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Sophie Dubuisson-Quellier works in economic sociology. She studies how economic behaviors are shaped by markets, social movements and governments.
She has been studying how market intermediation shapes consumers' conducts, the role of environmental mobilizations in the transformation of economic organizations (political consumption, companies-activists interactions), and the government of consumers' conducts by public policies (sustainable consumption and food policies). She is currently working on a political economic approach of abundance regimes.
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Sean Safford was previously an Assistant Professor of Organizations and Strategy at the University of Chicago’s Graduate School of Business, a Lecturer at the London School of Economics and Political Science and a Visiting Professor at the University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School.
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Emmanuel Lazega’s research contributes to the development of a neo-structural sociology that brings together organisational analysis and social network analysis to understand how collective action works.
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Olivier Pilmis’ current work proposes an economic sociology that draws on the sociologies of risk, of labour and professions, and of science and technology. It focuses on how individuals and organisations deal with uncertainty, by inquiring into the ways they anticipate general movements in the economy. Every economic crisis, from the Great Depression in the 1930s to the crisis brought on by the lockdown in 2020, by way of the Great Recession of 2008, underscores the impossibility of unravelling the mysteries of the economy’s future.