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53Fieldwork in Political Theory: Five Arguments for an Ethnographic SensibilityBritish Journal of Political Science 49 (2). 2019.This article makes a positive case for an ethnographic sensibility in political theory. Drawing on published ethnographies and original fieldwork, it argues that an ethnographic sensibility can contribute to normative reflection in five distinct ways. It can help uncover the nature of situated normative demands (epistemic argument); diagnose obstacles encountered when responding to these demands (diagnostic argument); evaluate practices and institutions against a given set of values (evaluative …Read more
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Political Theory in an Ethnographic KeyAmerican Political Science Review 113 (4). 2019.Should political theorists engage in ethnography? In this letter, we assess a recent wave of interest in ethnography among political theorists and explain why it is a good thing. We focus, in particular, on how ethnographic research generates what Ian Shapiro calls “problematizing redescriptions”—accounts of political phenomena that destabilize the lens through which we traditionally study them, engendering novel questions and exposing new avenues of moral concern. We argue that (1) by revealing…Read more
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89The architectures of waiting: Helmut Puff and Bernardo Zacka in conversationContemporary Political Theory 22 (2): 266-283. 2023.
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217Political Theory with an Ethnographic SensibilityContemporary Political Theory 20 (2): 385-418. 2021.Political theory is a field that finds nourishment in others. From economics, history, sociology, psychology, and political science, theorists have drawn a rich repertoire of schemas to parse the social world and make sense of it. With each of these encounters, new subjects are brought into focus as others recede into the background, ushering a change not only in how questions are tackled but also in what questions are thought worth asking.
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62Every twelve seconds: Industrialized slaughter and the politics of sightContemporary Political Theory 13 (2). 2014.
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59Adhocracy, security and responsibility: Revisiting Abu Ghraib a decade laterContemporary Political Theory 15 (1): 38-57. 2016.
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Harvard UniversityGraduate student
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America