Kornberger Et Al
Making Things Valuable C
Kornberger Et Al
Making Things Valuable C
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This book provides insights into the process of valuation. Valuing is understood as a plural activity where 'pricing' things is just one way of signifying value. Socio-economic reality is constituted through different 'orders of worth' that are grounded in the way people 'praise' and 'prize' things.
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This book provides insights into the process of valuation. Valuing is understood as a plural activity where 'pricing' things is just one way of signifying value. Socio-economic reality is constituted through different 'orders of worth' that are grounded in the way people 'praise' and 'prize' things.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 306
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Oktober 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 160mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9780198712282
- ISBN-10: 0198712286
- Artikelnr.: 47868385
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 306
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Oktober 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 160mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9780198712282
- ISBN-10: 0198712286
- Artikelnr.: 47868385
Martin Kornberger is professor of Strategy and Organisation at Copenhagen Business School and visiting professor at the WU Wien. He received his PhD in philosophy from the University of Vienna, followed by a decade at the University of Technology, Sydney where he worked last as associate professor for design and management and research director of the Australian government's Creative Industry Innovation Centre. Next to articles in scholarly journals such as Organization Studies, Accounting, Organization and Society, Strategic Organization and others he is author of Brand Society. How Brands Transform Management and Lifestyle (Cambridge University Press, 2010) and has co-authored two textbooks, one on strategy and one on organization behavior. Lise Justesen is Associate Professor at the department of Organization at Copenhagen Business School She has an MA in philosophy from Copenhagen University and a PhD from the Doctoral School of Managing Technologies, Copenhagen Business School. She is particularly interested in the intersections between organizing, management technologies and non-financial accounting practices. Her work is inspired by actor-network theory. Anders Koed Madsen is Assistant Professor at Aalborg University Copenhagen, where he is part of the Techno Anthropoligy Reseach Group. Drawing on his background in philosophy, new media studies and organizational theory, Anders does research on the way new forms of digital data and analytical software set new conditions for the production of knowledge in public and private organizations as well as in academia. In order to explore this question, he is simultaneously engaged in experimenting with digital methods and anlyzing organizations working with similar techniques. Theoretically Anders is inspired by various strands of Science and Technology Studies as well as different versions of pragmatic theory. Jan Mouritsen is professor at Copenhagen Business School. His research is oriented towards understanding the role of Management Technologies and Management Control in various organisational and social contexts. He focuses on empirical research and attempts to develop new ways of understanding the role and effects of controls and financial information in organisations and society. He is interested in translations and interpretations made of (numerical) representations (e.g. as in budgets, financial reports, non-financial indicators and profitability analysis) throughout the contexts they help to illuminate. His interests include Intellectual Capital and Knowledge Management, Technology Management, Operations Management, New Accounting and Management Control. Jan Mouritsen is currently editorial board member of 22 academic journals in the various areas of management and business research including accounting, operations management, IT and knowledge management.
* Introduction: Making Things Valuable
* 1: Wendy Nelson Espeland and Stacy E. Lom: Noticing Numbers: How
Quantification Changes What We See and What We Dont
* 2: Paolo Quattrone: Value in the Age of Doubt: Accounting as a
Maieutic Machine
* 3: Pierre Pénet: Rating Reports as Figuring Documents: How CRAs Build
Scenarios of the Future
* 4: Neil Pollock and Gian Marco Campagnolo: Subitizing Practices and
Market Decisions: The Role of Simple Graphs In Business Valuations
* 5: Liliana Doganova and Fabian Muniesa: Capitalization devices:
