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About CSSO

The Center for the Study of Social Organization (CSSO) is devoted to fostering interest, training, and research that illuminates the structures and mechanisms through which collectivities of all kinds pursue their goals and coordinate their activities. In particular, we focus on the three major and interpenetrating forms of organization in modern societies – bureaucracy or formal organization; markets; and informal social networks. 

Within the Sociology Department, the Center serves as a meeting place for scholars working in three of the Department's central specialities: Economic Sociology, Organizational Sociology; and Social Net­work Analysis.  CSSO aims to serve as a resource for faculty and students working in all of these areas.  For the University as a whole, the Center hopes to provide a meeting place for scholars from many disciplines whose work leads them to the study of organizations, institutions, and social networks.  

CSSO is pursuing these aims in several ways:
  • Ongoing public seminars and lectures. CSSO co-sponsors the bi-weekly “Econ­om­ic Sociology” workshop, organized in fall 2009 by Avinash Dixit of Princeton’s Economics Department and Viviana Zelizer of the Sociology Department, which brings to Princeton scholars from multiple disciplines whose work focuses on the social organization of economic life.  The CSSO also sponsors a series of lectures and seminars by leading scholars in the fields of organization theory, social network analysis and economic sociology. Once each semester, CSSO brings a senior scholar to Princeton for an extended residency, affording opportunities to meet with faculty and students. 
  • The CSSO Workshop. The CSSO Workshop, open to Princeton University graduate students working in the areas of economic sociology/institutional economics, organization theory/organizational behavior, or social network analysis, meets weekly. Participating students attend regularly and take the course on a for-credit or audit basis. Sessions are divided between presentations and discussions of student work-in-progress and meetings with senior scholars from Princeton and elsewhere.
  • Theorodology Workshop. The name of this workshop reflects the conviction that the most interesting theoretical problems in the social sciences almost always require meth­odological innovation, and the most interesting methodological problems almost always turn out to be problems of theory, as well.  The Workshop, which includes roughly equal numbers of faculty and advanced graduate students, meets monthly to discuss new work – papers, prospectuses, memos, half-baked ideas – from participants and to hear pre­sentations by Princeton faculty (from such departments as Computer Science, Economics, Philosophy and Population Biology) engaged in theorodological research.
  • Postdoctoral Fellowships.  The Center offers competitive two-year postdoctoral fellowships to new or recent Ph.Ds whose work is making fundamental contributions to some aspect of the study of social organization. Fellows will pursue their own research agendas and also teach a course in the Sociology Department. When the application process for postdoctoral fellowships is open, information will be available in the sidebar at right.
  • Conferences and Research Meetings. The Center will also organize occasional conferences or research meetings that bring together scholars working in areas of particular importance or potential for one or two days of intense discussion.
We encourage Princeton faculty and students who find the Center’s work of potential interest to email the Center at csso@princeton.edu and request to be added to the mailing list.
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2012-2013 Seminars

Fall 2012

September 17:  Randall Collins,The Dorothy Swaine Thomas Professor in Sociology, University of Pennsylvania 

October 1: Michael Schlossman, Doctoral Candidate, Sociology

October 8: Jayanti Owens, Doctoral Candidate, Sociology

November 5: Besnik Pula, ASA/NSF Postdoctoral Research Associate, CSSO

November 19: Emily Erikson, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Yale University

December 3: James Evans, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Chicago

Spring 2013

February 18: Lincoln Quillian, Professor of Sociology and Faculty Fellow, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University

March 4: Nicole Marwell, Associate Professor of Public Affairs and Sociology, Baruch College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York. 

March 11: Bernice Pescosolido, Distinguished Professor and Chancellor's Professor of Sociology, Indiana University

March 25: Mauro Guillen,  Dr. Felix Zandman Endowed Professor of International Management and Professor of Sociology (secondary appointment), University of Pennsylvania

April 8: Lawrence KingProfessor of Sociology and Political Economy, Cambridge University

April 22- 3rd Annual Theorodology Prize Lecture: Andrew Abbott, Gustavus F. and Ann M. Swift Distinguished Service Professor, University of Chicago