The social infrastructures that constitute both public and private administration are increasingly entangled with digital code, big data, and algorithms. While some argue these technologies have blown apart the strictures of bureaucratic order, we see more subtle changes at work. We suggest that far from a radical rupture, in today\u27s digitizing society, there are strong traces of the logic and techniques of Max Weber\u27s bureau; a foundational concept in his account of the symbiotic relationship between modernity, capitalism, and social order. We suggest the manner through which these techniques have shaped contemporary systems of social administration helps explain the remarkable legitimacy digital governance has acquired. We do this b...
In this article, I argue that the debate about the irrational consequences of rationality, discussed...
This article introduces the reader to the so called ‘digital labor debate’ in the context of the pol...
The term Weberian bureaucracy refers to Max Weber’s (1864–1920) ideal type (or model) of rational bu...
The social infrastructures that constitute both public and private administration are increasingly e...
© Indiana University Maurer School of Law. The social infrastructures that constitute both public an...
The use of the idea of bureaucracy to make sense of the power of algorithms in today’s society is ex...
Production, distribution, and consumption of digital use values occur today in a sociotechnological ...
Anything that can be automated, will be. The “magic” that digital technology has brought us — self-d...
The article critically investigates various approaches to “smart” governance, from algorithmic regul...
The digital sphere can be studied as one of the most mature materialisations of the process of abstr...
The article shows the evolution of the theoretical understanding of the “monitoring revolution”, inc...
During the last decades, the world has been going through major technological, economic and social c...
Are robots taking away our jobs? Those who ask this question have misunderstood digitalisation - it ...
The economic and social consequences of technological change in capitalist societies have always bee...
Cybernetic governmentality weakens the capacity of resistant subjectivities to struggle against neol...
In this article, I argue that the debate about the irrational consequences of rationality, discussed...
This article introduces the reader to the so called ‘digital labor debate’ in the context of the pol...
The term Weberian bureaucracy refers to Max Weber’s (1864–1920) ideal type (or model) of rational bu...
The social infrastructures that constitute both public and private administration are increasingly e...
© Indiana University Maurer School of Law. The social infrastructures that constitute both public an...
The use of the idea of bureaucracy to make sense of the power of algorithms in today’s society is ex...
Production, distribution, and consumption of digital use values occur today in a sociotechnological ...
Anything that can be automated, will be. The “magic” that digital technology has brought us — self-d...
The article critically investigates various approaches to “smart” governance, from algorithmic regul...
The digital sphere can be studied as one of the most mature materialisations of the process of abstr...
The article shows the evolution of the theoretical understanding of the “monitoring revolution”, inc...
During the last decades, the world has been going through major technological, economic and social c...
Are robots taking away our jobs? Those who ask this question have misunderstood digitalisation - it ...
The economic and social consequences of technological change in capitalist societies have always bee...
Cybernetic governmentality weakens the capacity of resistant subjectivities to struggle against neol...
In this article, I argue that the debate about the irrational consequences of rationality, discussed...
This article introduces the reader to the so called ‘digital labor debate’ in the context of the pol...
The term Weberian bureaucracy refers to Max Weber’s (1864–1920) ideal type (or model) of rational bu...