business models and the renewal of markets
* 6: Trine Pallesen: Valuable assemblages or assembling values
* 7: Sabina Du Rietz: Valuation devices orientation to each other:
Imitation and differentiation among devices valuing companies social
and environmental performance
* 8: Laure Cabantous and Théodora Dupont-Courtade: What is a
catastrophe model worth? The (e)valuative practices of cat analysts
in insurance companies
* 9: José Ossandón: The enactment of Economic Things: The Objects of
Insurance
* 10: Juliane Reinecke: The politics of values: A case study of
conflict-free gold
* 11: Celia Lury and Noortje Marres: Notes on Objectual Valuation
* 12: Anders Koed-Madsen: Tracing Data Paying Attention: Interpreting
digital methods through valuation studies and Gibsons theory of
perception
* 1: Wendy Nelson Espeland and Stacy E. Lom: Noticing Numbers: How
Quantification Changes What We See and What We Dont
* 2: Paolo Quattrone: Value in the Age of Doubt: Accounting as a
Maieutic Machine
* 3: Pierre Pénet: Rating Reports as Figuring Documents: How CRAs Build
Scenarios of the Future
* 4: Neil Pollock and Gian Marco Campagnolo: Subitizing Practices and
Market Decisions: The Role of Simple Graphs In Business Valuations
* 5: Liliana Doganova and Fabian Muniesa: Capitalization devices:
business models and the renewal of markets
* 6: Trine Pallesen: Valuable assemblages or assembling values
* 7: Sabina Du Rietz: Valuation devices orientation to each other:
Imitation and differentiation among devices valuing companies social
and environmental performance
* 8: Laure Cabantous and Théodora Dupont-Courtade: What is a
catastrophe model worth? The (e)valuative practices of cat analysts
in insurance companies
* 9: José Ossandón: The enactment of Economic Things: The Objects of
Insurance
* 10: Juliane Reinecke: The politics of values: A case study of
conflict-free gold
* 11: Celia Lury and Noortje Marres: Notes on Objectual Valuation
* 12: Anders Koed-Madsen: Tracing Data Paying Attention: Interpreting
digital methods through valuation studies and Gibsons theory of
perception
* Introduction: Making Things Valuable
* 1: Wendy Nelson Espeland and Stacy E. Lom: Noticing Numbers: How
Quantification Changes What We See and What We Dont
* 2: Paolo Quattrone: Value in the Age of Doubt: Accounting as a
Maieutic Machine
* 3: Pierre Pénet: Rating Reports as Figuring Documents: How CRAs Build
Scenarios of the Future
* 4: Neil Pollock and Gian Marco Campagnolo: Subitizing Practices and
Market Decisions: The Role of Simple Graphs In Business Valuations
* 5: Liliana Doganova and Fabian Muniesa: Capitalization devices:
business models and the renewal of markets
* 6: Trine Pallesen: Valuable assemblages or assembling values
* 7: Sabina Du Rietz: Valuation devices orientation to each other:
Imitation and differentiation among devices valuing companies social
and environmental performance
* 8: Laure Cabantous and Théodora Dupont-Courtade: What is a
catastrophe model worth? The (e)valuative practices of cat analysts
in insurance companies
* 9: José Ossandón: The enactment of Economic Things: The Objects of
Insurance
* 10: Juliane Reinecke: The politics of values: A case study of
conflict-free gold
* 11: Celia Lury and Noortje Marres: Notes on Objectual Valuation
* 12: Anders Koed-Madsen: Tracing Data Paying Attention: Interpreting
digital methods through valuation studies and Gibsons theory of
perception
* 1: Wendy Nelson Espeland and Stacy E. Lom: Noticing Numbers: How
Quantification Changes What We See and What We Dont
* 2: Paolo Quattrone: Value in the Age of Doubt: Accounting as a
Maieutic Machine
* 3: Pierre Pénet: Rating Reports as Figuring Documents: How CRAs Build
Scenarios of the Future
* 4: Neil Pollock and Gian Marco Campagnolo: Subitizing Practices and
Market Decisions: The Role of Simple Graphs In Business Valuations
* 5: Liliana Doganova and Fabian Muniesa: Capitalization devices:
business models and the renewal of markets
* 6: Trine Pallesen: Valuable assemblages or assembling values
* 7: Sabina Du Rietz: Valuation devices orientation to each other:
Imitation and differentiation among devices valuing companies social
and environmental performance
* 8: Laure Cabantous and Théodora Dupont-Courtade: What is a
catastrophe model worth? The (e)valuative practices of cat analysts
in insurance companies
* 9: José Ossandón: The enactment of Economic Things: The Objects of
Insurance
* 10: Juliane Reinecke: The politics of values: A case study of
conflict-free gold
* 11: Celia Lury and Noortje Marres: Notes on Objectual Valuation
* 12: Anders Koed-Madsen: Tracing Data Paying Attention: Interpreting
digital methods through valuation studies and Gibsons theory of
perception