RESEARCH
Isabelle Ferreras is a sociologist and political scientist. Her research agenda has developed toward an exploration of firms as –internally- political entities from both a descriptive and normative perspective. At the micro-level, her focus is on understanding the logic of work in the context of the Western service-based economy, for which she is developing a critical ‘political sociology of work’. At the institutional level, she is developing a companion ‘political theory of the firm’ that seeks to grasp firms as political entities, and to explore its implications at both the levels of efficiency and normative, and democratic, accountability. Her research into these issues has led me to explore what Isabelle Ferreras calls the ‘capitalism/democracy contradiction’; that is, the potential problems that arise when we organize our economy along capitalist lines while nurturing the democratic political ideal of equality for all. Isabelle Ferreras studies both normative and efficiency issues raised by this contradiction, combining empirical and sociological research with political theory. As a scholar, Isabelle Ferreras is committed too to helping address the current sustainability, planetary and democratic crisis.
Isabelle Ferreras is a Research Director (Directrice de recherches) at the Belgian National Science Foundation (F.N.R.S., Brussels) and Professor of Sociology at the University of Louvain, where Isabelle Ferrerasteach in the Department of Social and Political Sciences, the Institut des sciences du travail, and the Economics School of Louvain. Since 2004, Isabelle Ferreras has been affiliated with the Labor and Worklife Program at Harvard Law School, where she is currently Senior Research Associate. Isabelle Ferreras is a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences, Humanities and the Arts of Belgium, Class Technology and Society, and a Distinguished Research Fellow at the Institute for Ethics in A.I. at Jesus College, University of Oxford.
Her key publications include Firms as Political Entities: Saving Democracy through Economic Bicameralism (Cambridge University Press, 2017) and Democratize Work. The Case for Reorganizing the Economy (University of Chicago Press, 2022), which has been translated into five languages.