About this book series

In various disciplines such as archeology, psychology, psychoanalysis, international relations, and philosophy, we have seen the emergence of relational approaches or theories. This series, founded by François Dépelteau, seeks to further develop relational sociology through the publication of diverse theoretical and empirical research—including that which is critical of the relational approach. In this respect, the goal of the series is to explore the advantages and limits of relational sociology. The series welcomes contributions related to various thinkers, theories, and methods clearly associated with relational sociology (such as Bourdieu, critical realism, Deleuze, Dewey, Elias, Latour, Luhmann, Mead, network analysis, symbolic interactionism, Tarde, and Tilly). Multidisciplinary studies which are relevant to relational sociology are also welcome, as well as research on various empirical topics (such as education, family, music, health, social inequalities, international relations, feminism, ethnicity, environmental issues, politics, culture, violence, social movements, and terrorism). Relational sociology—and more specifically, this series—will contribute to change and support contemporary sociology by discussing fundamental principles and issues within a relational framework.

Electronic ISSN
2946-4129
Print ISSN
2946-4110
Series Editor
  • R.D. Deshpande,
  • Peeter Selg

Book titles in this series

  1. Making Bodies

    Sexed and Gendered Bodies as Social Institutions

    Authors:
    • Irene Rafanell
    • Copyright: 2023

    Available Renditions

    • Hard cover
    • eBook
  2. The Invisible Order

    A Relational Approach to Social Institutions

    Authors:
    • Olli Herranen
    • Copyright: 2022

    Available Renditions

    • Hard cover
    • Soft cover
    • eBook