Description: This expanded, updated edition of Revolutions offers a new chapter on terrorism and on social movements, including jihadism
Review Quotes:
"Sanderson does a credible job of detailing the major aspects of the topic of revolution. ... well worth reading. Recommended."
--CHOICE
--Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University "Stephen Sanderson has written a smart and clear introduction to revolutions-and to recent scholarship on them. This new edition includes an equally sharp and pellucid chapter on terrorism. Readers new to these topics will find this an especially helpful book."
--Jeffrey Goodwin, New York University "Stephen Sanderson's book has already garnered much praise and won a wide readership. This new edition, with a valuable new chapter on terrorism, can only add to that acclain and influence."
--Krishan Kumar, University of Virginia Praise for the Previous Edition: "Informative and thought-provoking ... encompasses all the major revolutions of our time. ... A useful introduction for students."
--Misagh Parsa in Contemporary Sociology "A very readable introduction to the literature and accessible to undergraduate students. The book also introduces students to some important book-length studies and students of social and political revolutions."
--Canadian Journal of Sociology "Erudite yet accessible ... this broad introduction to the topic will be useful for students new to the area."
--CHOICE Previous Adopters of the Text Say: "It is useful, theoretically erudite and accessible to freshmen. The biographies of leading sociologists of revolution provide a rare insight into who the men and women are behind our theories and why they invented them."
--Georgi Derlugian, Northwestern University "This book is an excellent gateway for students to begin thinking critically about the conceptual underpinnings, history, and causes of revolution. I have used it with success for years."
--David L. Richards, University of Memphis, Co-Director, The CIRI Human Rights Data Project "I enjoyed this book's connection between several theoretical frameworks to analyze revolutions and the case studies presented in the text."
--Jose Soltero, DePaul University