University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and ...



| |CURRICULUM VITAE |May, 2014 |

JEFFERY M. PAIGE

Education

1960-1964 A.B. summa cum laude, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts

1964-1968 Ph.D., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Positions Held

1982- Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

1993-1997 Director, Center For Research on Social Organization, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

1992-1993 Acting Director, Center for Research on Social Organization, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

1976-1982 Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

1968-1976 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley, California

1967-1968 Assistant Study Director, Institute for Social Research, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Language

Spanish

Honors and International Recognition

Fellow Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars 2012-2013

Nave Visiting Scholar, Latin American, Caribbean and Iberian Studies Center, University of Wisconsin (2010).

Invited Lecture Series “Workshop in Comparative Historical Sociology,” Tsinghua University, Beijing China (2001).

Visiting Scholar, International Development and Regional Planning Group,

Department of Urban Studies and Regional Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1998

Excellence in Research Award, University Michigan, College of Letters, Science and the Arts, 1997

Invited participant International Symposium "Technological Modernization, Social Change and the Coffee Crisis Technológica, Cambio Social y Crisis Cafeteras" Heredia, Costa Rica, July 13-16 1993.

Visiting Professor, Department of Sociology, and Research Associate, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Florida International University, Miami, Florida, September-December, 1992.

Faculty Fellow, Kellogg Institute of International Relations, Notre Dame University, September-December 1991

Visiting Lecturer, University of Central America José Simeón Cañas, San Salvador, El Salvador, February-May 1990.

Fulbright Advanced Research Fellowship in the Central American Republics Research Program. El Salvador and Costa Rica, February-August 1990.

Faculty Recognition Award, University of Michigan, 1990.

Invited International Observer, International Symposium on State, Autonomy, and Indian Rights sponsored by the Nicaraguan National Commission for Autonomy of the Atlantic Coast, Managua, Nicaragua, July 13-17, 1986.

Elected to Sociological Research Association, 1981.

Honorable Mention, Gordon Allport Intergroup Relations Prize, 1971.

Professional Activities

Member. Barrington Moore Award Committee. Comparative Historical Section, American Sociological Association 2005

Editorial Board, Latin American Research Review 1997- 2002

President, Political Economy of the World System Section of the American Sociological Association 1988-1989.

President Elect, Political Economy of the World System Section of the American Sociological Association, 1987-1988.

Council Member, Political Economy of the World System Section of the American Sociological Association, 1985-86.

Coordinator (Chair), Comisión 1: Historia Social y Política: Colonia y Siglo XIX. V Congreso de Historia de Colombia, Universidad de Quindio, Armenia, Colombia, July 15-19, 1985.

Associate Editor, Political Power and Social Theory, 1990-2005

Associate Editor, Journal of Conflict Resolution, 1979-1981.

Associate Editor, American Sociological Review, January 1975-December 1977.

Contributing Editor, American Journal of Sociology, October 1974-October 1976.

Associate Editor, Contemporary Sociology, January 1975-December 1977.

Member, Latin American Studies Association 1986-present.

Member, International Sociological Association, 1982-present.

Member, American Sociological Association, 1968-present.

Consultant, National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, 1968.

Teaching

Michigan Student Assembly. Honors List of Outstanding Teachers. Numerous occasions, 1984—.

Excellence in Education Award, University of Michigan, College of Letters, Science and the Arts, 1991.

Grants and Awards

“Rethinking Revolution in Evo Morales Bolivia,” $13,324 Office of Vice President of Research, University of Michigan, June 30, 2009-December 30, 2011.

"Coffee and Power in Central America," $10,000. Office of the Vice President for Research, University of Michigan September-December 1992.

"Coffee and Politics in Central America: The Coffee Elites of El Salvador, Costa Rica and Nicaragua." $59,000, National Science Foundation Grant, 1990-1991.

"Comparative Study of Social Transformations," $307,000, Presidential Initiatives Fund (Kellogg Foundation), April 1987-April 1990. Member, Drafting Committee with William Sewell, Project Director, Terry McDonald and Sherry Ortner.

Books

Coffee and Power: Revolution and the Rise of Democracy in Central America. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1997. Pp. xv +432.

