Crisis Management in Crisis?
In: Administrative theory & praxis: ATP ; a quarterly journal of dialogue in public administration theory, Band 30, Heft 2, S. 155-183
ISSN: 1949-0461
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In: Administrative theory & praxis: ATP ; a quarterly journal of dialogue in public administration theory, Band 30, Heft 2, S. 155-183
ISSN: 1949-0461
In: The world today, Band 59, Heft 5, S. 25-26
ISSN: 0043-9134
World Affairs Online
In: The Japanese economy, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 3-19
ISSN: 1944-7256
In: The ecologist, Band 30, Heft 7, S. 56-57
ISSN: 0012-9631, 0261-3131
World Affairs Online
In: Probation journal: the journal of community and criminal justice, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 52-53
ISSN: 1741-3079
In: Government & opposition: an international journal of comparative politics, Band 28, Heft 4, S. 558
ISSN: 0017-257X
In: Public policy research: PPR, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 71-77
ISSN: 1744-540X
In: Theory, culture & society: explorations in critical social science, Band 28, Heft 6, S. 91-112
ISSN: 1460-3616
This article addresses the seemingly paradoxical proliferation of coded systems designed to guarantee our safety and crises that endanger us. These two phenomena, it argues, are not opposites but rather complements; crises are not accidental to a culture focused on safety, they are its raison d'être. Mapping out the temporality of networks, it argues that crises are new media's critical difference: its exception and its norm. Although crises promise to disrupt memory – to disturb the usual programmability of our machines by indexing 'real time' – they reinforce codes and coded logic: both codes and crises are central to the production of mythical and mystical sovereign subjects who weld together norm with reality, word with action. Codes and states of exception are complementary functions, which render information and ourselves undead. Against this fantasy and against the exhaustion that crisis as norm produces, the article ends by arguing that we need a means to exhaust exhaustion, to recover the undecidable potential of our decisions and our information through a practice of constant care.
In: Space and Culture, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 226-229
ISSN: 1552-8308
Sanitary Crisis, Civilizational Crisis is the translation of Michel Maffesoli's Crise sanitaire, crise civilisationnelle. This paper can be taken as his pronouncement on the civilizational crisis that the COVID-19 pandemic acutely reveals. Maffesoli's text urges one to see beyond secondary causes or dramatic representations of the pandemic as a sanitary crisis, and to consider the primary, and tragic, causes of this event, understood as a crisis that marks the exhaustion of the logic of modernity. Following from a longstanding critique of the decadence of modernity and, by extension, of an "official society" ordered and controlled by an out-of-touch and morbid elite, Maffesoli makes unequivocally clear that this global pandemic is a direct consequence of a globalized progressivist, economicist, and utilitarian civilizational paradigm. The paper takes up the task of reflecting on how relationality, being-together, and being-with, can be thought in our current moment of civilizational crisis.
In: Journal of risk analysis and crisis response, Band 2, Heft 3, S. 157
ISSN: 2210-8505
World Affairs Online
World Affairs Online
In: Europe report, 160
In: Background report
World Affairs Online