[{"content":"Leschevin T., « The Enemy\u0026rsquo;s Mandate. Paramilitaries and Communities in Northern Ireland » in Rios-Bordes A. et Linhardt D. (dir.), Sociological Lens, « Special Issue – On Processes of Ennemization in Modern Societies », Printemps 2026. À paraître.\n","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/publication/leschevin-2026/","summary":"Leschevin T., « The Enemy\u0026rsquo;s Mandate. Paramilitaries and Communities in Northern Ireland » in Rios-Bordes A. et Linhardt D. (dir.), Sociological Lens, « Special Issue – On Processes of Ennemization in Modern Societies », Printemps 2026. À paraître.","title":"The Enemy's Mandate. Paramilitaries and Communities in Northern Ireland"},{"content":"Elias N., Pour une théorie des communautés, Leschevin T. (trad. et introduction), Paris, PUF, Coll. Émancipations, 2025. À paraître.\n","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/publication/leschevin-2025/","summary":"Elias N., Pour une théorie des communautés, Leschevin T. (trad. et introduction), Paris, PUF, Coll. Émancipations, 2025. À paraître.","title":"Pour une théorie des communautés"},{"content":"Leschevin T., « Attitudes politiques et classes populaires en Irlande du Nord. Ni unionistes, ni nationalistes, ni \u0026lsquo;Neither/Nor\u0026rsquo; », Revue Française de Science Politique. Soumis, en cours d\u0026rsquo;évaluation.\n","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/publication/leschevin-submitted-b/","summary":"Leschevin T., « Attitudes politiques et classes populaires en Irlande du Nord. Ni unionistes, ni nationalistes, ni \u0026lsquo;Neither/Nor\u0026rsquo; », Revue Française de Science Politique. Soumis, en cours d\u0026rsquo;évaluation.","title":"Attitudes politiques et classes populaires en Irlande du Nord. Ni unionistes, ni nationalistes, ni 'Neither/Nor'"},{"content":"Leschevin T., United by Division. North Belfast deprived communities and the internalisation of differences, Liverpool, Liverpool University Press. Soumis, en cours d\u0026rsquo;évaluation.\n","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/publication/leschevin-submitted-a/","summary":"Leschevin T., United by Division. North Belfast deprived communities and the internalisation of differences, Liverpool, Liverpool University Press. Soumis, en cours d\u0026rsquo;évaluation.","title":"United by Division. North Belfast deprived communities and the internalisation of differences"},{"content":"Leschevin T., « Sectarian, Recreational, or Anti-Social? Interpreting juvenile violence in post-conflict Belfast », in Coulter C. et Shirlow P. (dir.), Space and Polity, « Special Issue – Northern Ireland and the 25 years of the Good Friday Agreement », Novembre 2023, Vol. 27, n°1.\n","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/publication/leschevin-2023/","summary":"Leschevin T., « Sectarian, Recreational, or Anti-Social? Interpreting juvenile violence in post-conflict Belfast », in Coulter C. et Shirlow P. (dir.), Space and Polity, « Special Issue – Northern Ireland and the 25 years of the Good Friday Agreement », Novembre 2023, Vol. 27, n°1.","title":"Sectarian, Recreational, or Anti-Social? Interpreting juvenile violence in post-conflict Belfast"},{"content":" I am a sociologist, Maître de conférences (Associate Professor) in Anglophone Studies at Université Paris Cité – IUT de Paris Rives de Seine.\nMy work aims to develop a political sociology of secondary groups. My research rests on two strands: on one side, the study of the secondary groups known as \u0026ldquo;communities\u0026rdquo; in contemporary societies; on the other, the study of the contradictory aspirations that characterise secondary socialisation, through the particular type of politicization that manifests itself in the passage to adulthood.\nMost of my research revolves around the idea that there is a properly modern form of community, which is reducible neither to the continuation of the traditional \u0026ldquo;community/society\u0026rdquo; dichotomy, nor to the idea that any social bond, within highly differentiated societies, can present a \u0026ldquo;community\u0026rdquo; dimension. Conversely, the specificity of modern communities becomes visible through the integration conflicts to which the motif of \u0026ldquo;communities\u0026rdquo; increasingly points within contemporary societies.\nMost of my investigations have also led me to highlight the particular type of social problems that crystallize the passage to adulthood — residential mobility, occupational specialization, gender emancipation, exit from delinquency, and generational positioning. I am interested in how these issues surrounding younger generations and their aspirations, particularly in disadvantaged urban neighbourhoods, help make visible a certain relationship to politics.