Finalist Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Award American

Sociological Association 1999

Finalist Lionel Gelber Award for Best Book in International Relations. 1997

Distinguished Book Award. Political Economy of the World-System Section of the American Sociological Association 1998

Honorable Mention Barrington Moore Award of the Comparative Historical Section of the American Sociological Association 1998.

Subject of Author Meets Critics Panel of the Latin American Studies Association, March, 2000.

Reviewed in the New York Times Book Review, April 22, 1997

(with Karen Ericksen) The Politics of Reproductive Ritual. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1981. Pp. ix + 380.

Agrarian Revolution: Social Movements and Export Agriculture in the Underdeveloped World. New York: The Free Press, 1975. Pp. xiv + 435.

Co-winner of the 1976 Sorokin Award of the American Sociological Association.

Articles and Book Chapters

“India and the Myth of the Anti-Developmental State,” Symposium Locked in Place: State Building and Late Industrialization in India by Vivek Chibber (Princeton University Press 2003) Comparative and Historical Sociology 18 (Spring 2007):2-4.

“Revolution in Vietnam, Cuba, and Nicaragua: Cultural Contradictions of Peripheral Capitalism in the Age of Globalization,” Proceedings of the Seminar on the Consequences of the Changing World Economy for Class Relations, Ideology, and Culture, Ho Chi Minh National Political Academy, Hanoi (Jan 9-11 2006):32-34.

“Coffee, Revolution, and Democracy in Central America,” pp. 333-352 in Nature, Raw Materials and Political Economy. Edited by Paul Ciccantell, Gay Seidman, and David Smith. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2005

“Finding the Revolutionary in the Revolution: Social Science Concepts and the Future of Revolution,” pp. 19-29 in The Future of Revolution in the Context of Globalization. Edited by John Foran (London: Zed Press, 2003)

“Globalization and Comparative Historical Research: A Reply to Robertson,” Newsletter of the ASA Comparative and Historical Sociology Section. (Summer 2000):3-4.

"Contingency, Comparison and Conditional Theory in Macro-Social Inquiry,” American Journal of Sociology (November 1999):781-800.

"Agrarian Policy and The Agrarian Bourgeoisie in Revolutionary Nicaragua," pp. 65-90 in Globalization, Urbanization and the State: Selected Studies on Contemporary Latin America. Edited by Sattya R. Pattnayak. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1996.

Spanish Translation. "La política agraria y la burgesía agraria en la Nicaragua revolucionaria," Revista de Historia 30 (julio-diciembre 1994):217-229.

"Revolution and Agrarian Reform in El Salvador: Comment on Seligson and Diskin," Latin American Research Review, 31, no. 2 (1996):127-139.

"Coffee and Power in El Salvador," Latin American Research Review, 28, no. 3 (1993):7-40.

"The Social Origins of Dictatorship, Democracy and Socialist Revolution in Central America." Journal of Developing Societies, 6 (Spring 1990):37-42.

"Revolution and the Agrarian Bourgeoisie in Nicaragua." pp. 99-128 in Revolution and the World-System, Studies in the Political Economy of the World System 12. Edited by Terry Boswell. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1989.

"Coffee and Politics in Central America." pp. 141-19 in Crises in the Caribbean Basin: Meaning and Prospects, Political Economy of the World System Annuals 9. Edited by Richard Tardanico. Beverly Hills, Ca.: Sage, 1987.

"Cotton and Revolution in Nicaragua." pp. 91-114 in States versus Markets in the World System, Political Economy of the World System Annuals 8. Edited by Peter Evans, Dietrich Rueschemeyer, and Evelyne Huber Stephens. Beverly Hills, Ca.: Sage, 1985.

"Social Theory and Peasant Revolution in Vietnam and Guatemala," Theory and Society, 12 (November 1983):699-737.

Spanish translation published as "Vietnam y Guatemala." Polémica, 10-11 July-October 1983):62-82.

Reprinted in Global Crises and Social Movements. Edited by Edmund Burke III. Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1988.

"Kinship and Polity in Stateless Societies," American Journal of Sociology 80 (September 1974):301-320.

(with Karen E. Paige) "The Politics of Birth Practices: A Strategic Analysis." American Sociological Review 38 (December 1973):663-677.

