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'Floating things' and methodological drift: Accounting for haunted materialities in the North Pacific Ocean
In: Social studies of science: an international review of research in the social dimensions of science and technology, Band 54, Heft 4, S. 536-556
ISSN: 1460-3659
In this article I follow the mystery of millions of tons of materials washed out to sea by the March 2011 Japan tsunami: a massive wave of lost materials expected to reach North American shores that never seems to officially arrive. I bring Gordon's conceptualization of haunting together with STS conversations about absence and invisibility to build on feminist approaches that do not take as given what is missing or what should be done. I begin by situating efforts to respectfully distinguish materials survivors call 'floating things' amidst a sea of concern for ocean plastic pollution. These efforts are then contrasted with what I initially perceived as the institutional erasure of floating things at sea, re-counting how some practices work to ensure materials can be ignored, cleaned-up, or used for other kinds of ocean science research. Yet, floating things refuse to disappear completely, as potential traces wash up on beaches, trajectories are modeled back into existence, and individual practices exceed institutional obligations. I argue that attending to hauntings by listening to ghosts and drifting with them is necessary for justice-oriented forms of care for absences. In the case of floating things, this means honoring survivor relations while resisting the perpetuation of Pacific narratives of danger from the outside.
Mortality Differentials, the Racial and Ethnic Retirement Wealth Gap, and the Great Pandemic
In: NBER Working Paper No. w31200
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Book Review: The Privileges of Wealth: Rising Inequality and the Growing Racial Divide
In: Review of radical political economics, Band 51, Heft 1, S. 169-172
ISSN: 1552-8502
Plastic Naturecultures: Multispecies Ethnography and the Dangers of Separating Living from Nonliving Bodies
In: Body & society, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 23-47
ISSN: 1460-3632
A jellyfish surrounds a plastic fragment, merging the synthetic material with its body; a water agency poster warns of dangerous plastic bottle 'fish' in the Mediterranean; marine organisms take shelter on and under synthetic materials. These are the denizens of a growing realm marine ecologists call the 'plastisphere', where sea life and plastics meet. Building upon multispecies ethnography, science and technology studies interrogations of nature/culture divides and the practical work of classification, this article explores the indeterminacy – the very plasticity – of the category of 'species' as it is engaged in seriousness and irony, with living and nonliving bodies. First, I draw on participant observation at a nonprofit marine institute laboratory in California to trace the travels of plastic-creatures through attempts to disentangle them in the pursuit of scientific knowledge. Here volunteers sort tiny plastic bits from animal ones under the microscope, enacting material boundaries as they decide what gets counted as life (not plastic) and what does not (plastic). Second, I follow movements of plastic-creatures through public education campaigns, paying particular attention to assumptions about belonging and agency enacted with assumptions about whether and when plastic-species should or should not meet. I argue that the 'danger' of plastic relationships lurks not in associations but in the very categories used to know and live with forms of plastic and forms of life, in the kinds of belonging that emerge with kinds of materials, and in the failure to recognize the impossibility of their separation.
Crafting a NATO Brand: Bolstering Internal Support for the Alliance through Image Management
In: Contemporary security policy, Band 35, Heft 1, S. 73-95
ISSN: 1743-8764
Buchbesprechungen - Michael Sachs/Helmut Siekmann (Hrsg.), Der grundrechtsgeprägte Verfassungsstaat, Festschrift für Klaus Stern zum 80. Geburtstag
In: Die öffentliche Verwaltung: DÖV ; Zeitschrift für öffentliches Recht und Verwaltungswissenschaft, Band 67, Heft 4, S. 164-163
ISSN: 0029-859X
Crafting a NATO brand: bolstering internal support for the alliance through image management
In: Contemporary security policy, Band 35, Heft 1, S. 73-95
ISSN: 1352-3260, 0144-0381
World Affairs Online
Gyre Plastic : Science, Circulation and the Matter of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch
In global oceans, circulating current systems called gyres concentrate floating plastic waste into garbage patches far from land. This dissertation describes how the Great Pacific Garbage Patch accumulating between California and Japan comes to matter as an environmental problem and public concern at the turn of the 21st century. It draws on participant observation, interviews, historical and textual analysis to "follow" plastic as it circulates - with water, images, people, knowledge and marine life - from the ocean, through laboratories and beyond. By tracing the intersecting trajectories of multiple materials, I take a problem often blamed on activist exaggeration or media misrepresentation and show how the garbage patch emerges with a diversity of collective practices. The production and sharing of knowledge not only shapes the garbage patch, but also the kinds of solutions and care that are possible in return. For some, the garbage patch becomes a solid 'trash island' twice the size of Texas in need of cleanup; for others, a whole new realm of inseparable associations between synthetics and life called the plastisphere. Plastic, however, continues to escape from these attempts to measure, know, cleanup and otherwise control it, challenging the cultural and political foundations of science and ecology. I argue that caring for the ocean requires responding to plastic in all its natural-cultural relationships, as it transforms humans and environments alike
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Well‐Being of Elderly People Living in Nursing Homes: The Benefits of Making Friends
In: Kyklos: international review for social sciences, Band 66, Heft 1, S. 153-171
ISSN: 1467-6435
SummaryUsing French data collected in 2007 from a sample of about 2,000 elderly people living in nursing homes, this paper investigates the role that individual characteristics play in satisfaction with life and depression. Following psychological studies that have highlighted the benefits of social interactions on individual well‐being, I focus in particular on the role played by making friends in the nursing home. Results from random effect ordered Probit models show that both satisfaction with living conditions and feeling of depression are much more influenced by making friends in the institution than by visits from family and relatives or other individual background characteristics. These findings may be interpreted as evidence of a relational return to friendship within nursing homes.
Foreign direct investment in the enlarged EU: do taxes matter and to what extent?
Foreign direct investment is of increasing importance in the European Union. This paper estimates the effect of taxes on foreign direct investment (FDI) flows and on three sub-components of these flows for the countries of the en- larged European Union. The model in the spirit of gravity equations robustly explains FDI flows between the 25 member states. Sample selection needs to be addressed in the estimation. We show that the different subcomponents of FDI should and indeed do react differently to taxes. After controlling for unobserved country characteristics and common time effects, the top statutory corporate tax rate of both, source and host country, turn insignificant for total FDI and investment into equity. However, high source country taxes clearly increase the probability of firms to re-invest profits abroad and lower the percentage of debt financed FDI. This might reflect profit re-allocation to avoid taxes. Market size factors have the expected signs for total FDI. Non-productivity adjusted wages as determinants of FDI are less robust.
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Foreign Direct Investment in the Enlarged EU: Do Taxes Matter and to What Extent?
In: Bundesbank Series 1 Discussion Paper No. 2006,13
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