Publications
Book Chapters
Forthcoming
- “Cosmopolitan Liberalism and its Limits,” in Cosmopolitanism, edited by R. Robertson (Sage 2010) [PDF: 17 pages, 120KB]
- “For the Social History of the Present: Bourdieu as Historical Sociologist,” in Bourdieu, Theory and Historical Sociology, edited by Philip Gorski (Duke University Press, 2011) [PDF: 29 pages, 248KB]
- “A Cosmopolitanism of Connections,” in Hilary Ballon ed., The Cosmopolitan Idea. New York: New York University Press.
- “Foreword” to J. Hacker and A. O’Leary, eds.: Shared Responsibility, Shared Risk: Government, Markets, and Social Policy in the Twenty-First Century (New York: Oxford University Press).
2011
- “Secularism, Citizenship and the Public Sphere,” in C. Calhoun, M. Juergensmeyer and J. VanAntwerpen, eds.: Rethinking Secularism Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- “From the Current Crisis to Possible Futures” in C. Calhoun and G. Derluguian, eds., Business as Usual: Sources of the Global Financial Meltdown. New York: NYU Press.
- “Foreword” to P. Dutkiewicz and D. Trenin, eds.: Russia: The Challenges of Transformation. New York: NYU Press.
- “Civil Society and the Public Sphere,” in The Civil Society Handbook, edited by Michael Edwards (Oxford University Press 2010) [PDF: 21 pages, 164KB]
- “The Public Mission of the Research University,” in Knowledge Matters, edited by Diana Rhoten and Craig Calhoun (SSRC/Columbia University Press 2010) [PDF: 33 pages, 208kb]
- “On Merton’s Legacy and Contemporary Sociology,” pp. 1-30 in C. Calhoun, ed.: Robert K. Merton: Sociology of Science and Sociology as Science (New York: Columbia University Press.
- “The Idea of Emergency: Humanitarian Action and Global (Dis)order,” pp. 18-39 in Didier Fassin and Mariella Pandolfi, eds., Contemporary States of Emergency. The Politics of Military and Humanitarian Interventions (Cambridge, MA: Zone Books). [PDF: 25 pages, 118kb]
- “Afterword: Religion’s Many Powers,” in The Power of Religion in the Public Sphere, edited by E. Mendieta and J. VanAntwerpen (Columbia University Press, 2010). [PDF: 18 pages, 144KB].
- “Welcoming Remarks,” (On the occasion of the award of the Albert Hirschman Prize to Charles Tilly, September 2008), Social Science History vol. 34 #3: 385-88.
- “Renewing International Studies: Regional and Transregional Studies in a Changing Intellectual Field,” in Knowledge for the Nation’s Global Future: Fifty Years of Title VI and Fulbright-Hays Programs for Language and International Expertise in the United States, edited by David Wiley (Michigan State University Press, 2010) [PDF: 28 pages, 224KB]
- “Integrating the Social Sciences: Theoretical Knowledge, Methodological Tools, and Practical Action” (with Diana Rhoten), pp. 103-118 in R. Frodeman and B. Holbrook, eds., Oxford Handbook of Interdisciplinarity (Oxford: Oxford University Press).
- “Cosmopolitanism and Nationalism,”in Globalization and the State, edited by Willem Schinkel (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009). [PDF: 35 pages, 203KB]
- “Cosmopolitan Europe and European Studies,” in the Sage Handbook of European Studies, edited by Chris Rumford (Sage Publications, 2009). [PDF: 18 pages, 424KB]
- “The Imperative to Reduce Suffering: Charity, Progress, and Emergencies in the Field of Humanitarian Action,” in Humanitarianism in Question: Power, Politics, Ethics, edited by Thomas G. Weiss and Michael Barnett. (Cornell University Press, 2008).
- “Culture and Social Transformation,” in Transformations: Risk, Crisis, Adaptation, edited by Viadimir I. Ionesov (SAMARA, 2008). [PDF: 5 pages, 220KB. Russian/English]
- “Social Solidarity as a Problem for Cosmopolitan Liberalism,” in Identities, Affiliations, and Allegiances, edited by S. Benhabib, I. Shapiro, and D. Petranovich (Cambridge University Press, 2007).
- “Nationalism Matters,” in Nationalism in the New World, edited by Don Doyle and Marco Pamplona (University Press of Georgia, 2006).
- “My Back Pages,” in A Disobedient Generation: ’68ers and the Transformation of Social Theory, edited by A. Sica and S. Turner (University of Chicago Press, 2005).
- “Public Discourse and Political Experience: T. J. Wooler and Transformations of the Public Sphere in Early 19th Century Britain,” in Spheres of Influence: Intellectual and Cultural Publics from Shakespeare to Habermas, edited by A. Benchimol and W. Maley (Peter Lang Publishing, 2004).
- “Foreword,” in The Idea of Nationalism, by Hans Kohn (Transaction Publishers, 2004).
- “Les transformations institutionnelles des sciences sociales américaines,” in Pour une histoire des sciences socials: Hommage à Pierre Bourdieu, edited by Johan Heilbron, Remi Lenoir and Gisèle Sapiro (Fayard, 2004).
- “Is It Time to Be Postnational?” in Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Minority Rights, edited by Stephen May, Tariq Modood and Judith Squires (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
NOTE: A version of this was reprinted in Hégémonie et Civilisation de la Peur, ed. Candido Mendes. - “Information Technology and the International Public Sphere,” in Shaping the Network Society: The New Role of Civil Society in Cyberspace, edited by Douglas Schuler and Peter Day (MIT Press, 2003).
- “The Democratic Integration of Europe: Interests, Identity, and the Public Sphere,” in Europe without Borders: Re-Mapping Territory, Citizenship and Identity in a Transnational Age, edited by M. Berezin and M. Schain (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003).
- “Afterword: Why Historical Sociology?” in Handbook of Historical Sociology, edited by Gerard Delanty and Engin Isin (Sage Publications, 2003).