"Reply to Gordon." American Sociological Review, 37 (June 1972):380.

"Political Orientation and Riot Participation," American Sociological Review, 36 (October 1971):810-819.

Reprinted in Social Conflict: Readings in Rule Structures and Conflict Relationships. Edited by Philip J. Brickman. Lexington, Mass.: D. C. Heath, 1974.

"Changing Patterns of Anti-White Attitudes Among Blacks." Journal of Social Issues, 26 (Autumn 1970):69-86.

Honorable Mention, Gordon Allport Intergroup Relations Prize, 1971.

"Inequality and Insurgency in Vietnam: A Reanalysis." World Politics, 23 (October 1970):24-37.

(with Nathan Caplan) "A Study of Ghetto Rioters." Scientific American, 219 (August 1968):15-19.

Reprinted in American Urban History. Edited by Alexander B. Callow, Jr. New York: Oxford University Press, 1969.

(with Herbert Simon) "Cognitive Processes in Solving Algebra Word Problems," pp. 51-119 in Problem Solving. Edited by Benjamin Kleinmuntz. New York: Wiley, 1966.

Reprinted in Models of Thought. Authored and Edited by Herbert A. Simon. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1979.

"Letters from Jenny: An Approach to the Clinical Analysis of Personality Structure by Computer." pp. 431-451 in The General Inquirer. Edited by Philip J. Stone, Dexter C. Dunphy, Marshall S. Smith and Daniel M. Olgilvie. Cambridge: M.I.T. Press, 1966.

Reviews

In Contemporary Sociology, Social Forces, American Journal of Sociology, American Political Science Review

Work in Progress

Abstract Subjects: “Class,” “Race,” “Gender” and Modernity”

The Discourse of Indigenous Revolution in the Andes.

Invited Lectures and Papers (last twenty years)

“The Discourse of Indigenous Revolution in the Andes,” invited lectures at

Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, May 20, 2013.

Foreign Service Institute, United States Department of State, March 8, 2013.

Comments on Panel: Power to Whom? “Power to the People” Symposium, International Studies Program, University of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky, March 30, 2012.

“Rethinking Revolution in Evo Morales’s Bolivia, paper presented at:

Workshop in Comparative Politics, George Washington University, October 19, 2012

The Comparative Historical Section of the American Sociological Association Conference Comparing Past and Present. August 12, 2009.

“Rethinking Revolution in Evo Morales’s Bolivia,” invited lecture at

Latin American, Caribbean and Iberian Studies Program, University of Wisconsin, March 23, 2010.

Global Studies Program, University of Tennessee, March 27, 2009.

Department of Sociology, Princeton University. December 11, 2008

“Revolution, Pachakuti and the Social Transformation of 21st Century Latin America,”

paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association

Boston, Mass., August 2008.

“The Two Seidman’s Problem,” Comments on Gay Seidman’s Beyond the Boycott, Annual Conference of the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics, San José, Costa Rica, July, 2008.

“India and the Myth of the Anti-Developmental State: Comments on Vivek Chibber’s Locked In Place,” Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Montreal Canada, August, 2006

“Revolution in Vietnam, Cuba and Nicaragua: Cultural Contradictions of Peripheral Capitalism in the Age of Globalization.” Paper presented at the Conference on Consequences of the Changing World Economy for Class Relations, Ideology, and Culture. Hanoi, Vietnam. January 9-11, 2006.

“Old Wine in New Bottles: Old, New and Newer Social Movements.” Paper Presented at “Activist Scholarship: Making Social Movement Theory Matter,” Mini-Conference Sponsored by the Social Movement Scholars Network, University of Michigan, May 8, 2004.

“Coffee, Revolution and Democracy in Central American,” Paper presented at the Conference Nature, Raw Materials and Political Economy Celebrating Stephen Bunker’s Contributions to Sociology. Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison Wisconsin, November 3, 2003.

“Abstract Subjects: “Class,” “Race,” “Gender,” and Modernity” paper presented at:

Annual Conference of the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics, Aix en Provence, June 27, 2003.

Yale University Center for Comparative Research, April 3, 2003.

