I am an organizational sociologist with longstanding interests in educational sequences, lifelong learning, alternative educational forms, and the formal organization of knowledge. At Stanford I convene the Pathways Network (pathways.stanford.edu) and the Futures Project on Education and the Learning Society (learningsociety.io).
Sendroiu, I., & Stevens, M. (2025). What was the Cold War? Theorizing a Medium Durée: Introduction to a special issue of Social Science History, 'What Was the Cold War?'. SOCIAL SCIENCE HISTORY.
Levine, E. J., & Stevens, M. L. (2024). Neither state nor market: competitive emulation in higher education. STUDIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION.
Stevens, M. L. (2024). Financing Higher Education in America. CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGY-A JOURNAL OF REVIEWS, 53(2), 103–107.
An op-ed coauthored by Professor Mitchell Stevens argues that improving the institutions most students attend will do more than affirmative action policies to bring racial equity in higher education.
GSE faculty members Ari Kelman, Emily Levine, and Mitchell Stevens argue that universities can engender renewed public trust by acknowledging errors of the past.