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Daniel Neyland

    Can Markets Solve Problems?
    Organizational Ethnography
    The Everyday Life of an Algorithm
    • The Everyday Life of an Algorithm

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      4,0(2)Évaluer

      This open access book begins with an algorithm–a set of IF...THEN rules used in the development of a new, ethical, video surveillance architecture for transport hubs. Readers are invited to follow the algorithm over three years, charting its everyday life. Questions of ethics, transparency, accountability and market value must be grasped by the algorithm in a series of ever more demanding forms of experimentation. Here the algorithm must prove its ability to get a grip on everyday life if it is to become an ordinary feature of the settings where it is being put to work. Through investigating the everyday life of the algorithm, the book opens a conversation with existing social science research that tends to focus on the power and opacity of algorithms. In this book we have unique access to the algorithm’s design, development and testing, but can also bear witness to its fragility and dependency on others.

      The Everyday Life of an Algorithm
    • Organizational Ethnography

      • 192pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,0(2)Évaluer

      Focusing on the study of organizations, this resource provides valuable insights into both formal and informal contexts. It serves as an essential guide for researchers and students, offering a comprehensive understanding of organizational dynamics and structures. The material is designed to enhance knowledge and facilitate deeper exploration of organizational behavior.

      Organizational Ethnography
    • Can Markets Solve Problems?

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      1,0(1)Évaluer

      "Market-based interventions have been used in attempts to solve numerous public problems, from education to healthcare and from climate change to privacy. Scholars have responded persuasively through critiques of neoliberalism. In Can Markets Solve Problems? Daniel Neyland, Véra Ehrenstein, and Sveta Milyaeva propose a different route forward. There is no single entity knowable as "the market," the authors argue. Instead, they examine in detail the devices, relations, and practices that underpin these market-based interventions. Drawing on recent work in science and technology studies (STS), each chapter focuses on a different intervention and critically explores the market sensibility around which it is organized. Trade and exchange, competition, property and ownership, and investment and return all become the focus of a thorough exploration of what it means to intervene in public problems, how problems are composed, and how solutions are continually reworked. Can Markets Solve Problems? offers the first book-length STS enquiry into markets and public problems. Weaving together rich empirical descriptions and conceptual discussions, the book provides in-depth insights into the workings of these markets, their continuous evolution, and the consequences. The result is a new avenue of critical inquiry that moves between the details of specific policies and the always-emerging, collective features of this landscape of intervention."-- Provided by publisher

      Can Markets Solve Problems?