While the institutionalization of some of Colombia’s largest family-owned businesses is often explained with reference to the global economic liberalization of the 1990s and the need for smooth intergenerational transference of property and management, this article connects the increasing popularity of these specialized managerial measures to long-standing structures of social hierarchy and group formation in the country. Drawing on twenty months of ethnographic research among members of industrial elite business-owning families, I argue that the increasing prevalence of these measures cannot be fully explained without attention to dynamics of symbolic social distinction in the country. I ground family business governance in its social cont...
Populations in developed societies are rapidly aging: fertility rates are at all-time lows while lif...
In this paper, I examine the challenges socially extended minds pose for mainstream, individualistic...
We live in an age of extreme corporate concentration, in which global industries are controlled by j...
This chapter in the edited collection 'Tricky Design: The Ethics of Things', explores the growing us...
A large proportion of long-term care for people with disabilities and/or long-term health conditions...
A large proportion of long-term care for people with disabilities and/or long-term health conditions...
The Troubled Families Programme, launched by the coalition in the aftermath of the 2011 riots, was t...
This paper revisits canonical thinking on international financial centres (IFCs) that understands th...
Sørensen and Torfing assert that “governance” has become a highly influential paradigm, able to inf...
This article explores different ways to interpret the extent to which (capitalist) critique influenc...
Conflicts surrounding the development of public lands are on the rise around the world. In the Unite...
Populations in developed societies are rapidly aging: fertility rates are at all-time lows while lif...
Populations in developed societies are rapidly aging: fertility rates are at all-time lows while lif...
Disintermediation is a concept well-understood in almost all industries. At its simplest, it refers ...
In this paper, I examine the challenges socially extended minds pose for mainstream, individualistic...
Populations in developed societies are rapidly aging: fertility rates are at all-time lows while lif...
In this paper, I examine the challenges socially extended minds pose for mainstream, individualistic...
We live in an age of extreme corporate concentration, in which global industries are controlled by j...
This chapter in the edited collection 'Tricky Design: The Ethics of Things', explores the growing us...
A large proportion of long-term care for people with disabilities and/or long-term health conditions...
A large proportion of long-term care for people with disabilities and/or long-term health conditions...
The Troubled Families Programme, launched by the coalition in the aftermath of the 2011 riots, was t...
This paper revisits canonical thinking on international financial centres (IFCs) that understands th...
Sørensen and Torfing assert that “governance” has become a highly influential paradigm, able to inf...
This article explores different ways to interpret the extent to which (capitalist) critique influenc...
Conflicts surrounding the development of public lands are on the rise around the world. In the Unite...
Populations in developed societies are rapidly aging: fertility rates are at all-time lows while lif...
Populations in developed societies are rapidly aging: fertility rates are at all-time lows while lif...
Disintermediation is a concept well-understood in almost all industries. At its simplest, it refers ...
In this paper, I examine the challenges socially extended minds pose for mainstream, individualistic...
Populations in developed societies are rapidly aging: fertility rates are at all-time lows while lif...
In this paper, I examine the challenges socially extended minds pose for mainstream, individualistic...
We live in an age of extreme corporate concentration, in which global industries are controlled by j...