Frédéric Sawicki
UMR CNRS 8026, centre d’études et de recherches administratives, politiques et sociales (Ceraps), faculté des sciences juridiques, politiques et sociales, université de Lille II, BP 629, 1, place Déliot, 59024 Lille cedex, France
Johanna Siméant
UMR CNRS 8056, département (…)
Accueil > English Supplement > Volume 52, Supplement 1
Volume 52, Supplement 1
-
Decompartmentalizing the sociology of activist commitment. A critical survey of some recent trends in French research - F. Sawicki, J. Siméant
-
For a sociology of committed professionals : “Art Worlds” in the United States and opposing the war in Iraq - V. Roussel
Violaine Roussel
Laboratoire Théories du politique (LabToP), département de science politique,
université Paris 8, 2, rue de la Liberté, 93526 Saint-Denis cedex, France
Available online 27 July 2010 on ScienceDirect
doi:10.1016/j.soctra.2010.06.004
Abstract
This article analyzes (…) -
The barrier and the stained-glass ceiling. Analyzing female careers in religious organizations - B. de Gasquet
Béatrice de Gasquet,
Centre d’études interdisciplinaires des faits religieux,
10, rue Monsieur-le-Prince, 75006 Paris, France
Available online 27 July 2010 on ScienceDirect
doi:10.1016/j.soctra.2010.06.002
Abstract
This article surveys existing research (principally in France and (…) -
Closing the market as the only protection ? Trade unions and the labor market in the French performing arts industry from 1919 to 1937 - M. Grégoire
Mathieu Grégoire,
Centre d’études de l’emploi, 29, promenade Michel-Simon,
93166 Noisy-le-Grand cedex, France
Available online 24 July 2010 on ScienceDirect
doi:10.1016/j.soctra.2010.06.003
Abstract
The case of trade unions in the French performing arts industry between the two (…) -
Alerts and catastrophes : The case of the 1999 storm in France, a treacherous risk - F. Dedieu
François Dedieu, Centre de sociologie des organisations, 19, rue Amélie, 75018 Paris, France
Available online 23 July 2010 on ScienceDirect
doi:10.1016/j.soctra.2010.06.001
Abstract
How is it that catastrophes always seem predictable ex post but never ex ante ? The paradox is (…)