Special Issue – Law and (De)Civilization: Process-Sociological Perspectives on Law in Social Change. (Marta Bucholc, Hugo Canihac, Florence Delmotte & Robert van Krieken)
Chris Thornhill: Constitutional Law and Cultures of Violence. [abstract]
Robert van Krieken: Welfare or Cultural Genocide? Law, Civilization, Decivilization, and the Removal of Indigenous Children in Australia. [abstract]
Aurélie Lacassagne: A Legal Decivilizing Process: Canada’s Indigenous Policies and Legislation. [abstract]
Alon Helled: Sovereignty and (De)Civilizing Processes in the Israeli Habitus between Revolution and Counterrevolution: A Three-Act Story? [abstract]
Marta Bucholc: Legal Governance of Abortion: Interdependencies and Centrifugal Forces in the Global Figuration of Human Rights. [abstract]
Michal Kaczmarczyk: Civil(-izing) Disobedience: Four Traditions of Examined Contestation. [abstract]
Christophe Granger: Rule Matters: On Sport, Violence, and the Law. [abstract]
Hugo Canihac: The Law against the Rule? Ambivalence, Ambiguity, and the Historical Sociology of European Legal Integration. [abstract]
Christophe Majastre: Constituent Politics and the Force of Law. Assessing the Role of Constitutional Discourse in the Debate around EU Legitimacy from a Historical Sociology Perspective. [abstract]
Lola Avril: “Civilizing” Professionals? Competition Lawyers in the European Integration Process. [abstract]
Christopher R. Hill & Saima Nakuti Ashipala: “Follow the Yellowcake Road”: Historical Geographies of Namibian Uranium from the Rössing Mine. [abstract]
Michiel Bron: The Uranium Club: Big Oil’s Involvement in Uranium Mining and the Formation of an Infamous Uranium Cartel. [abstract]
Matteo Gerlini: Nuclear Settlers in a European Land? The Making of Centre Commune de Recherche in Ispra. [abstract]
Alicia Gutting & Per Högselius: Nuclearized River Basins: Conflict and Cooperation along the Rhine, Danube, and Elbe. [abstract]
Christian Götter: Accepted to Cool: Conflicts about Cooling Technologies for Riverside Nuclear Power Plants. [abstract]
Louis Fagon: Who Is Affected? Defining Nuclear Territories and Their Borders: A Historical Perspective on the Nuclearization of the Rhône River from the 1970s to the 1990s. [abstract]
Jan-Henrik Meyer: Nuclear Power and Geography: How the European Communities Failed to Regulate the Siting of Nuclear Installations at Borders in the 1970s and 1980s. [abstract]
Melanie Mbah & Sophie Kuppler: Governing Nuclear Waste in the Long Term: On the Role of Place. [abstract]
Teva Meyer: Bordering Nuclearity: Very Low-level Radioactive Wastes’ Clearance and the Production of Spatial Nuclearities in Germany. [abstract]
Special Issue– Doing Global Sociology: Qualitative Methods and Biographical Becoming after the Postcolonial Critique. (Johannes Becker & Marian Burchardt)
Gérard Amougou: Subjectivization Analysed by the Biography of the Subject-Entrepreneur in a Precarious Environment. [abstract]
Martín Hernán Di Marco: “Stop it with Mommy and Daddy!” Analyzing How Accounts of People in Prison Change with Their Trajectory in Argentinean Penal Institutions. [abstract]
Daniel Bultmann: A Global and Diachronic Approach to the Study of Social Fields. [abstract]
Swetlana Torno: Life-Course Management and Social Security in Later Life: Women’s Biographical Practices Spanning Generations and Historical Contexts in Tajikistan. [abstract]
Marian Burchardt & Johannes Becker: Subjects of God? Rethinking Religious Agency, Biography, and Masculinity from the Global South. [abstract]
Hannah Schilling: Navigating Uncertainty: Young Workers and Precarity in Berlin and Abidjan. [abstract]
Arne Worm: Migrantized Biographies. Reconstructing Life-Stories and Life-Histories as a Reflexive Approach in Migration Research. [abstract]
Joschka Philipps: Whose Uncertainties? Dealing with Multiple Meanings in a Transnational Biography. [abstract]
Michael P. K. Okyerefo: The Autobiographical Self as an Object for Sociological Enquiry. [abstract]
Eva Bahl & Yvonne Berger: Processes of South-South Migration in Their Historical Context: Biographical Case Studies from Brazil and China. [abstract]
Nkululeko Nkomo & Sibusiso Nkomo: Melancholy as Witness and Active Black Citizenry in the Writing of A.S. Vil-Nkomo. [abstract]
Gaku Oshima: Societal Envisioning of Biographical AIDS Activism among Gay People Living with HIV in Japan. [abstract]
Fabio Santos: Mind the Archival Gap: Critical Fabulation as Decolonial Method. [abstract]
Suppl. 34 - Arbeit, Bevölkerung, Alter und Migration
Supplement – Arbeit, Bevölkerung, Alter und Migration - historisch und im interkulturellen Vergleich. Eine persönliche Retrospektive. (ed. Josef Ehmer)
Josef Ehmer: Rote Fahnen – Blauer Montag. Soziale Bedingungen von Aktions- und Organisationsformen der frühen Wiener Arbeiterbewegung [1979]. [abstract]
Josef Ehmer: Frauenarbeit und Arbeiterfamilie in Wien. Vom Vormärz bis 1934 [1981]. [abstract]
Josef Ehmer: Lohnarbeit und Lebenszyklus im Kaiserreich [1988]. [abstract]
Josef Ehmer: Heiratsverhalten und sozialökonomische Strukturen: England und Mitteleuropa im Vergleich [1996]. [abstract]
Josef Ehmer: Worlds of Mobility: Migration Patterns of Viennese Artisans in the Eighteenth Century [1997]. [abstract]
Josef Ehmer: „Traditionelle” Handwerker und ihre Zünfte als starke Akteure in der neuzeitlichen Expansion von Warenmärkten und Arbeitsmärkten: Forschungsansätze und Resultate [1998]. [abstract]