The social infrastructures that constitute both public and private administration are increasingly entangled with digital data, big data, and algorithms. While some argue that 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's digitising society, there are strong traces of the logic and techniques of Max Weber's bureau; a foundational concept in his account of the symbiotic relationship between modernity, capitalism and social order
The article critically investigates various approaches to “smart” governance, from algorithmic regul...
The term Weberian bureaucracy refers to Max Weber’s (1864–1920) ideal type (or model) of rational bu...
Cybernetic governmentality weakens the capacity of resistant subjectivities to struggle against neol...
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...
At the point where Max Weber meets Michel Foucault, Béatrice Hibou analyzes the political dynamics u...
The article shows the evolution of the theoretical understanding of the “monitoring revolution”, inc...
This chapter aims to shift the glance from a very peculiar feature—both fundamental and under-studie...
In an age of algorithmic governance and pre- emptive action, the prevail ing schematic of polit ics ...
Public sector organisations undergo digital transformation just as private sector ones. Literature s...
Production, distribution, and consumption of digital use values occur today in a sociotechnological ...
This article investigates the notion of the digital denizen and his/her relationship with modern inf...
Contingent as they are upon technological globalization, contemporary notions of global citizenship ...
Are robots taking away our jobs? Those who ask this question have misunderstood digitalisation - it ...
The article critically investigates various approaches to “smart” governance, from algorithmic regul...
The term Weberian bureaucracy refers to Max Weber’s (1864–1920) ideal type (or model) of rational bu...
Cybernetic governmentality weakens the capacity of resistant subjectivities to struggle against neol...
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...
At the point where Max Weber meets Michel Foucault, Béatrice Hibou analyzes the political dynamics u...
The article shows the evolution of the theoretical understanding of the “monitoring revolution”, inc...
This chapter aims to shift the glance from a very peculiar feature—both fundamental and under-studie...
In an age of algorithmic governance and pre- emptive action, the prevail ing schematic of polit ics ...
Public sector organisations undergo digital transformation just as private sector ones. Literature s...
Production, distribution, and consumption of digital use values occur today in a sociotechnological ...
This article investigates the notion of the digital denizen and his/her relationship with modern inf...
Contingent as they are upon technological globalization, contemporary notions of global citizenship ...
Are robots taking away our jobs? Those who ask this question have misunderstood digitalisation - it ...
The article critically investigates various approaches to “smart” governance, from algorithmic regul...
The term Weberian bureaucracy refers to Max Weber’s (1864–1920) ideal type (or model) of rational bu...
Cybernetic governmentality weakens the capacity of resistant subjectivities to struggle against neol...