@ProSocAcademics Fantastic. Thanks! I make a similar argument about academia as unique in the system of professions in this article: https://t.co/6K0fcqL8lm
@OxSoc @p_surridge @patricksturg I guess so. Disciplinary sociology is fragmented and non-cumulative, but I'd say that was due to longer history than Pomo... https://t.co/6K0fcqL8lm
@Des_Fitzgerald I've been trying to figure out why this is the case for a decade. Was obvious to me, but few others even see a problem. Anyway, this is what I got... https://t.co/6K0fcqL8lm
@spy_historian Argument also comes up less polemically in this openaccess article: https://t.co/6K0fcqL8lm
RT @EricRoyalLybeck: And, for anyone interested in the history of why sociology is positioned as it is within and beyond the academy, check…
RT @EricRoyalLybeck: And, for anyone interested in the history of why sociology is positioned as it is within and beyond the academy, check…
And, for anyone interested in the history of why sociology is positioned as it is within and beyond the academy, check out my article 'Ajurisdiction' in Theory & Society: https://t.co/6K0fcqL8lm
@mattyglesias @epopppp This paper combines these issues into one, drawing on @epopppp's analysis of economics' influence on policy. History was lawyers' (re)taking over policy mid-20th century, which enabled the restriction of values/norms to economics'
Looking good @EricRoyalLybeck! https://t.co/QMmEzZ5voB
Thrilled to see my article, 'Ajurisdiction' available open-access in 'Theory & Society'. https://t.co/6K0fcqL8lm