137 Followers
139 Following
65 Posts
Author of "Above the Fray: The RC & the Making of the Humanitarian NGO Sector" & "Moral Minefields: How Sociologists Debate Good Science" @UChicagoPress @HarvardSoc

The Fall 2026 issue is the 50th anniversary of Social Science History. For this issue, the theme of “past and present” will be explored. Papers should address this theme in some way, either theoretically, empirically, substantively (or some combination of them).

200-word abstracts are due by April 2nd, 2024, and a final paper must be ready for review by January 15, 2025. Abstracts should be sent to [email protected].

Final proofs are submitted - the Handbook of the Sociology of Morality, vol. 2, is coming out in November!

I am so incredibly proud to have not one but two books at the University of Chicago Press booth here at ASA.

Above the Fray came out in 2020 just as COVID arrived, so no ASA then, but it means I get to hold both of them here in 2023.

Looking forward to the 2023 Comparative Historical Sociology Mini Conference -- Making Space: Thinking Against the Grain in Historical Sociology! Drexel University, August 17, 2023 - a day before #ASA2023. Pls register here if you're planning to come: bit.ly/chsmini2023

A surprise advance copy came in the mail today! Sam and I are so grateful to everyone at the University of Chicago Press - especially our editor Elizabeth Branch-Dyson - for making this happen.

Moral Minefields is available for preorder on the University of Chicago Press website, and should be coming out in September. Use discount code UCPNEW for a 30% discount here: https://cdcshoppingcart.uchicago.edu/Cart2/ChicagoBook?ISBN=9780226828169&PRESS=CHICAGO

Select Formats - Shopping Cart

Excited to get in the mail today my friend and colleague Till Hilmar’s new book, looking at Czech and East German workers’ grapples with post socialist economic shifts. Great to see this stellar research in print!

There is a 30% discount on preorders of Moral Minefields: How Sociologists Debate Good Science - use the discount code UCPNEW at checkout on the University of Chicago Press website. After discount the paperback is only $19.25!

https://cdcshoppingcart.uchicago.edu/Cart2/ChicagoBook?ISBN=9780226828169&PRESS=CHICAGO

Select Formats - Shopping Cart

Coming out in September with Sam Stabler! Details here: https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/M/bo202329632.html
Moral Minefields

An analysis of the effects of moral debates on sociological research. Few academic disciplines are as contentious as sociology. Sociologists routinely turn on their peers with fierce criticisms not only of their empirical rigor and theoretical clarity but of their character as well. Yet despite the controversy, scholars manage to engage in thorny debates without being censured. How?   In Moral Minefields, Shai M. Dromi and Samuel D. Stabler consider five recent controversial topics in sociology—race and genetics, secularization theory, methodological nationalism, the culture of poverty, and parenting practices—to reveal how moral debates affect the field. Sociologists, they show, tend to respond to moral criticism of scholarly work in one of three ways. While some accept and endorse the criticism, others work out new ways to address these topics that can transcend the criticism, while still others build on the debates to form new, more morally acceptable research.  Moral Minefields addresses one of the most prominent questions in contemporary sociological theory: how can sociology contribute to the development of a virtuous society? Rather than suggesting that sociologists adopt a clear paradigm that can guide their research toward neatly defined moral aims, Dromi and Stabler argue that sociologists already largely possess and employ the repertoires to address questions of moral virtue in their research. The conversation thus is moved away from attempts to theorize the moral goods sociologists should support and toward questions about how sociologists manage the plurality of moral positions that present themselves in their studies. Moral diversity within sociology, they show, fosters disciplinary progress.   

University of Chicago Press
Proofs are in!