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What Comparative Area Studies (CAS) Brings to the Table: Leveraging and Integrating Area-Based Knowledge in the Social Sciences

Open lecture with Rudra Sil, Professor of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania and SAS Director of the dual-degree Huntsman Program in International Studies and Business
Abstract
In a previous volume, Comparative Area Studies: Methodological Rationales and Cross-Regional Applications (Oxford University Press, 2018), my colleagues and I laid out the distinctive features and value-added of “comparative area studies” (CAS) against the backdrop of ongoing methodological debates in the social sciences. In brief, CAS seeks to retain and utilize the in-depth, immersive knowledge associated with area-based training and expertise while encouraging contextualized comparisons involving engagement with research done on cases brought in from other, less familiar areas. The goal is not full-blown causal generalizations but rather novel interpretations and middle-range analyses that may elude researchers with a singular focus on a single area or relying on aggregage data. Since the publication of the 2018 volume, a new cohort of (mostly qualitative) researchers has sought to connect a growing range of scholarly endeavors to CAS while asking important questions about its epistemological boundaries and about the institutional pressures that scholars pursuing CAS may face. These questions have motivated a new volume, Advancing Comparative Area Studies: Analytical Heterogeneity and Organizational Challenges (Oxford University Press, 2025), which brings in more varied approaches and topics along with some new voices, including those of fifteen scholars who had no connection to the first volume. The latter book showcases how CAS can accommodate a wider range of area-based scholarship predicated on more varied methodological and epistemological principles. This includes not only contextualized comparisons of countries from different regions but also interpretive work, sub-national comparisons, as well as inter-regional comparisons addressing topics such as global human rights and the rise of regional powers that go beyond comparative politics (which was the focus of the first volume). Moreover, the volume offers practical, realistic discussions of how our current institutional architecture can be adapted to support cross-regional comparative research and to better connect different area studies communities – without undermining the quality of area-specific training in the United States or Europe. Thus, the promise of the CAS framework lies in a concerted effort to reinvigorate area studies, to encourage members of multiple area studies communities to engage more with each other around specific issues, and to leverage contextualized comparisons across regions so as to stimulate fresh interpretations and new conceptual frameworks for the social sciences.
Biography
Rudra Sil is Professor of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania where he is also SAS Director of the dual-degree Huntsman Program in International Studies and Business. He received his Ph.D. from Berkeley before joining the Penn faculty in 1996. His scholarly interests encompass Russian/post-communist studies, Asian studies, comparative labor politics, international development, qualitative methodology, and the philosophy of social science. Sil is currently working on a monograph titled The Fate of a Former Superpower: Russia’s Troubled Search for Relevance and Recognition in a Post-Cold War World. He has previously authored, coauthored, or coedited eight books. These include two monographs – Managing ‘Modernity’: Work, Community, and Authority in Late-Industrializing Japan and Russia (2002) and Beyond Paradigms: Analytic Eclecticism in the Study of World Politics (2010), coauthored with Peter Katzenstein and honored as a CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title – as well as six co-edited books, including The Politics of Labor in a Global Age (2001), World Order After Leninism (2006) and, most recently, Advancing Comparative Area Studies: Analytical Heterogeneity and Organizational Challenges (2025). His articles have appeared in a variety of scholarly journals, including Perspectives on Politics, Comparative Political Studies, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Theoretical Politics, Post-Soviet Affairs, Europe-Asia Studies, and Studies in Comparative International Development. The paper in Comparative Political Studies, coauthored with his former doctoral student Allison Evans, received the Dorothy Day Award for Outstanding Labor Scholarship. Sil is also recipient of multiple teaching awards, including the 2022 Ira H. Abrams Memorial Prize for Distinguished Teaching in the School of Arts and Sciences.
Om händelsen:
Plats: Asia Library, Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies, Sölvegatan 18 B, Lund
Kontakt: tabita.rosendal_ebbesenace.luse