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Many of you have heard the sad news already, but for those who haven't, 
Charles Tilly passed away on Tuesday after a long battle with lymphoma. 
He was a prodigious scholar, an innovative theorist, a generous mentor, 
and steadfast friend to so many of us in the discipline.  He had agreed 
to speak on one of the Theory Section Miniconference panels in August, 
on the topic of "Theoretical Careers," in which I asked him to reflect 
on the ways in which his theoretical ideas had changed over time in 
dialogue with the complexities of the empirical world. There is no 
better person than Tilly to speak to this topic, as he rethought and 
challenged his own theories in substantial and probing ways, in response 
not only to his empirical research, but also to his conversations and 
debates within a broad research community.  He was a champion of 
relational thinking, and manifested this commitment in his own 
far-reaching intellectual networks.   His absence will be sorely felt 
not only on our panel in August, but throughout our discipline and far 
beyond. 

Below, you can find statements from Columbia University about Chuck's 
passing. 

With warm remembrances, 

Ann Mische 



Dear members of the Columbia sociology community: 

We are all saddened by the passing of Charles Tilly, who died yesterday. 
I've attached the statement that has just been released by the public 
affairs office of the university, and also the statement that was just 
released by President Bollinger. 

Sincerely, 


Thomas DiPrete, Chair Department of Sociology 
---------------------------------------- 

The Columbia University community mourns the loss of one of its beloved 
members, Charles Tilly, the Joseph L. Buttenwieser Professor of Social 
Science, who passed away on April 29 after a long battle with cancer. He 
was 78. 

Tilly, who had a joint appointment with the University's Departments of 
Sociology and Political Science, is widely considered the leading scholar 
of his generation on contentious politics and its relationship with 
military, economic, urban and demographic social change. 

President of the Social Sciences Research Council Craig Calhoun called 
Tilly "one of the most distinguished of all contemporary social 
scientists," adding: "He is the most influential analyst of social 
movements and contentious politics, a path-breaker in the historical 
sociology of the state, a pivotal theorist of social inequality." 

"His intellectual range and level of productivity are virtually unrivaled 
in the social sciences," said Columbia sociology Professor and Chair 
Thomas DiPrete.  Adam Ashforth, professor of anthropology and political 
science at Northwestern University, described Tilly as "the founding 
father of twenty-first century sociology." 

During the course of his 50-year career, Tilly's academic expertise 
covered urbanization, industrialization, collective action and state- 
making, and his most recent work explored social relations, identity and 
culture. His primary interest concerned Europe from 1500 to the present, 
but his work extended to North America and other parts of the world as 
well. 

Tilly is well known for his generosity to students. Many recall thanking 
Tilly for his mentorship, only to receive the response: "Don't thank me, 
just do the same for your students." 

One important training ground he offered to students was a succession of 
informal seminars, co-launched with his former wife Louise in their living 
room 40 years ago when he was a younger professor at the University of 
Michigan. Once titled the "Think, Then Drink" workshop, the name changed 
to the "Workshop on Contentious Politics" and was held regularly at 
Columbia for more than a decade. Many students continued to participate 
well past graduation and into their own professorship tenures. 

"Much as his own scholarship transcended traditional disciplinary 
boundaries, these vibrant discussions brought a diverse array of 
professors and students together in an ongoing conversation that 
represented the best of historical social science," said former student 
and close friend Wayne Te Brake, now a professor of history at Purchase 
College. Participants enjoyed Tilly's "egalitarian rules for presentation, 
critique and intervention," he added. 

Tilly was born May 27, 1929, in Lombard, Ill., and studied at Harvard 
University, earning the bachelor's degree magna cum laude in 1950 and the 
Ph.D. in sociology in 1958. He also studied at Balliol College, Oxford, 
and the Catholic University of Angers, France, and served in the U.S. Navy 
during the Korean War. Before arriving at Columbia in 1996, Tilly taught 
at the University of Delaware, Harvard, the University of Toronto, the 
University of Michigan and The New School for Social Research. In 
addition, he held several short-term research and teaching appointments at 
universities throughout Europe and North America during the course of his 
career. 