\nCrossing these two strands leads me to address different objects. I am primarily a specialist of Northern Ireland, of community relations between unionists and nationalists in Belfast, and of the public issues that characterise the Northern Irish peace process. More recently, I have also focused on the study of enemisation and radicalization processes, investigating States\u0026rsquo; efforts at categorizing and managing domestic threats in several countries — notably France, the United Kingdom and the United States. Finally, my research also encompasses a more general interest in the sociology of knowledge, and in how the social sciences have attempted to account for the role of conflictuality in the transformations of social organization.\nFrom this perspective, my work also contributes to a political sociology of conflictuality — and to understanding how social actors appropriate the paradoxical relationship that conflictuality maintains with the growth of social differentiation and integration.\nFrom a methodological point of view, I develop a \u0026ldquo;processual ethnographic\u0026rdquo; approach. This consists in stressing, from the field and right through to the analysis, the complementarity between ethnographic fieldwork, controversy analysis and figurational sociology. In parallel, I am interested in the new methods used in digital data collection, analysis and visualization.\nfield of research General sociology Urban sociology Political sociology Sociology of public problems Sociology of communities Sociology of the British Isles Sociology of knowledge Eliassian sociology Sociology of law qualifications French \u0026ldquo;Conseil National des Universités\u0026rdquo;\n— Qualified as a Lecturer in Section 19 (Sociology, demography), 2022 session.\n— Qualified as a Lecturer in Section 11 (English and Anglo-Saxon Languages ​​and Literature), 2022 session.\n— Qualified as a Lecturer in Section 4 (Political Science), 2023 session.\naffiliations — Member of the Norbert Elias Foundation, the AFS, the IPSA and the AFSP.\n— Member of the G.I.S EIRE since 2024.\n— Editor at Sociological Futures (Routledge), attached to the British Sociological Association, since 2023.\n— Member of the ECHELLES research unit (UMR 8264) since 2024.\n— Associate member of the Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire d’Études sur les Réflexivités – Fonds Yan Thomas (UMR 8065) since november 2021.\n","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/about/","summary":"I am a sociologist, Maître de conférences (Associate Professor) in Anglophone Studies at Université Paris Cité – IUT de Paris Rives de Seine.\nMy work aims to develop a political sociology of secondary groups. My research rests on two strands: on one side, the study of the secondary groups known as \u0026ldquo;communities\u0026rdquo; in contemporary societies; on the other, the study of the contradictory aspirations that characterise secondary socialisation, through the particular type of politicization that manifests itself in the passage to adulthood.","title":"about"},{"content":" Name E-mail address Message Send Or feel free to contact me :\ntheo.leschevin@u-paris.fr\nUniversité Paris Cité IUT de Paris – Rives de Seine – Département Information-Communication 143 av. de Versailles 75016 Paris B7-13\nECHELLES (UMR 8264) ∧ LIER-FYT (UMR 8065)\n","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/contact/","summary":"Name E-mail address Message Send Or feel free to contact me :\ntheo.leschevin@u-paris.fr\nUniversité Paris Cité IUT de Paris – Rives de Seine – Département Information-Communication 143 av. de Versailles 75016 Paris B7-13\nECHELLES (UMR 8264) ∧ LIER-FYT (UMR 8065)","title":"contact"},{"content":" filter by topic:\nall Northern Ireland Belfast violence community Elias double-bind pacification Brexit state publications in peer-reviewed journals 2023 Théo Leschevin June 2023 • Coulter C. \u0026 Shirlow P. (dir.), Space and Polity , « Special Issue – Northern Ireland and the 25 years of the Good Friday Agreement » Sectarian, Recreational, or Anti-Social? Interpreting juvenile violence in post-conflict Belfast Abstract The conflict which had opposed unionists and nationalists in Northern Ireland, mostly taking place in deprived urban areas, officially ended in 1998. In North Belfast, in 2018 and 2019, there was a resurgence of collective street violence involving groups of teenagers from unionist and nationalist communities. This reopened a critical question: despite peace and in spite of the attention given to juvenile violence since the 2000s, how come it remained such an issue? To suggest an answer, I focus on the persistent obstacles local actors face when assessing the nature of this public problem, and attempt to gain detachment from its social dynamics. I first return to the emergence of the notion of ‘recreational rioting’, and how its critique led to the rise of two other approaches to the problem, based on whether those behaviours should be considered