Pierpaolo Donati


Pierpaolo Donati is an Italian sociologist and philosopher of social science, who is considered one of the main exponents of relational sociology and a prominent thinker in relational theory.

Biography

Donati was born in Budrio, a small town of medieval origin 17 km from Bologna. After high school, he enrolled in the faculty of physics at the University of Bologna, but, after two years, he decided to dedicate himself to the study of society and enrolled in the faculty of Political Sciences in the same university, where he got his M.A. degree in 1970. Then he went to the University of Milan to do a research for the National Research Council Italy on Italian entrepreneurship. In the years 1974-78 he attended the summer school of the ECPR at the University of Essex.
In 1980 he became full professor of sociology. In the years 1970-2016 he taught many different subjects in the fields of sociology, social theory, and social policy, in particular sociology of the family, health, citizenship, welfare, social capital, social services. In the same years, he lectured at the universities of Geneva, Gratz, Harvard, Chicago, Paris Sorbonne, Warsaw, Moscow, Navarra. In the years 1995-1998 he served as President of the Italian Sociological Association, and during the mandate 2001-2005 he served as Counsellor and Auditor of the Board of the International Institute of Sociology.
In 1997 he was appointed member of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. He has received the Doctorate Honoris Causa from the Lateran University in 2009 and from the Universitat Internacional de Catalunya in 2017 for his studies on the family and social policy. Acknowledged by the United Nations as IYF PATRON, in 2009 he has received the San Benedetto Prize for the promotion of Life in Europe and in 2015 the Cheryl Frank Memorial Prize for the book The Relational Subject, Cambridge University Press.

Works

Donati’s researches started with the idea of building a useful sociology to reform society according to a humanistic perspective. Actually, his writings became a long journey of reflections on the vicissitudes of modernity, its institutions, movements and ideologies, up to claiming that modernity dies and a new, after-modern society is born.

General overview

The starting point for searching a new theory was that of overcoming the theories that were dominant in the 1960s and 1970s. It was the time when sociology was elaborated within the framework of the nation-state and the welfare state understood as a compromise between capitalistic market and political democracy. The issue at stake, for sociology, was to understand the possible evolution of that sort of society. The primal intention of Donati’s works was to revise the Parsonian theory on society and modernity. It was about building a good theory of society by avoiding Parsons’ mistakes, notably the one to consider a model of society as the most advanced in a supposed evolutionary scale. On this line, it was necessary to find also a way out of all forms of neo-functionalism, e.g. J.C. Alexander’s and N. Luhmann’s theories. The analytical realism proposed by Parsons offered an interesting base of departure, but it was totally insufficient and misleading inasmuch as it ended building a constructivist, rather than realistic, sociology.
For Donati, sociological realism should become critical and relational.. Therefore, Donati left Parsons' analytical realism in his ‘Introduzione alla sociologia relazionale’ and subsequently in ‘Teoria relazionale della società’.

The 'Relational Society'

