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      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        October 2021

        Political History of the 19th century

        by Nicolas Delalande, Blaise Truong-Loï

        It would be wrong to consider the 19th century as distant or over. In many aspects, such as the intense politicization of European societies, the diversity of mobilization and protest practices, ideological and cultural inventiveness, and critical reflection on modernity and progress, this period is a laboratory rich in experience and lessons. Restoring the great political dynamics and tensions that run through it allows us not only to better understand the forms of historical change, but also to find one's bearings in an uncertain present. By placing the imperial expansion of Europe in the context of the globalization of the time and its interactions with America, Africa and Asia, Nicolas Delalande and Blaise Truong-Loï propose a history of the 19th century that is neither homogeneous nor self-centered, but profoundly renewed by the contributions of the most recent research in history and social sciences.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        March 2020

        Land, Power and Conflict - 2nd edition

        An Agro-History of the World

        by Pierre Blanc

        The land provides resources and confers power on those who appropriate them. Our societies have constantly fought to control these resources, through conquests, civil wars, authoritarianisms, etc. How many bloody passages of political history have played out against a backdrop of contested land distribution? How many countries have expressed their desire for domination and security through territorial control? How many peoples have seen their land stolen, and with it their dreams of recognition?

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        May 2019

        White Lead

        History of a Legal Poison

        by Judith Rainhorn

        There is not a single area of everyday life that is free from suspected or confirmed poisons - asbestos, pesticides, phlalates, etc.- carcinogens or endocrine disruptors. To understand the reasons for our collective acceptance of this situation, this book investigates the history of white lead and the social, industrial, scientific and political rationales that have imposed their rhythms and requirements, making it – for centuries - a legal poison.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        January 2021

        Controversies: a Guide

        by FORCCAST, Clémence Seurat, Thomas Tari

        In response to the environmental and health issues we are facing, and the unprecedented frequency of technological innovation, experts clash, contradict each other, or admit they have no answers. Controversies erupt much more frequently than new knowledge can be produced. In this age of uncertainty, when decision-making must often come before knowledge, we have to come up with new ways of thinking and acting together. Mapping controversies provides a framework for this. This pedagogical practice, fundamental in the social sciences, teaches us to examine the world without ever separating science, techniques, and society. It teaches us to take into account all perspectives and the context in which they are expressed, to conduct a close analysis of the ecosystem in which an object emerges, an invention or a phenomenon. To find our way through uncertainty, we must first immerse ourselves in complexity. This book shows us how, by relying on examples of contemporary controversies carefully chosen for their diversity and the wealth of their teaching.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        February 2021

        European Diplomacy

        19th-21st centuries

        by Laurence Badel

        European diplomacies are characterised by widely varied practices, whether in training staff, the place of women, culture, the negotiating language they use, or in the way they construct networks and build identities. Diplomacy in Europe, which this book provides a unique history of, is firstly that of the cohabitation between small, medium, and large states, combining diplomacy of power, of trade, and of values. It is also a history of forms of cooperation that, from multinational empires to nation-states, are reconfigured into a regional framework, while coming up against the practices of other spheres. The profound contemporary transformation of diplomacy as a profession must be interpreted in light of these traditions, exposed to the increased complexity of missions, and the emergence of para-diplomatic actors. Practices specific to the European Union are slowly being put into place, yet the power relations between European states and the eminently political nature of their cultural and economic exchanges persist.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        January 2021

        A Sociologist at the European Commission

        by Frédéric Mérand

        For four years, between 2015 and 2019, Frédéric Mérand went behind the wings at Berlaymont, the seat of the European Commission in Brussels, in order to observe and understand how Europe is really "made". Taking an ethnographic approach, he slipped into the team led by Pierre Moscovici, then European Commissioner for economic affairs under President Hollande, and later President Macron. Mérand shared offices with the men and women responsible for euro-zone policy, followed them through the corridors of their building in Brussels, sat with them at the canteen, and attended their meetings around the world. He questioned them on their strategies and methods, and their navigation between partisan struggles and diplomatic games. He listened to their fears and surprises, their hopes and disappointment during the various storms they weathered, from the Greek financial crisis, to tax evasion scandals, and the rise of the populist threat in Italy. This book provides the unique perspective of a North-American sociologist on our European and national practices, and on a European Commission that is clearly more political than it is technocratic.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        September 2021

