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Charles Sabel

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Name
  
Charles Sabel

Role
  
Political Scientist

Awards
  
MacArthur Fellowship


Charles Sabel betaglobalcolumbiaedufilesglobalcommons2styl

Books
  
Work and Politics, Can We Put an End to Sweatshops?, Ireland: Local Partnerships and Social Innovation

Education
  
Harvard University (1978), Harvard College (1969)

Similar People
  
Michael J Piore, Archon Fung, Joshua Cohen, Dara O'Rourke, Joel Rogers

Asking delivery units to solve wicked problems


Charles Fredrick Sabel (born December 1, 1947) is an American academic and professor of Law and Social Science at the Columbia Law School. His research centers on public innovations, European Union governance, labor standards, economic development, and ultra-robust networks.

Contents

Charles Sabel wwwlawcolumbiaedusitesdefaultfilesstylesfa

Sabel attended Harvard University and earned a B.A. in Social Studies in 1969 and a Ph.D. in Government in 1978. He was a faculty member in the departments of Political Science and Science, Technology, and Society at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology between 1977 and 1995. He joined the faculty at Columbia University in 1995. He is the recipient of a 1982 MacArthur Fellowship. Together with Joshua Cohen and others he developed the theory of directly deliberative polyarchy or democratic experimentalism, which is related to the concept of deliberative democracy. This concept mainly builds upon Japanese production methods interpreted as the institutionalization of decentralized learning.

His 1984 book, The Second Industrial Divide: Possibilities for Prosperity, co-written with Michael J. Piore, has been widely influential among labor scholars.

Sabel and others designed his mountain house via “a continuous mutual disruption,” which is a recurring theme in his scholarly work. He describes such disruptions saying, “What you do determines what I do, and vice versa. By the end of our collaboration, neither of us could have anticipated the result.”

Charles Sabel received the honor of a Professorship through The Radboud Excellence Initiative at Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands. Sabel will begin his time in the Radboud Excellence Initiative in June 2015.

Using a default condition to shape agreement


Publications

  • Gilson, Ronald; Sabel, Charles; Scott, Robert (2009), Contracting for Innovation: Vertical Disintegration and Interfirm Collaboration, New York, NY: Columbia Law Review 
  • Sabel, Charles (2006), Learning by Monitoring, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 
  • Sabel, Charles; Fung, Archon; O'Rourke, Dara (2001), Can We Put an End to Sweatshops?, Boston, MA: Beacon Press 
  • Sabel, Charles; Dorf, Michael C. (1998), A Constitution of Democratic Experimentalism, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 
  • Sabel, Charles (1996), Local Partnerships and Social Innovation: Ireland, Dublin: OECD 
  • Sabel, Charles; Piore, Michael (1984), The Second Industrial Divide: Possibilities for Prosperity, New York: Basic Books 
  • Sabel, Charles (1982), Work and Politics: The Division of Labor in Industry, Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press 
  • Sabel, Charles (1978), Ökonomische Krisentendenzen im gegenwärtigen Kapitalismus, Frankfurt: Campus Verlag 
  • References

    Charles Sabel Wikipedia


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