In addition to his director at Max Planck, Beckert is a member of the Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences at the University of Cologne. He is a faculty member and chair of the International Max Planck Research School on the Social and Political Constitution of the Economy, a doctoral program run jointly by the MPIfG and the Faculty of Management at the University of Cologne. He is a member of the Joint Council of the Max Planck Sciences Po Center on Coping with Instability in Market Societies at Sciences Po Paris, which investigates how individuals, organizations, and nation-states cope with new forms of economic and social instability in Western societies and is a unique innovation in Franco-German collaboration in the social sciences reflecting the Max Planck Society's aim to put its operations on an international footing. Beckert is an editor of the European Journal of Sociology, a member of the editorial board of Socio-Economic Review,. He was council member of the Economic Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association.
Research
Economies as social orders within societies
Jens Beckert’s current work at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies reflects a research program he has developed with his codirector which “proposes to invest in a theory of social action as the most promising approach to a deeper understanding and an improved theorization of the economy as a socially and politically constituted system of action.” “Any economy is socially and politically constructed. The way it is socially embedded reflects both prevailing systems of meaning and the results of political ‘market struggles’ over social regulation. Investigating institutional regulation of the economy requires studying how economies are constituted as social orders within societies.”
Markets from a sociological perspective
In his research cluster on the “Sociology of Markets,” Beckert focuses on “markets as the core institution of capitalist economies,” seeking “to understand the functioning of markets from a distinctively sociological perspective.” Analyzing markets “from a Weberian viewpoint as arenas of social struggle in which actors confront each other under conditions of competition,” he explores the “social, cultural, and political underpinnings for the development of the order of markets.”
Embeddedness of economic action
“The problem of uncertainty market actors face when making decisions” is a key issue in Beckert’s research, which examines “the coordination problems market participants must cope with” – the problems of value, competition, and cooperation. “Uncertainty also provides a theoretical opening to explain the embeddedness of economic action.”
2005: Best Law Book of the Year, by the German law journal :de:Neue Juristische Wochenschrift|Neue Juristische Wochenschrift, his book Unverdientes Vermögen
2005: Prize of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities donated by the Commerzbank Foundation. In its tribute, the Academy states that Jens Beckert is “one of the most original and productive sociologists of his generation, both nationally and internationally. He is considered a leading proponent of a new economic sociology .”
Imagined Futures: Fictional Expectations in the Economy. In: Theory and Society 42, 219-240.
Institutional Isomorphism Revisited: Convergence and Divergence in Institutional Change. In: Sociological Theory 28, 150-166.
How Do Fields Change? The Interrelations of Institutions, Networks, and Cognition in the Dynamics of Markets. In: Organization Studies 31, 605-627.
The Social Order of Markets. In: Theory and Society 38, 245-269.
Agency, Entrepreneurs and Institutional Change: The Role of Strategic Choice and Institutionalized Practices in Organizations. In: Organization Studies 20, 777-799.