political or not. I argue that it is the unsettled controversy which characterises the current stalemate in the management of juvenile violence. Finally, I argue that this situation is an effect of the liminal stage of increasing interdependencies between unionist and nationalist communities. This work is based on ethnographic observations of both City Council and local working groups, interviews, and media coverage. Preprint Citation Document source DOI 2022 Théo Leschevin June 2022 • Sociologie , Vol. 14, n°2, Rubrique Enquête, p. 143-158 Renegotiate the code. Community distinction and urban pacification in Northern Ireland. Abstract Today, parts of Belfast are marked by a division between Catholics and Protestants as a result of a long civil conflict. This article examines how members of the local Catholic and Protestant communities are increasingly driven to \"tell\" and \"not tell\" what distinguishes them. As this ambivalent situation persists, they have the choice of either relying on a communal code of distinction to informally and implicitly manage this dual aspiration, or attempting to publicise this situation. If the code of distinction is part of a legacy of communal conflict, becoming less and less justifiable in a pacified society, how do Northern Irish people attempt to use it as a springboard for peace, to overcome the contradictions they experience in practice? We first outline the implicit code of distinction and how actors learn and reiterate it, as well as how the same actors subsequently aspire to abandon this code. Finally, we analyse attempts to expose the contradictions arising from this situation. The intervention of third parties is then central to the greater regulation of the code of communal distinction and of its risks. When the code is managed in a more detached way, it allows both forms of difference and indifference to be claimed positively, offering opportunities to overcome this ambivalent condition. Preprint Citation Document source chapters in collective works 2022 Théo Leschevin Février 2022 • Cédric Moreau de Bellaing et Dany Trom (dir.), Raisons Pratiques , « La sociologie politique de Norbert Elias », Vol. 30, Paris, EHESS, p. 187-215. Au pied du mur. La réflexivité entravée des protestants et catholiques de Belfast quant à leurs interdépendances Abstract Afin de comprendre la situation de blocage qui entoure actuellement la gestion des \"murs de la paix\" à Belfast Nord, à la fois dénoncés comme maintenant la ségrégation entre catholiques et protestants et défendu comme dispositif de protection façe aux violences urbaines, nous suggérons que la vie sociale nord-irlandaise est encalminée dans un type de situation que Norbert Elias qualifie de « double-bind ». Nous montrons que les résidents font en effet de plus en plus l’expérience d’aspirations potentiellement contradictoires à l’égard de ces murs, ce qui peut être rapporté à une condition de seuil. Il s’agit là d’une période liminale dans l’accroissement des chaînes d’interdépendances au sein de sociétés différenciées. Ce chapitre repart ainsi des débats qui ont pris forme autour du maintien des peace walls de Belfast, et la création d’un groupe professionnel spécialisé dans la gestion de ces murs pour protéger les communautés de violences interposées et favoriser la pacification de leurs relations. Nous montrons que ces murs comme ces « gardiens » sont l’expression d’un travail de maintien de la « bonne distance » à respecter entre communautés. Ensuite, nous montrons que ce travail s’inscrit dans un processus sociohistorique de long terme qui découle de l’accroissement des chaînes d’interdépendances au sein de la société nord-irlandaise. Que cette tension accroisse une double contrainte à se protéger et à s’intégrer signale qu’elle atteint aujourd’hui un nouveau seuil. Le texte défend alors l’idée que les difficultés rencontrées par les acteurs pour monter en réflexivité sur cette double contrainte ne sont intelligibles que lorsque l’on considère la situation au regard de la configuration plus vaste dans laquelle le problème s’insère : à savoir l’ensemble politico-social que forment les îles Britanniques et irlandaise. Preprint Citation Document source book reviews 2021 Théo Leschevin April 2021 • Lectures , Les comptes rendus « Norbert Elias : Moyen Âge et procès de civilisation » Citation Document source research dissemination 2025 Théo Leschevin July 2025 • The Conversation Ce que les émeutes racistes de Ballymena disent de l'Irlande du Nord (in French) Document source 2022 Marguerite Déon • Maxime Clément • Alice LeGall • Baptiste Legros • Théo Leschevin • Asmaa Marta • Valentin Rio March 2022 • Reflex - Revue interne du LIER-FYT, p.78-80 Dossier Thématique : L'État et ses épreuves Citation 2021 Théo Leschevin June 2021 • A.O.C , rubrique Analyse Covid, Brexit et Irlande du Nord : l'ironie du sort Citation Document source Théo Leschevin June 2021 • Cyril Lemieux et Pierre Nocerino (ed.), Dis/continuités , Juin 2021, Paris, LIER-FYT, pp. 78-81. Conflits communautaires. Le double-bind d'Ardoyne. Preprint Citation Document source 2016 Théo Leschevin March 2016 • Carnet Hypothèses des étudiant-e-s du Master Sociologie de l'EHESS, édité par Romain Juston-Morival Changer d'horizon disciplinaire par l'élaboration d'un projet de recherche Preprint Citation Document source ongoing \u0026ndash; \u0026ldquo;Unis dans le détachement ? Quand le Brexit renforce une nationalisation ambivalente à l\u0026rsquo;intérieur des îles Britanniques » for the Revue Française de Sciences Politiques.