Tilly was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American 
Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, the 
Sociological Research Association and the Ordre des Palmes Academiques. 


In addition to his theoretical and substantive interests, Tilly wrote 
extensively on the subject of research methodology. His writings touched 
on epistemology, the nature of causality, process analysis, the use of 
narrative as a method for historical explanation, mechanism- based 
explanations, contextual analysis, political ethnography, and quantitative 
methods in historical analysis, among many topics. 

During his lifetime Tilly received several prominent awards, including: 
the Common Wealth Award in sociology (1982); the Amalfi Prize for 
Sociology and Social Sciences (1994); the Eastern Sociological Society's 
Merit Award for Distinguished Scholarship (1996); the American 
Sociological Association's Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award 
(2005); the International Political Science Association's Karl Deutsch 
Award in Comparative Politics (2006); the Phi Beta Kappa Sidney Hook 
Memorial Award (2006); and the Social Science Research Council's Albert O. 
Hirschman Award (2008). 

In addition, he was awarded honorary doctorates in social sciences from 
Erasmus University, Rotterdam (1983); the Institut d'Etudes Politiques, 
University of Paris (1993); the University of Toronto (1995); the 
University of Strasbourg (1996); the University of Geneva (1999); the 
University of Crete (2002); the University of Quebec at 
Montreal (2004); and the University of Michigan (2007). 

In 2001, Columbia's sociology graduate students named Tilly the Professor 
of the Year. 

He authored, co-authored, edited or co-edited 51 published books and 
monographs and over 600 scholarly articles. His major works include _The 
Vendee: A Sociological Analysis of the Counter-Revolution of 1793_ (1964); 
_Sociology Meets History_ (1981); _Big Structures, Large Processes, Huge 
Comparisons_ (1984); _The Contentious French_ (1983); _European 
Revolutions 1492-1992_ (1993); _Cities and the Rise of States in Europe: 
A.D. 1000 to 1800_ (1994); _Popular Contention in Great Britain, 
1758-1834_ (1995); _Durable Inequality_ (1998); _Transforming 
Post-Communist Political Economies_ (1998); _Dynamics of Contention_ 
(2001); _Soial Movements 1768-2004_ (2004); _Trust and Rule_ (2005); 
_Why?_(2006); and _Democracy_ (2007). 

"Professor Tilly will be remembered as an extraordinarily generous and 
innovative scholar and teacher by a vast network of colleagues, 
students and friends around the country and across the globe," said Te 
Brake. 

Tilly is survived by his former wife (and sometimes collaborator), 
Louise; his brothers, Richard and Stephen, and sister Carolyn; his 
children, Chris, Kit, Laura and Sarah; their spouses Marie, Steve, 
Derek, and David; his grandchildren, Amanda, Charlotte, Chris, Abby, 
Ben, Jon and Becky; and his great-grandchildren, Jamie and Julian. 



President Bollinger's Statement on the Passing of Professor Charles 
Tilly 

   Columbia lost one of its finest citizens when Professor Charles 
Tilly passed away April 29. Most recently the Joseph L. Buttenwieser 
Professor of Social Science, serving the departments of Political 
Science and Sociology, he was a scholar of boundless energy and 
intellect. Few could, or will ever, match his scholarly output and 
lasting impact. His 50 years of teaching, writing and intellectual 
inspiration will be missed here at Columbia and everywhere people seek 
to understand how history and societies move forward. 

The extraordinary half-century career of Charles Tilly continuously 
demonstrated scholarship that transcended disciplinary boundaries. It 
seemed that he could write, interpret, and explain virtually anything 
to curious minds. With more than 600 articles and 51 books and 
monographs bearing his name, Charles Tilly literally wrote the book on 
the contentious dynamics and the ethnographic foundations of political 
history. 

Though he received an extraordinary number of special awards, 
scholarly inductions and honorary degrees during his long and 
productive career, we will remember that, since 1996, he was a 
distinguished member of the Columbia community. His students, fellow 
faculty members and friends will all remember someone not only who 
reached and remained at the pinnacle of his field but also a warm and 
valued colleague who never stopped asking profound questions. 

Lee C. Bollinger 

President