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2015년 6월 2일 화요일

배리 웰먼 - 네트워크화된 개인주의Networked Individualism

새로운 사회 운영 시스템 

: 네트워크화된 개인주의Networked Individualism가 지배하는 디지털 세상의 현재와 미래




Kiezen voor de kudde - Choosing the herd



W.G.J. (Jan WillemDuyvendak

http://www.jwduyvendak.nl/index.php/about

Breaking down the State


Editor:
Jan Willem Duyvendak, James Jasper

Series:
Protest and Social Movements
In this important book, Jan Willem Duyvendak and James M. Jasper bring together an internationally acclaimed group of contributors to demonstrate the complexities of the social and political spheres in various areas of public policy. By breaking down the state into the players who really make decisions and pursue coherent strategies, these essays provide new perspectives on the interactions between political protestors and the many parts of the state“from courts, political parties, and legislators to police, armies, and intelligence services. By analyzing politics as the interplay of various players within structured arenas, Breaking Down the State provides an innovative look at law and order versus opposition movements in countries across the globe.

City in Sight - Dutch Dealings with Urban Change


Editor:
Frank Hendriks, Jan Willem Duyvendak, Mies van Niekerk
Series:
NICIS Publications on Urban Research
Huge social transformations and turbulent political events – 9/11 and the political murders of Pim Fortuyn and Theo van Gogh – have put urban issues high on the political agenda of the Netherlands. Against this background, the contributors to this volume bring the city in sight from various disciplinary perspectives and relate their research findings to both national and international debates on urban problems. In this way, City in Sight not only provides insight into the most urgent questions of contemporary cities in the Netherlands, but also how these relate to similar problems in other countries as well.  

The Politics of Home

Belonging and Nostalgia in Europe and the United States




This book addresses prominent debates in Western Europe and the United States on themes as seemingly diverse as national identity and nostalgia, migration and integration, gender relations and 'caring communities'. At the most fundamental level, all of these debates deal with the right to belong and the ability to 'feel at home'. The book examines what has happened to the 'home feelings' of the majority under the influence of the two major revolutions of our times: the gender revolution and increased mobility due to globalization. It analyzes how 'home' has been politicized, examines the risks of this politicization, as well as exploring alternative home-making strategies that aim to transcend the 'logic of identities' where one group's ability to feel at home comes at the expense of other groups.

Crafting Citizenship

Negotiating Tensions in Modern Society

Menno Hurenkamp, Evelien Tonkens, Jan Willem Duyvendak

According to politics and the media, immigration and individualization are driving citizens apart but in neighbourhoods social life is often thriving, depending on the talents of particular citizens or the inventiveness of local institutions. Drawing on quantitative and qualitative research among hundreds of active and less active citizens, and an analysis of a vast array of newspaper articles, this book explores the crafting of citizenship, examining new forms of active citizenship and the actual conditions that hinder social cohesion.

MENNO HURENKAMP is a researcher at the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.  
EVELIEN TONKENS is a professor of Sociology at the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
JAN WILLEM DUYVENDAK is a professor of Sociology at the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands. He has previously published The Politics of Home.



Creativity and the City How the Creative Economy is Changing the City 
Author: Richard FloridaRobert KloostermanCharles LandryArnold ReijndropJeroen SarisJohn Thackaza

Richard Florida, the economist whose The Rise of the Creative Class brought into common usage the terms "creative class" and "creative city," may be American, but as a contributor to Creativity and the City he inquires how his ideas might function in the laboratory of Dutch policy. Florida has posited that as industrial and service jobs move to low-wage countries, creativity will become a larger force in economic growth, and that a creative sector of scientists, researchers, architects, designers, consultants, and their ilk will come to drive the economy. He believes that those cities fostering and attracting such an elite will have the greatest potency: businesses will locate where there is talent. Dutch politicians, administrators, and intellectuals have been reading him avidly, and see practical applications for his ideas in the redevelopment of former industrial zones, in new business activity in the old city centers, and in the sorts of new economic activity that they hope will serve the country well in the next century. Creativity and the City explores potential political, social and societal outcomes--along with a wealth of practical urban policy questions--in 15 essays, including contributions from Richard Florida, Charles Landry, Nachtwacht Amsterdam (Amsterdam's "Night-time Mayor"), John Thackaza and others. 


창조적인 사람들은 어떻게 행동하는가

 : 빅데이터와 사회물리학