Chris Uggen's Blog: pub econ?

Saturday, October 28, 2006

pub econ?

my friday talk was co-sponsored by a law school and a soc department. over the years, i've spoken in econ departments and policy schools and crim departments and law schools and african american studies departments. it is always fun to see the different norms regarding length, interruptions, and so forth. in the soc series, the speakers are expected to talk for an hour and then take questions for thirty minutes. in the law series, in contrast, they are expected to speak for seven minutes before engaging in questions. this must have something to do with billable hours.

i spoke about public criminology (and, by extension, public sociology), using clifford shaw as an exemplar. many law professors have been doing pubcrim for years, particularly on the op/ed front, but an econ phd/law prof couldn't see how the idea of public economics would ever gain much momentum. i mumbled something about lester thurow and john r. commons, and, of course, steven levitt's name came up. still, i think my questioner was probably right about the prospects for pub econ.

is there a public aspect to other disciplines (e.g., pub polisci, pub anthro, pub psych, pub history, pub philosophy, pub geography, pub genetics), or is sociology somehow uniquely positioned to want or need a public variant? if so, does this signal the relative weakness or the relative strength of sociology as a discipline?

2 Comments:

At 6:09 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

A sociologist speaking here with much experience in econ and crim...

Sociology flows well into the public arena...why?...because it is spotted with non-objectivity, or ideology. In essence, the discipline is littered (in an o.k. way) with activism. We confront polarized issues with scientific evidence and this opens the door for us to enter the public arena of debate.

Mine is not a criticism but an observation. Are econ, crim, or political science also tainted with an ideological bent - yes. But not to the degree of sociology.

 
At 2:29 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sociology's need for 'public sociology' stems from a general lack of importance and relevance to key issues. Pulbic sociology is jargon for "LOOK WHAT I DO REALLY MATTERS!" After hearing public sociology being engaged, my reaction reminds me of encounters to used car salesmen. Public sociologists are basically educated con-men. Maybe that's why Uggen finds it so easy moving between criminology and sociology in his public presentations.

 

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