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La entrevista con Dario Azzellini se inició con mucha prisa en vista de que el autor de libro „El negocio de la guerra“, recientemente publicado por Monte Avila Editores, debia tomar un vuelo con destino a su pais de origen, Alemania. Aùn así, el Correo del Orinoco tuvo la oportunidad de conversar en exclusiva con el escrito acerca de su titulo y algo mas. ...
Trata-se de uma réplica ao texto "Uma filosofia da história tornada sóbria", de Georg Lohmann. Nessa réplica o autor justifica que procura vincular uma teoria exigente da evolução social com a da consciência falível, porém não derrotista, de um ethos kantiano que nos obriga a contribuir de algum modo para a melhoria do mundo.
We analyze the relations between ethnographic data and theory through an examination of materiality in research practices, arguing that data production is a form of material theorizing. This entails reviewing and (re-)applying practice-theoretical discussions on materiality to questions of ethnography, and moving from understanding theory primarily as ideas to observing theorizing in all steps of research practice. We introduce “pocketing” as a heuristic concept to analyze how and when ethnographic data materializes: the concept defines data’s materiality relationally, through the affective and temporal dimensions of practice. It is discussed using two examples: in a study on everyday architectural experience where ethnographic data materialized as bodies affected by architecture; and in a study on digital cooperation where research data’s materialization was distributed over time according to the use of a company database. By conceptualizing data’s materiality as practice-bound, “pocketing” facilitates understanding the links between data and theory in ethnographic data production.
Erfolgreiche Unternehmer wie SAP-Mitbegründer Dietmar Hopp oder Microsoft-Gründer Bill Gates sind Pioniere von Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Regelmäßig erichten die Medien über ihre vielfältigen sozialen Aktivitäten und animieren damit andere Unternehmen, sich in ähnlicher Weise zu engagieren. Welche Motive stecken dahinter? Wollen diese Firmen etwas Gutes für die Gesellschaft tun oder bestimmen Strategien, die von negativen Folgen kapitalistischen Handelns ablenken sollen, ihr altruistisches Handeln? Fußen betriebliche Maßnahmen zur Vereinbarkeit von Beruf und Familie auf sozialem Engagement, oder macht der demografi sche Wandel die verstärkte Integration von Frauen erst notwendig?
Max Webers Beitrag zum "Grundriß der Sozialökonomik" ist uns in zwei verschiedenen Fassungen überliefert worden. Ihnen entsprechen zugleich zwei unterschiedliche Fassungen seiner soziologischen Grundbegriffe, die beide auf Ferdinand Tönnies' Hauptwerk "Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft" Bezug nehmen. Ausgehend von dem bei Tönnies beschriebenen Gegensatz von Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft wird zum einen Webers Gebrauch der Begriffe "Vergemeinschaftung" und "Vergesellschaftung" rekonstruiert, wie er sich in seinem Aufsatz "Über einige Kategorien der verstehenden Soziologie" von 1913 und im älteren Teil von "Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft" niedergeschlagen hat. Zum anderen werden die Veränderungen aufgezeigt, die Weber an diesen Kategorien im Rahmen der Neufassung seiner soziologischen Grundbegriffe 1920 vorgenommen hat. Es wird dabei der Nachweis erbracht, daß es Weber erst mit der endgültigen Fassung seiner Grundbegriffe gelungen ist, die Marktvergesellschaftung und die anstaltsmäßige Vergesellschaftung im Rahmen einer einheitlichen Terminologie zu beschreiben.
Interview with Dario Azzellini, author of The Business of War and the new documentary film, Comuna Under Construction. What is it about Venezuela that is so interesting? Since 2003 I have practically lived in Venezuela. What motivates me is that I am interested in the social transformation process happening here. It’s a different type of revolution, a new left that draws from all the experiences of the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s. ...
Let me start with a reminiscence: a few weeks ago, I was sitting in one of my preferred cafés in Paris, le Café Odéon- Théâtre de l’Europe, a vivid place near the Jardin de Luxembourg in the heart of the university quarter. I realised that the waiter was wearing a shirt with the letters "Defend Paris", which he explained to be a statement against the forces that make Paris an uneasy place to live, a defiance against the powerful and social injustice. With a mixture of rebellion and idealism, he added that he understands himself as part of a "Reclaim Your City" Movement, thus representing what is central for urban citizenship today: a republican defence against forces that make a metropolitan city a trademark to be sold to people who can afford it, but increasingly less a home for ordinary people who want to live in the city. Walking through the streets, passing a small jewelry shop, a place of distinguished understatement showing a picture of Meghan Markle wearing "rose"-earrings displayed in the window, the term "zombie urbanism" came to my mind – a term used by Jonny Aspen, professor at the Institute of Urbanism and Landscape in Oslo (See Bjerkeset and Aspen (forthcoming 2020) and here), to describe a cliché-like way of dealing with urban environment by developers and designers – a "staged urbanism", in which urban features are used as a means for selling, marketing and branding. This kind of city-marketing can prove quite successful: whereas the burning of Notre Dame mobilised hundreds of millions of donations within a short period of time, the burning of the National Museum in Rio de Janeiro soon after, extinguishing 200 years of documentation of cultural memory, mobilised only 225.000 Euros (state 1.4.2019). ...
The Muskoka Initiative – or the Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) Initiative has been a flagship foreign policy strategy of the Harper Conservatives since it was introduced in 2010. However, the maternal health initiative has been met with a number of key criticisms in relation to its failure to address the sexual and reproductive health needs of women in the Global South2. In this article, I examine these criticisms and expose the prevalent and problematic discourse employed in Canadian policy papers and official government speeches pertaining to the MNCH Initiative. I examine the embodiment of the MNCH and how these references to women’s bodies as “walking wombs” facilitate: the objectification and ‘othering’ of women as mothers and childbearers; a discourse of ‘saving mothers’ in a paternalistic and essentialist language; and the purposeful omission of gender equality. Feminist International Relations (IR) and post-colonial literature, as well as critical/feminist Canadian foreign policy scholarship are employed in this paper to frame these critiques.
In den zahlreichen Beiträgen zum "Jubeljahr der 1968er-Bewegung" kommen oft ehemalige Aktive, Historikerinnen und Experten zu Wort. Doch wie blicken eigentlich Aktivistinnen und Aktivisten des 21. Jahrhunderts auf diese Zeit zurück? Dieser Frage hat sich ein zweijähriges Forschungsprojekt am Institut für Politikwissenschaft der Goethe-Universität gewidmet.