ...............................5Regoeczi, Wendy C. ..............................25Remote Control ....................................22Rethinking Comparative Cultural Sociology

.........................................................20Rethinking Homicide.............................25Rice, Thomas.........................................13Rideout, Victoria J. ................................23Right Wing Populism in a Changing

Europe...............................................19Roberts, Donald F..................................23Roberts, Julian V....................................24Room, Graham .....................................11Rose, Richard........................................18Rosen, Ori...............................................6Roth, Benita ...........................................9Rothengatter, Werner ..............................3Rothman, William .................................23Ruggie, Mary ..........................................8Rutten, Rosanne ...................................14

SSacred and Secular .................................5Salais, Robert........................................12Sampson, Steven ....................................6Sawyer, R. Keith ......................................5Sayer, Andrew ........................................2Scales, Len............................................17Schabas, William A................................25Schneider, Barbara ..................................9Schneider, Steven Jay ............................23Schwartz, Mildred .................................13Scott, John..............................................7Scott, W. Richard...................................16Search for American Political Development,

The ....................................................18Separate Roads to Feminism ...................9Simmon, Scott ......................................23Skowronek, Stephen .............................18Smith, Carolyn A. ..................................24Smith, Philip ...........................................4Social Construction of Intellectual

Disability, The.....................................20Social Emergence....................................5Social Life of Opium in China, The.........22Social Movements and Organization

Theory ...............................................16Social Policy and Society .......................12Social Solidarity and the Gift ...................3Social Theory and Religion ......................9Sociological History of Christian Worship, A

...........................................................9Sociology of Norbert Elias, The ................4Sociology of Work in Japan, A ...............11Soper, J. Christopher ...............................6Spinner-Halev, Jeff ................................11Squires, Judith ......................................10Stover, Eric..............................................2Stringer, Martin.......................................9Structure, Agency and the Internal

Conversation .......................................5Sugirtharajah, R. S. ...............................10Suleiman, Yasir .....................................22Szirmai, Adam.......................................17Sztompka, Piotr ....................................20

TTaking Power........................................13Tanner, Martin A. ....................................6te Molder, Hedwig ................................20Teles, Steven M.....................................10Thévenot, Laurent .................................20Third Party Policing ...............................24Thornberry, Terence P. ...........................24Tilly, Charles .........................................18Tobin, Kimberly .....................................24Travis, Jeremy........................................23Trentmann, Frank ..................................18Trostle, James A. ...................................21Trust .....................................................20

UUnderstanding Police Use of Force ........24Understanding the Divorce Cycle.............3Unfinished Revolution, The....................20

Author and Title Index

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28

Vvan den Berg, Harry ..............................11van der Linden, Marcel .........................19Villeneuve, Robert .................................12Virtual Prison, The.................................24Visher, Christy .......................................23

WWaite, Linda J. ........................................9War of Words, A....................................22Ward, Graham ........................................9Warnes, Tony ........................................13Wasserman, Stanley................................7Weinreb, Lloyd L. ....................................3Weinstein, Harvey M...............................2Weisburd, David ...................................23Welzel, Christian...................................14Wetherell, Margaret..............................11Wetzell, Richard F. ................................25White Backlash and the Politics of

Multiculturalism .................................10Widdis, Emma.......................................22Wincup, Emma .....................................12Wolfinger, Nicholas H..............................3Wood, Geof ..........................................11Woodhead, Linda..................................10World Cities beyond the West ...............15

YYangwen, Zheng...................................22Yashar, Deborah J..................................16

ZZald, Mayer ..........................................16Zertal, Idith...........................................17Zimmer, Oliver ......................................17

Author and Title Index

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March 2005

Cambridge University PressThe Edinburgh BuildingCambridge CB2 2RU, UK

www.cambridge.org/sociology

Announcing a new series from Cambridge

Cambridge Studies in Society and theLife SciencesGeneral Editors

Nikolas Rose London School of Economics

Paul Rabinow University of California, Berkeley

Cambridge Studies in Society and the Life Sciences promotes interdisciplinary worksin the social sciences that focus on the social shaping, social meaning and socialimplications of recent developments in the life sciences. Interdisciplinary projectswill be encouraged with a strong empirical and ethnographic base that explorestopics within the context of an internationalised world of science as well asrecognising national variations in ethical, moral and legal codes and mores.

Readership: graduate students, academic researchers, professionals

Market: Science and technology studies, sociology, anthropology, politics, policystudies

Format: books in this series will be published in hardback and paperback

Frequency: We expect to publish around two titles per year in this series

Forthcoming titlesPublication December 2004

The Politics ofPersonalised MedicinePharmacogenetics in the Clinic

See page 7

Publication January 2005

The Human GenomeDiversity Project An Ethnography of Scientific Practice

See page 7

Publication February 2005

Narrating the NewPredictive GeneticsEthics, Enthnography and Science

See page 8