Paolo Parigi Dept. of Sociology, 450 Serra Mall, Bldg 120 Room 132. Stanford, CA 94305-2047 Office: (650) 721 2648 Email:
[email protected] Fax: (650) 725 6471
Employment
Stanford University, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, 2008 – present Haverford College, Department of Sociology, Visiting Instructor, 2007-2008
Education
Ph.D., Sociology, Columbia University, 2008 M.A., Quantitative Methods for the Social Sciences, Columbia University, 2002 Laurea, Scienze Politiche, Universit´a degli Studi di Firenze, 1999
Publications
Parigi, Paolo. 2010. “Miracles Mobilization in the XVII Century” Sanctorum 7. Forthcoming Parigi, Paolo and Peter S. Bearman. 2008. “Spaghetti Politics: Local Electoral Rules and Alliance Structure in Italy, 1984-2201” Social Forces, 87 (2) Parigi, Paolo. 2006. “Fatti sociali e produzione di miracoli nel XVII secolo” Polis XX (3) Bearman, Peter S. and Paolo Parigi. 2004. “Cloning Headless Frog and Other Important Matters” Social Forces 83 (2)
Working & Under “Making True Miracles: Creating a New Institutional Field in the Sixteenth Century” Review Papers Under Review “Evidence Based Historical Sociology” Under Review “Stability Despite Change: The Inner Logic of the Italian Parliament” Working paper, with Laura Sartori Grants and Awards
UPS Fund, Stanford University, 2009 ( $43,000) Traveling Fellowship, Columbia University, 2005-2006 Lazersfeld Fellowship, Department of Sociology, Columbia University, 2001-2004
Invited Presentations
Princeton University, April 2008 University of Massachusetts (Amherst), December 2007 Stanford University, November 2007 University of Oregon, November 2007 Haverford College, October 2007
Conference Presentations
Social Network Conference, Annual Meeting, March 2009 American Sociological Association, Annual Meeting, August 2008 Networks in Political Science, Harvard University, June 2008 American Sociological Association, Annual Meeting, August 2007 American Sociological Association, Annual Meeting, August 2006
Inter-Ivy Sociology Symposium, Cornell University, April 2006 American Sociological Association, Annual Meeting, August 2003 Teaching
Undergraduate: Introduction to Quantitative Methods Historical Sociology Introduction to Network Analysis Political Sociology Graduate: Organizations and Uncertainty
Professional Experiences
National Center for Children and Poverty, School of Public Health Columbia University, Researcher, Summer & Fall 2003 Quantitative Methods in the Social Sciences, ISERP Columbia University, Statistical consultant for web page, Summer 2003
Professional Service
American Journal of Sociology, Reviewer