This article builds on advances in social ontology to develop a new understanding of how mainstream economic modelling affects reality. We propose a new framework for analysing and describing how models intervene in the social sphere. This framework allows us to identify and articulate three key epistemic features of models as interventions: specificity, portability and formal precision. The second part of the article uses our framework to demonstrate how specificity, portability and formal precision explain the use of moral hazard models in a variety of different policy contexts, including worker compensation schemes, bank regulation and the euro-sovereign debt crisis
According to Ferreira et al (2003), the activity of developing products takes on a prominent posture...
This paper discusses a bibliographic review portraying the product armchair versus humans. There was...
Thus far, many contributions in the field of design have described design’s role in the life cycle o...
This paper provides an inferentialist account of model-based understanding by combining a counterfac...
Methodologically, we suggest that modelling must start by an enumeration of the actors and instituti...
As the managerial art and science of coordinating the movement of people, finance and things, logist...
In recent years several authors have argued that developing countries should aim to target a stable ...
For approximately two thousand years, human thinkers have been attempting to define a behaviour, re...
This paper invites readers to look into how beliefs about future events help to better understand or...
Joining a vibrant conversation on spatial rhetorics, this project proposes a framework for rhetorica...
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) evolution varies from benign to aggressive forms, and its prognosis remains ...
In an opening paper Leon Feinstein reviews methodological criticism of his influential research into...
II Workshop on Identity, Memory and Experience. Getafe (Spain), March 1-4th, 2011In Shame and Neces...
The area of nanomedicine has witnessed a surge in research interest in recent years owing to the hug...
Visible Economies presents the work of artists and photographers Sutapa Biswas, Emma Charles, Anna F...
According to Ferreira et al (2003), the activity of developing products takes on a prominent posture...
This paper discusses a bibliographic review portraying the product armchair versus humans. There was...
Thus far, many contributions in the field of design have described design’s role in the life cycle o...
This paper provides an inferentialist account of model-based understanding by combining a counterfac...
Methodologically, we suggest that modelling must start by an enumeration of the actors and instituti...
As the managerial art and science of coordinating the movement of people, finance and things, logist...
In recent years several authors have argued that developing countries should aim to target a stable ...
For approximately two thousand years, human thinkers have been attempting to define a behaviour, re...
This paper invites readers to look into how beliefs about future events help to better understand or...
Joining a vibrant conversation on spatial rhetorics, this project proposes a framework for rhetorica...
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) evolution varies from benign to aggressive forms, and its prognosis remains ...
In an opening paper Leon Feinstein reviews methodological criticism of his influential research into...
II Workshop on Identity, Memory and Experience. Getafe (Spain), March 1-4th, 2011In Shame and Neces...
The area of nanomedicine has witnessed a surge in research interest in recent years owing to the hug...
Visible Economies presents the work of artists and photographers Sutapa Biswas, Emma Charles, Anna F...
According to Ferreira et al (2003), the activity of developing products takes on a prominent posture...
This paper discusses a bibliographic review portraying the product armchair versus humans. There was...
Thus far, many contributions in the field of design have described design’s role in the life cycle o...