\n\u0026ndash; « Pour une théorie des communautés », French translation N. Elias, « Towards a theory of communities » in C. R. Bell et H. Newby (dir.), The Sociology of Community : a selection of readings, New-York, Franck Cass, 1974, pp. ix-xlii.\n","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/publications/","summary":"filter by topic:\nall Northern Ireland Belfast violence community Elias double-bind pacification Brexit state publications in peer-reviewed journals 2023 Théo Leschevin June 2023 • Coulter C. \u0026 Shirlow P. (dir.), Space and Polity , « Special Issue – Northern Ireland and the 25 years of the Good Friday Agreement » Sectarian, Recreational, or Anti-Social? Interpreting juvenile violence in post-conflict Belfast Abstract The conflict which had opposed unionists and nationalists in Northern Ireland, mostly taking place in deprived urban areas, officially ended in 1998.","title":"publications"},{"content":"postdoctoral research ANR TROC project (2023-2024) From September 2023 to August 2024, I was a postdoctoral researcher within the ANR TROC project (Terrorists Reintegration in Open Custody), coordinated by Nicolas Amadio (DynamE, Université de Strasbourg), at the Fondation Maison des Sciences de l\u0026rsquo;Homme (FMSH).\nThis multidisciplinary research project studies the obstacles and drivers of the social reintegration of individuals convicted of terrorism or suspected of radicalization. Grounded in desistance studies, it focuses on the links between the individual and collective dimensions of social reintegration, and explores two hypotheses:\nReintegration practices in open custody require identifying the issues related to the (mis)adjustments of interpretations and expectations between the main actors involved and social demands. Individual resistance and the impact of collectives working against violent radicalization are sustained by both individual and collective dynamics. The project uses a mixed-methods approach, combining quantitative analysis — factorial survey studies and data collected from judicial and professional documents — with qualitative research interviews and narrative methods. Data is drawn from actors across the penal chain, civil society organizations, families, and collectives, as well as from the trajectories of individuals concerned.\nFunded by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR PRC CE39 — Global Security and Cybersecurity) and co-funded by the Secrétariat Général de la Défense et de la Sécurité Nationale (SGDSN), the project brings together four research teams led by Nicolas Amadio (DynamE, Université de Strasbourg), Massil Benbouriche (PSITEC, Université de Lille), Bruno Domingo (FMSH, Université de Toulouse) and Rachel Sarg (2L2S, Université de Lorraine).\nEmergence(s) \u0026ldquo;Ennemis\u0026rdquo; project (2022-2023) I was a postdoctoral researcher from 01/09/2022 to 31/08/2023 within the Enemy project, led by Alexandre Rios-Bordes.\nIn 2022, the research project received the support of the Émergence(s) program of the city of Paris. It is directed by the historian Alexandre Rios-Bordes. It brings together historians, sociologists, anthropologists, political scientists and jurists. This project aims at studying and comparing contemporary situations in which the identification by a State of an \u0026ldquo;internal enemy\u0026rdquo; undermines the distinction between two orders of violence that are a priori irreducible: the external order of war and the internal order of crime.\nThe team works on a set of international cases, systematically analyzed and compared according to three axes of analysis:\nthe process of enemisation , i.e. the social and political radicalization of adversity; the transformations engendered in political institutions and in the dominant definition of codes of conduct; the long-term processes that led to the internalization of threats within nation-states. Since November 2020, I have participated in the development of the research project, the collective implementation of the main lines of research as well as data collection and the organization of scientific events (two study days, an international symposium, several annual workshops).