Donati’s sociology is oriented to show how a ‘relational society’ is constantly emerging through a morphogenetic process. To him, society is not a space ‘containing’ relations, but rather the very tissue of relations. Relations are necessary, while their form is contingent.  That’s why societies can take many different forms. They emerge as a ‘third’ in respect to the agents/actors.
To summarize. Any social formation is the emergent effect of reciprocal actions, reiterated over time by social actors/subjects occupying different positions in a societal configuration. Society is any social formation generated by virtue of social mechanisms that are relational and reflexive. While the “Relational Subject” is characterized by personal reflexivity, the ‘relational society’ is characterized what Donati calls ‘relational reflexivity’, which is different in kind from the inner reflexivity of the individual.
In other words, each and every society is characterized by a special relation’s form, what Donati calls ‘social molecule’. Modernity has its typical relational form, and so it is equally for post-modernity. Donati speaks of an after-modern society to indicate a relational society endowed with a new social molecule. The ‘relational society’ is described as a morphogenetic society.
The social relation’s target/goal is to select variations according to the type and degree of relationality that they entail, with a view to producing ‘relational goods’; the means for achieving the goal can be extremely diverse, but they must be such as to allow for the production of relational goods; the after-modern social molecule’s norms promote meta-reflexivity in so far as they involve the search for a non-fungible quality in social relations; the relation’s  guiding distinction is its difference in terms of ‘value’, that is, the relation is evaluated on the basis of the meaningful experience that it can offer in contrast to what can be offered by other types of relations. In a nutshell, for Donati this new social molecule gains ground if and to the extent that the primacy of the adaptive function is replaced by the criterion of the cultural value of social relationality. This is the concrete utopia of the “relational society”, which is meant to be subsidiary to the human being. It is subsidiary if and when it develops the virtuous qualities of the human being through proper social relations, i.e. when it configures relations in order to enhance the positively synergetic relationality between Ego and Alter. The symbolic code of subsidiarity differentiates itself from other ones, because it does not confer the primacy to a systemic function, but to the dignity of the human being.
Donati's sociology can be viewed as quite close to the versions based on network analysis, while it is in radical disagreement with the sociologies that Donati defines as ‘relationalist’, meaning relativist, pragmatist, processualist, characterized by a flat ontology, like Jan Fuhse’s, François Dépelteau’s, Chris Powell’s and many others. The importance of the ontological perspective goes back to the humanistic interests with which Donati started his journey, and is now reflected in the issue of how to trace the distinctions between the human beings and hybrids, actants, post-humans, trans-humans, smart sentient robots. His perspective must now confront the advent of the digital era with the increasing influence of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics as generator of different kinds of social relations.
In the years 2000-2018 Donati intensified the convergence with critical realism, which he had already adopted since the research of the 1970s, and with the idea of social morphogenesis, applied to topics such as family, business, associations, citizenship, civil society. Being a critical realist, his work has been criticised by other relational sociologists adopting different approaches, such as François Dépelteau and Chris Powell, Gholam Reza Azarian and Jan Fuhse. However Mathieu Deflem asked him for an autobiography for the book ‘’.
In recent years, Donati has pursued the intention of constructing a "relational theory of society" that is clearly distinct from what he calls ‘relationalist sociologies’, meaning those sociologies that profess cultural, ethical relativism and reduce relationships to pure procedural flows. With Simon Laflamme, Doug Porpora and many other sociologists, he insists on the difference between the "relational" approach and "relationalist" approaches for social sciences. This difference is the badrock for new studies on human relations vis-à-vis the spreading of artificial intelligence and robotics.

Publications

Donati has published more than 800 works. Many publications are available for download on Researchgate.

Main Books

and Christopher Powell have criticized Donati's relational sociology for attributing a structural reality and moral values to social relations, so as to produce an excessively rigid view of the fluid and procedural-transactional nature of social relations. For Gholam Reza Azarian, Donati’s paradigm does not represent a significant contribution that adds something relevant in respect to Harrison White’s relational sociology. Neil Gross reproaches Donati to express an obscure thought. Frédéric Vandenberghe thinks that Donati has not overcome functionalism as he claims and proposes a way to reconcile Donati’s relational sociology with Dépelteau’s processual sociology.
According to Barry Vaughan, Donati’s relational sociology “is a call to arms, sounding the alarm about the unwelcome effects of many social theories that threaten to drive the human out of the social or else submerge the human within the social and so drown out its distinctive individuality. By placing social relations at the heart of society, he hopes to preserve the uniqueness of both humanity and individual personality.
Margaret Archer has highlighted the convergences between Roy Bhaskar's critical realism and Donati's relational sociology, and subsequently has debated the place of Donati's sociology within a variety of relational sociologies.
Fabio Folgheraiter has applied the relational paradigm of Donati to the social work, developing new insights in it.
Other authors have used Donati's theory to explain how to make young people desist from committing crimes.
Christian Papilloud criticizes the paradigm of Donati proposing a revision of it with regard to the concept of reciprocity which, in his opinion, establishes a new sociology "through the relation"