1st Edition

Relational Sociology A New Paradigm for the Social Sciences

By Pierpaolo Donati Copyright 2011
272 Pages
by Routledge

272 Pages 18 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

272 Pages 18 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

‘Simultaneous invention’ has become commonplace in the natural sciences, but is still virtually unknown within the sphere of social science. The convergence of two highly compatible versions of Critical Realism from two independent sources is a striking exception. Pierpaolo Donati’s Relational Sociology develops ‘upwards’ from sociology into a Realist meta-theory, unlike Roy Baskhar’s... Read more

Introduction: Prospects for a Relational Sociology  Chapter 1. The Relational Paradigm; its implications for the understanding and organization of Society  Chapter 2. Society as a Relation   Chapter 3. Critical Realism as viewed by Relational Sociology  Chapter 4. Observing and Thinking Relationally: the premises of the relational theory of society  Chapter 5. Social Change in the light of Relational Sociology  Chapter 6. Reflexivity after Modernity: From the viewpoint of Relational Sociology  Chapter 7. Doing Sociology in the Age of Globalisation

Biography

Pierpaolo Donati is Professor of Sociology at the University of Bologna (Italy). Past-President of the Italian Sociological Association, he is known as the founder of ‘relational sociology’ or the ‘relational theory of society’, an independently developed form of critical realism. He has published more than 600 works (see: Building a Relational Theory of Society: A Sociological Journey, in M. Deflem ed., Sociologists in a Global Age. Biographical Perspectives, Ashgate, Aldershot, 2007).

'Pierpaolo Donati’s book is an ambitious attempt to formulate a social theory appropriate to our age, based on the primacy of what he terms social relations which, for Donati, are crucial in upholding the distinctiveness of humanity. This book is a call to arms, sounding the alarm about the unwelcome effects of many social theories that threaten to drive the human out of the social or else submerge the human within the social and so drown out its distinctive individuality.'
-Barry Vaughn, National Economic and Social Council, in the Journal of Critical Realism, vol 11 iss 2 p.255-261