\nI brought to this project my own expertise on the case of Northern Ireland. In particular, I investigated the evolution of State knowledge regarding paramilitaries and their mandate in disadvantaged urban areas. I also conducted a systematic data collection of legislation and jurisprudence relating to \u0026ldquo;Enemy law\u0026rdquo;. The establishment of this database consists in listing, collecting, analyzing and classifying the legal standards (legislation, regulations, case law) enacted with the specific intention of facing \u0026ldquo;internal enemies\u0026rdquo;. I also handled the implementation of a website aimed at highlighting this collective research, as well as that of its team of researchers.\nPhD Thesis Thesis defended on November 26, 2021, entitled \u0026ldquo;The Communities of Moderns. A sociology of political ambivalence in Northern Ireland\u0026rdquo;.\nsummary The 1998 Good Friday Agreement in Northern Ireland ended a conflict between the Unionist Protestant and Nationalist Catholic communities in Belfast. Since then, the city has faced unexpected difficulties, such as the rise in juvenile suicides and the resumption of street clashes. The origin of these difficulties is often attributed to the desire of the inhabitants to continue the war or to a lack of support from the British State for them. But as the state pays increasing attention to the situation and members of both communities take part in pacification initiatives, how is it that these difficulties cannot be overcome?\nBased on an immersive ethnographic fieldwork of more than two years, semi-structured interviews and examination of local archives, this thesis analyzes moments of the daily life of the Protestant and Catholic communities of North Belfast, as well as the management of local political issues. She argues that the difficulties faced by the people of North Belfast stem not from a dynamic of conflict reproduction or social exclusion, but from the hampered politicization of their interdependencies and its contradictory effects.\nIn the first part, we show, from the study of local controversies on the increase in juvenile suicides and the emancipation of women from their communities, the importance of developing an approach centered on the concept of political ambivalence. This notion makes it possible to positively understand a double aspiration, shared by the two communities, to community attachment and detachment. Thus, the tendency to reduce existing tensions to forms of \u0026lsquo;resistance\u0026rsquo; amounts to ignoring the fact that these actors already take into account the local solidarities in which they are increasingly involved, while seeking to emancipate themselves from their Catholic or Protestant community.\nIn a second part, we show that some actors are already trying to politicize, and even to regulate the political ambivalence that such a situation provokes for them. For this, we start from the study of the management of street sociability and sports relations. The secondary distancing that some residents collectively demonstrate to claim, publicize and regulate this political ambivalence in integration devices favorable to its expression, highlights its most contradictory effects. This politicization nevertheless finds its fulcrum in the reproaches of hypocrisy, naivety or manipulation, addressed by local actors and external commentators in these debates. Consideration of community interdependencies is reduced to a return to the past, and collective emancipation to a denial of differences in political interests.\nIn a final chapter, we show that the situation in North Belfast is only understandable in view of the growing chains of interdependencies that have taken shape between Protestant and Catholic communities within the British Isles since the beginning of the 19th century. On the one hand, the industrial revolution and the changes in professional relations went with a greater integration of communities between them, on the other, they led to a greater awareness of their differences, precipitating the emergence of Unionist and Nationalist ideals. The first dynamic renders the politicization of this double aspiration increasingly desirable, the second makes the supports for this politicization more and more conflictual. The local difficulties of the peace process become explicable because of the double bind to which these concomitant evolutions lead. The British state struggles to support a greater distancing from the way in which this double aspiration already marks the participation of these communities in political modernity.\nThesis co-supervised by Yannick Barthe (CNRS, LIER-FYT), Dominique Linhardt (CNRS, LIER-FYT) and Colin Coulter (Maynooth University, Ireland).\nContractual doctoral student at EHESS-PSL (2017-2020) and John and Pat Hume Scholarship at Maynooth University, Ireland (2017-2021).