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Writing and Publishing Theory

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0:02

I did it. Okay. Um, welcome everybody.

0:05

Thanks again for coming. Um, our

0:09

panelists are almost all here. Um, so

0:13

that's great. And, um, yeah, what I

0:16

thought we would do is, um, I invited,

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you know, a range of, um,

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various cohort scholars to talk about

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their experience of publishing theory.

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Um I think um

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I think most of us have uh had the

0:34

experience that maybe it's a little bit

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harder to do that or a little little

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less clear. So um uh a number of the

0:41

graduate students asked me if I could do

0:43

kind of a panel on this and so here we

0:46

are and um if my panelists um could um

0:54

just um talk for you know three four

0:58

minutes about their experience. Um I

1:01

know some of you have um published

1:04

theory, have been editors, also been

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chairs of departments where those things

1:08

are evaluated. So just speak to your own

1:11

experiences. And um there's no

1:14

particular order here. Um maybe we'll

1:18

just go in the order of how I see you in

1:21

my Zoom room. Gil, do you mind going

1:23

first?

1:25

>> Uh you can hear me?

1:27

>> Yep.

1:28

>> Hey, Rebecca. Nice seeing you. Nice

1:30

seeing everybody else. Um I'll keep it

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uh very short. So I guess um I'll say

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first of all that I'm on the editorial

1:41

board of theory and social inquiry and

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Monica is here as well. Um and and so

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our our editorial board is represented

1:50

here. We are theory and social inquiry.

1:52

So you can

1:55

are indeed uh part of uh

2:00

repair to I would say and this

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is it's not a model like a pure theory

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paper a paper that um uh you know raises

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aical question and then um passes

2:16

theories or or concepts as a you know

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the main method of the paper is not our

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model paper. It doesn't mean that we

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don't publish those. I think there's a

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several in the works. Um but in general

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we kind of defined the the goal of the

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journal the the the

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model paper in a way that is very

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similar to theory and society

2:42

>> that uh we believe we are the true

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inheritors of uh you know we are all the

2:49

people who were kicked out of of the

2:51

editorial board of the society. uh that

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journal in my opinion is going down the

2:57

drain but we still have theory and

2:58

social inquiry. Um and the modal paper

3:02

in both what theory in society used to

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be and theory and social inquiry today

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is a paper that is at one and the same

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time asks an important theoretical

3:12

question but addresses it via you know

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no less relevant no less substantial

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part of the paper being empirical

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research. So it's the combination of

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theory and empirical research that that

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is really kind of like a model paper. We

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don't want just empirical papers. We

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don't want just theory papers. We really

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like the combination. Now a personal

3:37

point. Um

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I don't think I've ever published a

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paper that was simply theory actually.

3:45

Um I published quite a few papers in

3:48

theory and society in the past. I had a

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great experience there. You know, I got

3:53

I got uh you know, like really very

3:57

useful reviews at the time, but it was

3:59

never a paper that was pure theory. And

4:04

um I I

4:07

in general I I find that trying to write

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a paper and publish a paper that is pure

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theory rather than theory as it is uh

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sort of demonstrated in the body of

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empirical material.

4:22

This pure theory is a lot harder. Um

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it's not an exercise I would recommend

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to the faint of heart. Um, in general, I

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I I much prefer papers that I can see

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the theory contributing to an empirical

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case and and vice versa. Um, yeah. And

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so that's that's kind of would be my my

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take on this or my advice from my own

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personal experience.

4:52

>> Liz, you happen to be next in my Zoom

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room. Do you mind going next?

4:58

>> Sure. Okay, happy to go next. So, um I'm

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Liz Clemens. Um I have done a lot of

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editing over my career. So, I've um been

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on boards at ASR, Contemporary

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Sociology,

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um among others, and then been an editor

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or co-editor of um both studies in

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political development and um for six

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years at American Journal of Sociology

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and I'm currently on the editorial board

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of the annual review of sociology.

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So I want to start with um

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I guess a sense that yet again we are in

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another moment of intense um

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transformation and pressure on the

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system of publishing. Um there was a

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webinar for the editors of and editorial

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boards of all the annual re reviews the

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other day on the implications of AI. And

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a very talented theoretical physicist uh

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at MIT

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gave the talk that he had asked his AI

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to write for him.

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um and it was stunningly competent, but

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it I think also clarified

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what is going to be important to focus

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on going forward, which is really

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thinking about the character of the sort

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of theoretical advance and contribution

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that can be made in an article form.

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what was um uh gasp inducing was the

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level of basic competence at organizing

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existing knowledge with some

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hallucinations in there. So what I

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thought I'd do is offer a simple trio of

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um the ways in which

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I have found theoretical contributions

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um to be made not only in work that I've

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edited um some that I've written but a

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lot that I've read um because whatever

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changes about the publishing system

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that's where we mere humans are going to

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continue to have an advantage if we have

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any advantage at all. So I want to make

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a point about um sort of conceptual

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contributions,

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contributions in terms of establishing

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a space or dimensions of variation

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and then contributions in terms of going

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from a theoretical claim to claims about

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what to expect in terms of empirical

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findings and evidence.

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So one kind of important contribution is

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at the level of um conceptual reconfigur

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refiguring.

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And I want to warn here that this isn't

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simply an issue of coming up with a new

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label. There's a lot of this in articles

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that get submitted is, oh, I have a new

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catchy phrase and I'm going to put it in

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my title, in my abstract, and because

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it's going to be cited by millions of

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people, that's going to make my career.

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A lot of this gets done, very little of

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it makes career.

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Instead, really focus on whether you can

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make a case for some reconceptualization

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or some renaming to make a difference.

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Occasionally, and I think it's pretty

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occasionally,

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this can be done primarily at the level

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of conceptual theoretical

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distinction. And my example here is uh

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you know an old piece by um JP Nettle uh

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political sociologist

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who um made the argument that rather

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than thinking about states as a

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particular kind of organization.

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It was more productive to think about

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stateness as a variation

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a dimension of variation in the capacity

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for some kind of collective actor to

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exhibit a agency that was done primarily

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as a conceptual um discussion and since

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I'm talking about a piece published I

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think in 1968 possibly 67 in 2026 it was

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influential

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um more commonly and this starts It's re

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reinforcing some of Gil's points as

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these arguments are made in dialogue

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with empirical research. So here you can

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start thinking about classics. You know

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sort of Granavet are making an argument

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that ties are not just ties. There are

10:06

strong and weak ties and they operate

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differently.

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um man um Michael man arguing that state

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power is not just power but there's you

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know despotic power um which is the sort

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of off with their head uh kind of power

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but also infrastructural power organized

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through ties with organizations that are

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