Technological Trajectories
In: Futures: the journal of policy, planning and futures studies, Band 24, Heft 6, S. 580
ISSN: 0016-3287
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In: Futures: the journal of policy, planning and futures studies, Band 24, Heft 6, S. 580
ISSN: 0016-3287
In: Experimental futures
In: technological lives, scientific arts, anthropological voices
In: Forum qualitative Sozialforschung: FQS = Forum: qualitative social research, Band 11, Heft 2
ISSN: 1438-5627
Der vorliegende Beitrags beschäftigt sich mit der sozialen Integration von Flüchtlingen in ein Aufnahmeland, indem nachvollzogen wird, wie deren ethno-soziale Präferenzen und Praktiken sich im Zeitverlauf verändern. Im Besonderen interessiert, wie soziale Verlaufskurven nach der Ankunft im Aufnahmeland mit Änderungen der persönlichen Identität verknüpft sind.
Ein inhaltliches Ergebnis ist, dass Identität und ethno-soziale Praktiken in die je konkrete Migrationsbiografie, in die Alltagserfahrungen und antizipierten Zukunftsvorstellungen der betroffenen Personen eingebettet sind. Dies hat zugleich wichtige methodologische Implikationen mit Blick auf das Potenzial, das aus biografischen Narrationen als qualitativem Datenmaterial erwächst. Indem Vorteile und Probleme im Umgang mit diesen Narrationen diskutiert werden, soll nicht nur ein Beitrag zu Forschung geleistet werden, sondern auch für Sozialarbeiter/innen und andere, die Dienstleistungen im Kontext sozialer Integration erbringen und die den hier vorgestellten Ansatz nutzen können, um Spezifika des sozialen Lebens von/mit Flüchtlingen zu eruieren.
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Development Trajectories in Africa" published on by Oxford University Press.
In: Journal of income distribution: an international journal of social economics
To analyse in-work poverty, we build a model in which human capital and productivity varies over time with experience, time-related obsolescence and poverty. The model reveals four possible trajectories: poverty to exclusion, permanent poverty, the emergence from poverty, and finally, from poverty to non-poor worker and then back to poverty. It also generates the main traits of in-work poverty in terms of skill, age, duration, and family characteristics. Both skill-biased technical change and globalization boost in-work poverty and exclusion. When unemployment compensation is introduced, being a poor worker can be a rational choice for individuals who accept lower pay today to earn more tomorrow.
In: New trajectories in law
"Obligations: New Trajectories in Law provides a critical analysis of the role of obligations in contemporary legal and social practices. As rights have become the preeminent feature of modern political and legal discourse, the work of obligations has been overshadowed. Questioning and correcting this dominant image of our time, this book brings obligations back into view in a way that fits better with the realities of contemporary social life. Following a historical account of the changing place and priorities of obligations in modernity, the book analyses how obligations and practices of obedience are core to understanding how law sustains conditions of inequality. But it also explores the enduring role obligations play in furthering individual and collective well-being, highlighting their significance in practices that prioritize human and environmental needs, common goods, and solidarity. In doing so, it also offers an alternative and cogent assessment of the force, and the potential, of obligations in contemporary societies. This original jurisprudential contribution will appeal to an academic and student readership in law, politics, and the social sciences"--
International audience ; This article is an attempt to rethink the interconnectedness between discourse and subjective agency and to highlight methodological approaches to studies of gendering processes as a central part of it. The notions of desire, subjectification and biography are understood as mediated by narratives and metaphors, as a movement between the individual and her contexts. The transformative methodological project suggests conceptual retoolings as new analytic approaches to empirical analysis of the kind that aims to provide complex understanding of subjectification processes in lived life. The empirical field brought into the article as a means of explication deals with university cultures, and more specifically with a case of an assistant professor caught in conflicts between official academic discourses and more subtle political and gendered discourses. The author takes the concepts of desire trajectories, discursive authority, multifaceted discursive realities and past experiences (biography) into an analysis of the enacting forces involved in the processes of exclusion that finally ejects the protagonist in the empirical case from the university field.
BASE
In: Patterns of Protest, S. 39-58
In: New trajectories in law
"This book examines how legal institutions reify the value of death in the twenty-first century. Its starting point is that bio-technological innovations have extended life to such an extent that death has become an epistemological problem for legal institutions. It explores how legal definitions of death are subject to the governing logic of economisation, how legal technologies for registering a death reshape what kind of deaths are counted during a pandemic, and how technologies for recycling cadaveric tissue problematise the legal status of the corpse. The question that unites each chapter is how legal institutions respond to technologies that bring death before their laws. The book argues for an interdisciplinary approach, informed by the writings of Georges Bataille, Wendy Brown, Georges Canguilhem and Michel Foucault, to understand how legal epistemologies are increasingly disrupted, challenged, and countered by technologies that repurpose death to extend, nourish and foster human life. It contends that legal theorists and social scientists need to rethink doctrinal perspectives of law when theorising how law defines the moment of death, shapes what kind of deaths count, and recycles the debris of the dead. This book will appeal to a broad international readership with research interests in critical theory, political theory, legal theory or death studies; and it will be particularly useful for teachers and students who are searching for an accessible entry point to the study of the intersections between law and death"--
In: New trajectories in law
"This book provides an overview and assessment of infrastructure's legal and governance underpinnings. Infrastructure is often thought of as a term referring only to the physical entities - pipes, cables, utility poles, highways, airports - that facilitate the transmission of water, gas, telecommunications and electricity, as well as enabling both private and public transportation, and serving to house more or less public services such as health care and schools. However, infrastructure planning and implementation are not reducible to bricks and mortar. The complex process requires drawing from and sometimes re-inventing or recycling legal tools, from construction contracts to financing 'deals', which are often taken for granted by both practitioners and urban studies scholars. These are as important today as they were when the first railway lines were built, and to a large extent they remain just as invisible: the avalanche of drawings and photographs of planned or in-process fancy buildings tends to hide from view the behind the scenes negotiations and decision-making that had to happen before construction could start, and which in some cases continue afterwards. This book does not ignore the material and nonhuman aspects of infrastructure. But, focusing on the legal and governance underpinnings of infrastructure projects, via a series of key terms that refer to hybrid legal processes, the book offers an important socio-legal supplement to the current 'infrastructure turn'. This book will be of interest to students in the areas of sociolegal studies, urban sociology, urban studies, urban geography, planning, public law and contract law, as well as practitioners involved in infrastructure projects"--
In: New trajectories in law
In: 40th IAEE International Conference, Singapore, June 18-21, 2017
SSRN
Working paper
In: Review of international political economy, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 1-5
ISSN: 1466-4526
In: Myths of the Archaic State, S. 161-179