Limits to Liberal Government: An Alternative History of Governmentality
In: Administration & society
ISSN: 0095-3997
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In: Administration & society
ISSN: 0095-3997
In: International affairs, Volume 91, Issue 5, p. 1215-1217
ISSN: 0020-5850
In: Modern Asian studies, Volume 49, Issue 5, p. 1657-10
ISSN: 0026-749X
In: The Global Ethic and Law: Intersections and Interactions, p. 36-41
In: Public Administration and Policy in the Caribbean; Public Administration and Public Policy, p. 77-94
In: Social Networks, Political Institutions, and Rural Societies, p. 281-310
In: Corporate Governance in India: Change and Continuity (ed. Indian Institute of Corporate Affairs) (Oxford University Press, Forthcoming)
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The paper addresses two issues arising from Foucault's work. One concerns his treatment of liberalism in The Birth of Biopolitics, which is probably more familiar through the work of the (mostly) British 'governmentality' school, and the other concerns a
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In: 31 Georgia State University Law Review 471
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In: Media and Politics in New Democracies, p. 181-196
In: Journal of Financial Perspectives, Volume 3, Issue 2
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In: Latin American research review, Volume 50, Issue 2, p. 248-255
ISSN: 1542-4278
In: In Debate with Kari Palonen, p. 113-120
In: European journal of communication, Volume 30, Issue 1, p. 7-21
ISSN: 1460-3705
Der Aufsatz zeigt, dass in staatlichen Administrationen angewendete Verfahren der Beobachtung und der Aufzeichnung auf zufällige Weise in die Forschungspraktiken verschiedener Wissenschaten eingingen, so auch in die Archäologie. Rundschreiben oder Fragebögen, Bestandslisten und Berichte, das französische Modell medizinischer Post-mortem- Untersuchungen sowie Verfahren, die Topographen, Piloten und Militäringenieure verwendeten, gingen aus der bürokratischen in die wissenschatliche Praxis über. Die archäologischen Objekte, die in die Sammlungen kamen, waren somit (wissenschatlich) aubereitet mittels Verfahren, die ursprünglich für die staatliche Verwaltung, die Konstruktionstechnik oder die Wirtschat entwickelt worden waren. ; This paper shows that the protocols for observing and recording employed by different bureaucratic departments of state administration were fortuitously incorporated into the practices of several disciplines, including archaeology. Circulars or questionnaires, inventories and records, the French model for post-mortem medical examinations, and the protocols used by topographers, pilots, and military engineers moved from bureaucracy to scientific practice. Thus, objects were brought into collections having been formatted by procedures inherited from diverse traditions of state administration, construction, or commercial procedures.
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