
| When Changing Welfare States and the Eurocrisis Meet |
| Comment on Anton Hemerijck/1. Retrenchment Policies and the deficit of Social Europe |
| Comment on Anton Hemerijck/2. Social Investment, a Problematic Concept with an Ambiguous Past |
| Comment on Anton Hemerijck/3. More Europe, Not Less: Reversing the Long, Slow Decline of the European Social Model |
| Comment on Anton Hemerijck/4. Making Social Investment Work |
| Comment on Anton Hemerijck/5. The Quest for Social Investment Policies |
| Retrenchment, Redistribution, Capacitating Welfare Provision, and Institutional Coherence After The Eurozone's Austerity Reflex |
| The Poet of Autonomy: Antonio Negri as a Social Theorist |
| Presentation |
| Analytical Sociology and the Rest of Sociology |
| On Analytical Sociology |
| The Irreducibility of Cultural Structures |
| Can there Be Causal Effects on the Macro Level? |
| Analytical Sociology is a Research Strategy |
| Meso-Level Mechanisms and Micro-Level Foundation |
| Full and Sketched Micro-foundations. The Odd Resurgence of a Dubious Distinction |
| Analytical Sociology: Appreciation and Ambivalence |
| Analytical Sociology's Superfluous Revolution |
| The Whole and the Parts. Or: Is Analytical Sociology Analytical Enough about Sociology, and Itself? |
| Response to Commentators |
| Patrick Aspers, Orderly Fashion. A Sociology of Markets. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010, 237 pp |
| Pierpaolo Donati, Relational Sociology. A New Paradigm for the Social Sciences. London: Routledge, 2010, 272 pp. |
| Nathalie Heinich and Roberta Shapiro (eds.), De l'artification. Enquête sur le passage à l'art. Paris: Éditions EHESS, 2012, 334 pp. |
| Rick Helmes-Hayes, Measuring the Mosaic. An Intellectual Biography of John Porter. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2010, 588 pp. |
| Isaac Ariail Reed, Interpretation and Social Knowledge. On the Use of Theory in the Human Sciences, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011, 216 pp. |
| Monica W. Varsanyi (ed.), Taking Local Control. Immigration Policy Activism in U.S. Cities and States. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2010, 308 pp. |