\n","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/research/","summary":"postdoctoral research ANR TROC project (2023-2024) From September 2023 to August 2024, I was a postdoctoral researcher within the ANR TROC project (Terrorists Reintegration in Open Custody), coordinated by Nicolas Amadio (DynamE, Université de Strasbourg), at the Fondation Maison des Sciences de l\u0026rsquo;Homme (FMSH).\nThis multidisciplinary research project studies the obstacles and drivers of the social reintegration of individuals convicted of terrorism or suspected of radicalization. Grounded in desistance studies, it focuses on the links between the individual and collective dimensions of social reintegration, and explores two hypotheses:","title":"research"},{"content":"teaching areas General sociology Political sociology Comparative politics Sociology of knowledge English for academic \u0026 professional purposes Media \u0026 communication studies Publishing \u0026 information sciences Controversy analysis Qualitative methodologies area 1 – general sociology, theories and methods 2022-2023 • Université Sorbonne Paris Nord\nIntroduction to Sociology L1 AES, tutorial, 30h, in French\n2021-2022 • Université Paris Est Créteil Contemporary Sociology L1 AEI, tutorial, 36h, in French 2021-2022 • Université Paris Est Créteil General Sociology L1 AEI, tutorial, 60h, in English 2018-2020 • EHESS Co-supervision of a Master's dissertation Research Master in General Sociology Co-supervised with Cédric Moreau de Bellaing (ENS, CNRS – LIER-FYT). 2025-2026 • École Estienne From Target Groups to Social Groups: Generations \u0026 Beyond DSAA / Master DSCM, lecture + tutorial, 16h, in English 2025-2026 • IUT Paris Rives de Seine Sociology of Consumption BUT3 Information \u0026 Communication (Advertising), tutorial, 16h, in English area 2 – language, culture and communication 2025-2026 • IUT Paris Rives de Seine On Air: Making a Podcast BUT1 Information \u0026 Communication, tutorial, 36h, in English 2024-2026 • IUT Paris Rives de Seine English BUT1 Information \u0026 Communication, tutorial, 36h, in English 2024-2026 • IUT Paris Rives de Seine The Future of Books BUT2 Information \u0026 Communication – Book Trades, tutorial, 34h, in English 2024-2026 • IUT Paris Rives de Seine Libraries in Context BUT3 Information \u0026 Communication – Book Trades (Documentation \u0026 Libraries), tutorial, 10.5h, in English 2024-2026 • IUT Paris Rives de Seine Publishing in the Anglo-American Sphere BUT3 Information \u0026 Communication – Book Trades (Publishing \u0026 Book Trade), tutorial, 28h, in English 2024-2026 • IUT Paris Rives de Seine International Media BUT3 Information \u0026 Communication – Organizational Communication, tutorial, 14h, in English area 3 – political sociology 2022-2024 • Université Paris 8 Conflicts, Wars, Securities M1 Political Science, lecture/tutorial, 39h, in French 2023-2024 • Université Reims Champagne-Ardenne Social Intervention and Development M1, S2, in French 2021-2022 • Sciences Po Reims Conducting an interview-based research: the case of social conflicts and the integration of \"communities\" M1 Political Science, lecture/tutorial, 39h, in English 2021-2024 • Sciences Po Paris Comparative Politics L2, tutorial, 48h, in French area 4 – sociology of knowledge and science studies 2022-2023 • Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne Socio-anthropology of Knowledge L3 Sociology, lecture, 24h, in French 2018-2021 and 2023 • Sciences Po Paris Sciences \u0026 Society L2 Europe/North America and Europe/Africa tutorial, 16h, in French and English administrative responsibilities Since 2024 • Maître de conférences (Associate Professor) Université Paris Cité – IUT de Paris Rives de Seine Department of Information and Communication 2023-2024 • Professional internship supervision Data collection, analysis and publication from administrative sources Ministries of the Interior, Justice, and Labour. Since 2022 • Member of the admission jury ENS Saclay B/L competitive exam, sociology Since 2021 • Evaluator of Parcoursup applications Collège Universitaire de Sciences Po Paris ","permalink":"https://theoleschevin.netlify.app/teaching/","summary":"teaching areas General sociology Political sociology Comparative politics Sociology of knowledge English for academic \u0026 professional purposes Media \u0026 communication studies Publishing \u0026 information sciences Controversy analysis Qualitative methodologies area 1 – general sociology, theories and methods 2022-2023 • Université Sorbonne Paris Nord\nIntroduction to Sociology L1 AES, tutorial, 30h, in French\n2021-2022 • Université Paris Est Créteil Contemporary Sociology L1 AEI, tutorial, 36h, in French 2021-2022 • Université Paris Est Créteil General Sociology L1 AEI, tutorial, 60h, in English 2018-2020 • EHESS Co-supervision of a Master's dissertation Research Master in General Sociology Co-supervised with Cédric Moreau de Bellaing (ENS, CNRS – LIER-FYT).","title":"teaching"}]