        Atlas of the Anthropocene - 2nd edition

        by François Gemenne, Aleksandar Rankovic, Atelier de cartographie de Sciences Po

        Climate change, erosion of biodiversity, demographic evolution, urbanization, atmospheric pollution, soil degradation, natural catastrophes, industrial accidents, public health crises, social movements, international summits… This is the first atlas to bring together all data on our era's ecological crisis. A clear-eyed and unremitting assessment of the current state of affairs and a call to action.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        October 2020

        Atlas of the Urban Worlds

        by Éric Verdeil, Atelier de cartographie de Sciences Po

        Today, seventy percent of the world’s population live in cities. What are the realities behind this acceleration of urban densification? Gigantic megalopolises are developing, rural spaces are disappearing, buildings are spreading out and reaching up at the same time, new forms of segregation and inequality are appearing, etc. A clear sign of the beginning of the Anthropocene, urban densification is warming the planet, destroying biodiversity, and increasing our vulnerability to climate change.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        March 2019

        Digital Culture

        by Dominique Cardon

        This book provides the key to understanding what the digital revolution has done to our societies and what we do with digital technology. The arrival of the digital era in our societies should be compared to the invention of the printing press rather than to the great technological advancements of the industrial Revolutions, because the digital revolution is above all a cognitive one. It has inserted knowledge and information into every aspect of our lives.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        October 2020

        Feminist Economy - Why economics needs feminism and vice versa

        Why economics needs feminism and vice versa

        by Hélène Périvier

        Economics as a discipline was conceived by men in the interests of a society run by men. It is also the social science with the fewest women; barely a quarter of economists are women. This book lifts the veil on the apparent neutrality economic concepts and analyses. In so doing, it sheds light on the foundations of a social organization based on the patriarchal model focused on Mr. Breadwinner, while Ms. Housewife has become Ms. Paidappitance.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        May 2019

        The Tragedy of Growth

        A way out of the impasse

        by Gilbert Rist

        We all understand that infinite growth in a finite world is impossible, yet we act as if that were not true. We are collectively afflicted with cognitive dissonance – to preserve our mental health we refuse to consider embarrassing truths, hoping that all will turn out well … In reality, we know the way out of this impasse. To heal us of our addiction to growth, we must restore the notion of common goods, rehabilitate reciprocity, put an end to debt, and re-engage a dialogue with nature.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        March 2019

        The Nuremberg Moment

        The International Trial, the Lawyers and the Question of Race

        by Guillaume Mouralis

        This book provides a new reading of the Nuremberg trial based on a study of the lawyers who laid its foundations and guided the debates in the USA. It reveals the cluster of professional, social and cultural constraints that weighed heavily on this experimental moment. It also questions the legacy of Nuremberg during the Afro-American civil rights movement or in the anti-Vietnam war movement, and how these militant appropriations have influenced the emergence of an international legal framework

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        October 2018

        The Behaviorist Bias

        by Henri Bergeron, Sophie Dubuisson-Quellier, Patrick Castel, Jeanne Lazarus, Étienne Nouguez, Olivier Pilmis

        "Nudges" toward good behavior use individuals' cognitive bias to modify their behavior without them needing to think, or even understand the stakes. Easy to implement and inexpensive, they have become the alpha and omega of resolving social problems, whether in terms of environment, health, finance or tax. We need a critical analysis of behavioral knowledge and its applications, in order to understand its success and explore its limitations.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        September 2020

        The Transformations of Forced Labor

        by Alessandro Stanziani

        From the philosophers of the Enlightenment, to the evolution of the law and the reality of working conditions, Stanziani’s global approach shows that the history of forced labor can only be understood through its relationship with free labor. These two spheres constantly overlap and interact to construct a single unfinished history, that of an ongoing struggle for emancipation.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        October 2020

        “And the Bulgarian Jews were saved…”

        by Nadège Ragaru

        Bulgaria was an exception; a state allied with the Reich that refused to deport its Jewish community. This image of Bulgaria during WWII has persisted until the present day, overlooking the fact that in the Yugoslavian and Greek territories occupied by this country between 1941 and 1945, almost all the Jews were rounded up, sent to Poland, and exterminated. Deeply original in its approach and in its style, this historical investigation is an exemplary reflection on the silences of the past.

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