• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Processual Comparative Sociology: Building on the Approach of Charles Tilly
  • Contributor: Demetriou, Chares
  • Published: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012
  • Published in: Sociological Theory, 30 (2012) 1, Seite 51-65
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 0735-2751
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Charles Tilly's work on process analysis offers a methodological approach to comparative-historical sociology that can be considered paradigmatic. Yet the approach has been widely criticized for lack of rigor. This paper maintains that the problem lies in insufficient clarification of the approach's central concept: mechanism. Once scrutinized, the concept reveals a tension between its connotation and its denotation. This can be addressed in two ways: either by maintaining what the concept connotes according to Tilly but limiting what it denotes (thus limiting the paradigm's scope conditions) or by limiting what it connotes and maintaining what it was intended by Tilly to denote (thus maintaining wide scope conditions). Elucidating the possibilities of processual comparison is particularly important for comparative-historical sociology because the subfield rests upon processual presuppositions.