
| Globalizing Sociology, Turning South. Perspectival Realism and the Southern Standpoint |
| Comment on Julian Go/1 |
| Comment on Julian Go/2. Moving On |
| Comment on Julian Go/3. What are the Criteria for Truth in Globalized Sociology? A Critical Appraisal of Go's Southern Standpoint Approach |
| In Defense of the Southern Standpoint. A Friendly Response to Comments |
| Femicide in Italy. "Femminicidio," Moral Panic and Progressivist Discourse |
| Comment on Bandelli and Porcelli/1. Against Moral Panic, in Defence of Data |
| Comment on Bandelli and Porcelli/2. The Politics of Knowledge Production in the Field of Violence Against Women |
| Critical Sociology and Beyond. A Redescription of Representation of Femicide. A Response to Comments |
| Investigating Élites. Relationships, Spaces, Rituals. An Introduction |
| Family Offices and the Contemporary Infrastructures of Dynastic Wealth |
| Do Central Bankers' Biographies Matter? |
| Women in the Field of Power |
| Where is the Global Corporate Élite? A Large-scale Network Study of Local and Nonlocal Interlocking Directorates |
| The Resurgence of Élite Research: Promise and Prospects. A Comment on the Symposium |
| The Many Futures of Élites Research. A Comment on the Symposium |
| Mario Diani, "The Cement of Civil Society. Studying Networks in Localities." Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015, 268 pp. |
| Eszter Hargittai and Christian Sandvig (Eds.), "Digital Research Confidential: The Secrets of Studying Behavior Online." Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2015, 271 pp. |
| James J. Heckman, John R. Humphries and Tim Kautz (Eds.), "The Myth of Achievement Tests. The GED and the Role of Character in American Life." London and Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2014, 452 pp. |
| Elodie A. Roy, "Media, Materiality and Memory: Grounding the Groove." Abingdon: Ashgate, 2015, 234 pp. |
| Alan Warde, "The Practice of Eating." Cambridge: Polity Press, 2016, 220 pp. |