
| Apostolis Papakostas, "Civilizing the Public Sphere. Distrust, Trust and Corruption". Houndsmills: Palgrave, 208 pp. |
| Axial Age Religious Commitment in Theoretical Perspective |
| Axial Detachment: Reflections on Bellah's "Conclusion" |
| Bellah, Joas and the Future of "The Elementary Forms" |
| Celine-Marie Pascale (ed.), "Social Inequality and the Politics of Representation". Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore, Washington DC: Sage, 2013, 368 pp. |
| David Knoke, "Economic Networks". Cambridge: Polity, 2012, 236 pp. |
| How To Practice Visual and Material Culture Studies? A Cultural Sociological Perspective |
| Introduction to the Symposium: Views on Ritual, Religion, and Human Evolution |
| Jeffrey D. Lewandowski and Gregory W. Streich (eds.), "Urban Social Capital. Civil Society and City Life". Farnham: Ashgate, 2012, 362 pp. |
| Jonathan Hearn, "Theorizing power". Cambridge: Polity, 2012, xii + 251 pp. |
| Manuel Castells, "Networks of Outrage and Hope. Social Movements in the Internet Age". Cambridge: Polity Press, 2012, 200 pp. |
| The Problem of "Unmasking" in "Ideology and Utopia": Karl Mannheim, Karl Jaspers and Hannah Arendt |
| The Promise and Contradictions of Axiality |
| Reflexivity, Play, Ritual, and the Axial Age |
| Ronald S. Burt, "Neighbor Networks. Competitive Advantage Local and Personal". New York: Oxford University Press, 2010, xx + 389 pp. |
| Vulnerable Gods and Mutual Learning between Religion and Secularism |
| Alexandra George, "Constructing Intellectual Property". New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012, 405 pp. |
| Andrea Mubi Brighenti, "Visibility in Social Theory and Social Research". New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010, 214 pp. |
| Ann Nielsen, Julia Brannen and Suzan Lewis (eds.), "Transitions to parenthood in Europe. A comparative life course perspective". Bristol: University of Bristol, The Policy Press, 2012, 166 pp. |
| Appreciating Robert Bellah's Life Project |
| Beauty, Intelligence and Height: the Black Holes of Sociology |
| Boris Nieswand, "Theorising Transnational Migration. The Status Paradox of Migration". London: Routledge, 2011, 199 pp. |
| Comment on Simone Sarti, 'A Different Perspective to Investigate Social Inequalities: the Relationship between Height and Education in Italy' |
| A Different Approach to Investigating Social Inequalities. The Relationship Between Height and Education in Italy |
| Economic Circularities and Second-Order Observation: The Reality of Ratings |
| Embedded, scattered, confused minds: what do hyper-conductive markets impose on investors' social intelligence |
| Habits of the Heart |
| Height: an Enigmatic Form of Social Inequality |
| An Intellectual Life Well-Lived |
| Introduction to the Flashback: Words for Robert N. Bellah (1927-2013) |
| Joel Isaac, "Working Knowledge. Making the Human Sciences from Parsons to Kuhn". Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012, 314 pp. |
| The Joy of a Serious Life |
| Observations on a Conversation: Reply to Commentary |
| Observing Finance as a Network of Observations |
| Remarks For a Memorial Remembrance of Robert Bellah |
| Robert Bellah (1927-2013) |
| Robert Goldman and Stephen Papson, "Landscapes of Capital: Representing Time, Space, and Globalization in Corporate Advertising". Malden, MA: Polity Press, 2011, 224 pp. |
| Ruth Simpson, Natasha Slutskaya, Patricia Lewis, Heather Höpfl, "Dirty work. Concept and identities". Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012, 274 pp. |
| A Short Essay in Memory of Robert N. Bellah (1927-2013) |
| Some Clarifications about the Use of the Relation between Height and Education as a Proxy for Social Inequalities: a Response to the Comments |
| Watching the Watchers: A Comment on Esposito's "Economic Circularities and Second-Order Observation: the Reality of Ratings" |
| Collective Action and Web 2.0. An Exploratory Network Analysis of Twitter Use During Campaigns |
| Comment on Elena Giomi and Fabrizio Tonello/1. The boundaries at stake: towards a structural understanding of femicide as moral panic |
| Comment on Elena Giomi and Fabrizio Tonello/2. Femicide and The Media. Is Moral Panic Always Delusive? |
| Comment on Elena Giomi and Fabrizio Tonello/3. "Moral Panic" or "Cultural Suasion?" |
| Comment on Elena Pavan/1. Considering Platforms as Actors |
| Comment on Elena Pavan/2. Connecting Collective Actions to Social Media: Comments on an Exploratory Empirical Exercise |
| Comment on Elena Pavan/3. Towards a Culture of Connective Active? |
| Comment on Elena Pavan/4. Relations, Connections and Political Action |
| Diego Rinallo, Linda Scott and Pauline Maclaran (eds.), "Consumption and Spirituality". London; New York: Routledge, 2013, xiv + 280 pp. |
| "Émile Durkheim: A Biography" by Marcel Fournier |
| Francesca Bettio, Janneke Plantenga and Mark Smith (eds.), "Gender and the European Labour Market". New York: Routledge, 2013, 248 pp. |
| Moral Panic: the Issue of Women and Crime in Italian Evening News |
| Moral Panic: The Issue of Women and Crime in Italian Evening News. A Reply to Comments |
| Pierre Fournier, "Travailler dans le Nucléaire. Enquête au cur d'un Site à Risques". Paris: Armand Colin, 2012, 232 pp. |
| Status Attainment as a Competitive Process. A Theoretical and Empirical Study on the Implications of Boudon's Status Attainment Model |
| Studying the Nexus between Collective Action Dynamics and the Web 2.0: A Continuous Learning Experience. A Reply to Comments |
| Susanne Witzgall, Gerlinde Vogl and Sven Kesserling (eds.), "New Mobilities Regimes in Art and Social Sciences". Farnham: Ashgate, 2013, 394 pp. |
| Thomas Medvetz, "Think Tanks in America. Chicago": University of Chicago Press, 2012, 324 pp. |