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headshot of Marina Sitrin

Marina Sitrin

Chair, Graduate Director, Associate Professor

Sociology

Background

Marina Sitrin holds a PhD in Global Sociology from SUNY Stony Brook and a JD in International Women's Human Rights from CUNY Law School.

Marina鈥檚 scholarly work is part of a continuum, reflecting over 20 years of study and direct engagement in social movements and diverse forms of resistance. Specifically looking at new forms of social organization, such as autogesti贸n, horizontalidad, prefigurative politics, abolitionism and affective social relationship, she challenges us in the social sciences to rethink our understandings of social movements, inviting us to think in terms of societies in movement. Marina鈥檚 forthcoming book with the University of California Press argues that there is a new phenomenon occurring around the globe that is both revolutionary in the day-to-day sense of the word and without precedent with regard to consistency of form, politics, scope, and scale. The book covers over 20 regions in 12 countries and three autonomous zones, reflecting two decades of research and engagement. 

Currently, Marina is working on a book project reflecting over a decade of experiences in alternative conceptions of justice using alternative adjudication frameworks, reflecting processes of addressing harm outside formal state and punishment structures. Regions covered include, Argentina; Cher谩n, Chiapas and Guerrero, Mexico; Rojava and the United States.

Methodologically, she employs forms of ethnographic research, grounded in oral history and sociological narrative. The form of ethnographic research is sometimes participant observer, and always designed to relate history from below. Her research is based in contemporary movements in Latin America and the Caribbean, the United States and Canada and Southern Europe.

Marina is a part of the Core Group of , and on the Editorial Collective of the .

Research Interests

  • Abolition and Alternative Adjudication Processes
  • Collective Action, Social Movements/Societies in Movement
  • Commons, Commoning and Municipalism
  • Prefigurative and Affective Politics and Direct/Participatory Democracy

More Info

Selected Publications:

Select Books:

  • The New Revolutions: From Social Movements to Societies in Movement, University of California Press (forthcoming)

  • Pandemic Solidarity: Mutual Aid During the COVID 19 Crisis, co-edited with Colectiva Sembrar (Pluto Press, 2020).

  • They Can't Represent Us! Reinventing Democracy from Greece to Occupy, co-authored with Dario Azzellini (Verso Press, 2014).

  • Everyday Revolutions: Horizontalism and Autonomy in Argentina, (Zed Books, 2012).

  • Horizontalidad: Voces de Poder Popular en Argentina (Chilavert, 2005); Horizontalism: Voices of Popular Power in Argentina (AK Press, 2006); 螣蟻喂味慰谓蟿喂蠈蟿畏蟿伪: 蠁蠅谓苇蟼 位伪蠆魏萎蟼 蔚尉慰蠀蟽委伪蟼 蟽蟿畏谓 伪蟻纬蔚谓蟿喂谓畏 (SKYA, 2011)

Select Articles and Chapters:

2020. 鈥,鈥 Socialism and Democracy, Vol. 34 Issue 1.

2020. 鈥 coauthored, Red Pepper Magazine.

2020. 鈥,鈥 with Nancy Pi帽eiro, Peri贸dico Lavaca.

2019. 鈥 Chapter in Commoning with George Caffentzis and Silvia Federici, edited by Camille Barbagallo, Nicholas Beuret & David Harvie, Pluto Press.

2019. 鈥 Chapter in From Transnational to Transformative Justice, edited by Paul Gready and Simon Robins, Cambridge University Press.

2019. 鈥.鈥 Chapter in The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism, edited by Carl Levy and Matthew S. Adams, Palgrave Macmillan.

2018. 鈥 Chapter in


2016. 鈥,鈥 Chapter in Social Sciences for An-Other Politics. Women Theorising without Parachutes, edited by Ana Cecilia Dinerstein, Palgrave McMillan.

2014. 鈥 South Atlantic Quarterly, Volume 113, Issue 2.