Tshinghua University, Beijing, China, June 19, 2001.

University of California San Diego, Department of Sociology January 28, 2000.

Marxism 2000, Fourth Annual Conference on Rethinking Marxism. Amherst, Ma. September 21, 2000

Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Section on Race, Gender and Class, Washington D.C. August, 2000.

The Comparative Social Analysis Workshop, Department of Sociology, University of California Los Angeles, January 27, 2000.

“Finding the Revolutionary in the Revolution: Social Science Concepts and the Future of Revolution” Paper Presented at “The Future of Revolution in the Context of Globalization,” Santa Barbara, California, January 24-28, 2001

Coffee and Power and the Intersection of Revolution and Democratization in Central America, Commentary at the panel “The Intersection of Revolution and Democratization in Central America: A Roundtable on Jeff Paige’s “Coffee and Power.” Latin American Studies Association Miami, Florida, March 17, 2000.

"Contingency, Comparison and Conditional Theory in Macro-Social Inquiry," paper presented at International Development and Regional Planning Group, Department of Urban Studies and Regional Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, October 14, 1998.

"The Coffee Elite and the Transition to Democracy in Central America" paper delivered at the following.

Occidental College, September 17, 1999

Emory University, Department of Sociology March 23, 1999.

Dartmouth College, Department of Sociology, October 16, 1998.

Harvard University, Department of Sociology, October 13, 1998.

Conference Coffee Production and Economic Development, c 1750-c. 1960 Oxford, 10-12 September 1998.

Keynote Address for Conference "Violence and the Environment" Insitute of International Studies, University of California Berkeley, September 24, 1998

"Conjuncture, Comparison and Cause: History and Theory in Macrosocial Inquiry

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, May 13, 1998

Brown University, Dec. 9, 1997

"Born on the Fourth of July: The Social Origins of Whiteness in America" Invited Lecture:

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, February 9, 1998

Cornell University, September 26, 1997

University of Wisconsin, Dec. 1, 1997

"Democracy and Revolution in Central America," Invited Lecture,

Keynote Address, Conference on Violence and the Environment, University of California Berkeley, September 24, 1998.

Dartmouth University October 15, 1998

Harvard University, October 13, 1998

Brown University, Dec. 9, 1997

University of Wisconsin, Dec. 1, 1997

Cornell University, September 26, 1997

Northwestern University, May 5, 1997

New School for Social Research March, 13, 1997

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, October 1, 1996

University of Western Ontario, April 19, 1996

"Genocide, Politicide and Crimes Against Humanity: Theoretical Distinctions and Moral Arguments in the study of Mass Murder," Comments at the Session on "Difficulties of Conceptualization and Sensitivity in Identifying, Catregorizing, and Labeling Genocidal Events," Annual Meeting of the Midwest Sociological Society, Chicago IL, April 6, 1996

"The World-System Crisis of the 1930s in El Salvador and Costa Rica," Paper presented at the XIX Annual Conference of the Political Economy of the World-system Section of the American Sociological Association. Coral Gables, Florida, April 22, 1995.

"Intimacy, Identity and Dignity: Human Needs and the Primacy of Production in Marxist Social Thought," Paper presented at the 18th Annual Conference of the Political Economy of the World-System Section of the American Sociological Association. Irvine, CA. April 9, 1994.

"History and Memory in El Salvador: Elite Ideology and the Insurrection and Massacre of 1932," paper delivered at the Annual Meetrings of the Latin American Studies Association, Atlanta, GA., March 11, 1994.

"La política agraria y la burgesía agraria en la Nicaragua revolucionaria," paper presented at the International Symposium "Modernización Tecnológica, Cambio Social y Crisis Cafeteras, Heredia, Costa Rica, July 16, 1993.

"Agrarian Policy and the Agrarian Bourgoisie," paper delivered at the Villanova Sequicentennial Conference "Church State and Society in Latin America: Socio-Political and Economic Restructuing since 1960," Villanova, Pa. March 18-19, 1993. (Keynote Address)

"The Empire Strikes Back: Reflections on Marxism After the Collapse of State Socialism," Remarks at Departmental Symposium on Sociological Theory After the Collapse of the Soviet Union, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, March 9, 1993.

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