Seraphim Seferiades
(PhD, Columbia 1998) is the Secretary of the Hellenic Political Science Association and a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Politics and History at the Panteion University of Social and Political Science, Athens. Formerly a Fellow in Politics & History at the University of Cambridge, a Jean Monnet Fellow at the European University Institute, and Hannah Seeger Davis Fellow at Princeton University, his work spans Greek and European labour history, contentious politics and social movements, and social science methodology.
Editor of the volume Semantics, Concepts, Comparative Method (Athens 2004), he has co-edited the volume Dictatorship 1967-1974: Political Practice, Ideological Discourse, Resistance (Athens 1999). He is currently completing a collection of essays on contentious politics and social movements and editing a volume on collective action in the twenty-first century. He has published in several journals, including Comparative Politics, the Journal of South European Studies, the European Journal of Industrial Relations, the Journal of Contemporary History, the Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica, the Journal of Modern Greek Studies, and the Hellenic Political Science Review.Eurozine Articles
Contentious politics, collective action, social movements: A mapping
By means of a cognitive collage, Seraphim Seferiades explores the historical prerequisites of social movement and the thorny problem of assessing the movement's outcomes. [more]











