1. Introduction: Being Modern at the fin-de-siècle -- 2. Mountaineers in the City -- 3. Mountaineers against the City -- 4. Constructing the Alps -- 5. Time -- 6. Risk and Danger -- 7. Beyond the Nation -- 8. The Indoors in the Outdoors -- 9. Conclusion -- .
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The book uses data from a range of European countries as well as comparisons with Asia and the USA in examining the 'consequences', or more accurately the inter-relationships between information and communications technologies (ICTs) and society at the mi
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Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
The paper traces the development of UK 'state of emergency' legislation through three 'scenes of emergency': the introduction of the Emergency Powers Act in 1920, a revision to the Act in 1964, and discussion within government departments about possible changes to emergency powers in 1973. Through these scenes, and contra to existing work on the state of emergency as an occasion for the intensification of sovereignty, I show how the introduction of and revision to 'state of emergency' legislation were occasions for a double concern – with the excessiveness of the state, as per Foucault's analysis of liberalism, but also for the excessiveness of events. In 'scenes of emergency' a specific 'state effect' was dis/re-assembled: the promise of the providential state that protected life through control of events. As emergency legislation was subject to deliberation and contestation, other versions of the state surfaced: beginning with the interested, classed, state and the tyrannical state as emergency powers were introduced and ending with the anxious state that loses faith in the efficacy of emergency powers in a world of changing events. As well as arguing that work on governing emergencies should be orientated to 'scenes of emergency' in which that which governs relates to excess, the paper suggests that assemblage approaches to the state should be concerned with dis/re-assembly.
In: Political geography: an interdisciplinary journal for all students of political studies with an interest in the geographical and spatial aspects, Band 78, S. 102172
In this article I argue that contemporary counterinsurgency functions as a type of violent environmentality that aims to pre-empt or prevent the formation of insurgencies. Counterinsurgency becomes anticipatory as the 'War on Terror' morphs into a global counterinsurgency campaign oriented to the threat of insurgency and insurgents. The insurgent is faced as a spectral network that appears and disappears as distinctions between states of war and peace collapse and war is fought 'amongst the people'. In this context, the population is targeted as an unstable collective of future friends and future enemies that contains an ever present potential to become (counter)insurgent. Through examples of PSYOPS and the dropping of leaflets from above, I describe how preventing or pre-empting the formation of insurgents becomes a question of controlling the environment through the creation of biopolitical 'effects'.
ABSTRACT:Ramblers often voiced reformist ideas about how cities and their inhabitants might be improved. This article demonstrates how the Manchester Ramblers' Federation utilized themes of freedom and order to define and regulate urban movements in rural space. It explores how this group of ramblers defined rambling as a 'readjustment' to illiberal aspects of urban life, portrayed other performances in the countryside as harmful and illegitimate and finally sought to utilize technologies drawn from their experience of urban culture to regulate conduct in the countryside.
In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 6, Heft 6, S. 823-827
In: Political geography: an interdisciplinary journal for all students of political studies with an interest in the geographical and spatial aspects, Band 96, S. 102608