Decentering comparative analysis in a globalizing world / / edited by Olivier Giraud and Michel Lallement.
Decentering Comparative Analysis in a Globalizing World aims to go beyond the traditional criticism in comparative analysis. It wants to shed new light on the question of comparing as a form of categorizing. In this perspective, three relevant dimensions to question the naturalized categories of com...
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Superior document: | International comparative social studies ; 53 |
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TeilnehmendeR: | |
Place / Publishing House: | Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill,, [2022] ©2022 |
Year of Publication: | 2022 |
Language: | English |
Series: | International comparative social studies ;
53. |
Physical Description: | 1 online resource. |
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Table of Contents:
- 1. Introduction: Decentering comparative analysis and beyond
- Olivier Giraud, Lise CNRS-Cnam, Paris
- Michel Lallement, Lise CNRS-Cnam, Paris
- Part 1. Varying the analytical scale
- 2. Decentering comparison, questioning holism: The multi-sited ethnographic approach
- Luis Felipe Murillo, University of Virginia - Charlottesville
- 3. Close comparison in a global world: Categorizing the quality of work in a multinational company
- Bénédicte Zimmermann, EHESS, Paris, Wissenschaftskolleg Berlin
- Léa Renard, Freie Universität Berlin
- 4. Decentering comparative strategies in cross-border studies: Towards a comparative analysis of scale making within assemblages
- Anna Amelina, Universität Cottbus
- 5. Engaging in a dialogue - An experiment in comparative employment Law
- Marie Mercat-Bruns, Lise CNRS-Cnam, Paris
- 6. Which decentered methodological framework is best for comparing inclusive education policies?
- Serge Ebersold, Lise CNRS-Cnam, Paris
- 7. Spectral comparisons: universalization, generalization, and the resource curse
- Pablo Jaramillo, Universidad de los Andes - Bogota
- Part 2. Comparison: A historical phenomena and the social sciences
- 8. The rise of comparison and the rise of the New Deal order
- Kiran Klaus Patel, Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich
- 9. Silicosis as a test case for the decentering of medical and labor history
- Paul-André Rosental, Science Po, CFR- EHESS, Paris
- Catherine Cavalin, Irisso-CNRS-Université Paris Dauphine
- Michel Vincent, Minapath Développement
- 10. Homo Africanus vs homo œconomicus: looking back and forth
- Mohamedoune Abdoulaye Fall, LASP-D, Saint-Louis du Sénégal
- 11. The rise and strength of authoritarian restoration - Constructing a comparative logic for research
- Wiebke Keim, Sage-CNRS, Strasbourg
- 12. Comparing the Social and Spatial Inscription of Women's Work
- Tania Toffanin, Università degli Studi, Padova
- 13. Categoring difference: labor and the colonial experience
- Ferruccio Ricciardi, Lise CNRS-Cnam, Paris
- Part 3. Building commensurable universes for comparative analysis: Opportunities and constraints
- 14. Comparative Research Between France and India: A View from Within
- Stéphanie Tawa-Lama Rewal, EHESS, Paris
- 15. Comparability and conditions of comparability in education. Globalization of education: economist ethnocentrism versus culturalist singularism
- Aïssa Kadri, Université Paris 8
- 16. Comparing imagined transnational communities in France and Germany, or Playing national and European categories - religion, language, territory - at their own game
- Nikola Tietze, Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung, Hamburg
- 17. Communities, organization of work, and institutional mediation: comparing the United States and France
- Camille Boullier, Lise CNRS-Cnam, Paris
- Michel Lallement, Lise CNRS-Cnam, Paris
- 18. On the crossroads of territorialities and temporalities: the making of social politics in Brazil
- Isabel Georges, IRD-UMR 201 Développement et societies, Paris
- 19. Entangled politicizations. Democracy against the market in long-term care policies
- Olivier Giraud, Lise, CNRS-Cnam, Paris
- Concluding remarks
- Andreas Eckert, Humbold University Berlin.