Academic literature on the topic 'Social ordering'

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Journal articles on the topic "Social ordering"

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Marshall, Jon. "Social Disorder as a Social Good." Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 2, no. 1 (March 30, 2010): 21–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.5130/ccs.v2i1.1337.

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In complex systems, disorder and order are interrelated, so that disorder can be an inevitable consequence of ordering. Often this disorder can be disruptive, but sometimes it can be beneficial. Different social groups will argue over what they consider to be disordered, so that naming of something as ‘disorder’ is often a political action. However, although people may not agree on what disorder is, almost everyone agrees that it is bad. This primarily theoretical sketch explores the inevitability of disorder arising from ordering systems and argues that a representative democracy has to tolerate disorder so as to function.
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Whelan, Glen. ""High-Tech Responsibility: Private Ordering, Public Ordering, and the Social Good"." Academy of Management Proceedings 2014, no. 1 (January 2014): 10226. http://dx.doi.org/10.5465/ambpp.2014.10226abstract.

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Whitten, Robert C. "The Self-ordering of Social Systems." Chesterton Review 20, no. 1 (1994): 139–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/chesterton199420139.

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Fleurbaey, Marc. "The Pazner-Schmeidler social ordering: A defense." Review of Economic Design 9, no. 2 (April 2005): 145–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10058-005-0124-z.

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Egede, Hephzibah. "AFRICAN ‘SOCIAL ORDERING’ GRUNDNORMS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN AFRICAN LEX PETROLEA?" Denning Law Journal 28 (November 15, 2016): 138–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.5750/dlj.v28i0.1273.

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This article interrogates the constitutional relevance of African social ordering rules in petroleum governance in Sub-Saharan African petroleum producing states. At the apex of the hierarchized African legal system is the national constitution which contains the basic norm or grundnorm derived from Western received law. Yet some African scholars have described African social ordering norms as grundnorms. This goes contrary to the conventional positivist position that “a legal system cannot be founded on two conflicting grundnorms.” This article will consider whether African social ordering norms have attained the level of a grundnorm as expounded in Kelsen’s pure theory. Utilising the Ekeh’s “two publics” model, it investigates how the basic norm for African social ordering grundnorms is presupposed.The article considers whether there is a conflict between the domanial system of state ownership as approved by African national constitutions and indigenous African social ordering norms premised on communitarianism. The article presents for analysis the recent study undertaken by African Petroleum Producers Association (APPA). This study considers whether it is possible to standardise the rules of petroleum contractual governance in Africa. This has led to some discussion on whether the standardisation of these rules could lead to the development of an African Lex Petrolea. This article explores the role that African social ordering norms can play in the development of a continent-wide Lex Petrolea.
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Jóhannesson, Gunnar Thór. "Emergent Vikings: The Social Ordering of Tourism Innovation." Event Management 14, no. 4 (December 1, 2010): 261–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.3727/152599510x12901814778104.

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Womack, Autumn. "Reprinting the Past/Re-Ordering Black Social Life." American Literary History 32, no. 4 (2020): 755–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajaa033.

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Abstract This essay recovers the cultural and political history of Arno Press’s landmark republication project, The American Negro: His History and Literature. Within the context of the “reprint revolution,” the period when large publishing houses clamored to publish African American texts, many of which had long been out of print, and with the backing of The New York Times, Arno Press reissued hundreds of titles by and about Black life. While these titles have come to shape the contours of African American literary scholarship, the project was immediately ensnared within debates about the future of Black political life. Knitting together personal correspondence, advertisements, and reviews, this essay situates the Arno Press endeavor with a longer history of Black print culture in which the past was harnessed in the name of imagining new political futures. Yet, within the context of the late 1960s “reprint revolution,” I show how the Black past was summoned in the service of a liberal fantasy of assimilation, social management, and racial reform. Drawing a line of connection between the technology of reprinting and its ideological workings, this essay calls for a critical consideration of the labor that we invite Black texts to undertake in the service of particular, and often limited, political visions.
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Lim, Jennifer Daphne. "Social Protection as Dialogue in Transnational Legal Ordering." Australian Year Book of International Law 36, no. 1 (October 1, 2019): 125–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/26660229_03601008.

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Abstract Recently, ‘social protection’ has attracted attention as a powerful tool for poverty alleviation. For example, Target 1.3 of the 2015 UN Sustainable Development Goals calls for nationally appropriate social protection systems for all. However, ‘social protection’ has defied common definition to date. Rather, it can denote very different anti-poverty approaches, policies, beneficiaries and end goals. This lack of clarity has led to confusion and contestation between international institutional actors, including the International Monetary Fund and International Labour Organization. By historically tracing the development of ‘social protection’ within the economics, human rights, development and labour ‘transnational legal orders’, this article argues that different usages reflect diverse and enduring discourses about the root causes of poverty and most effective solutions. In particular, neoliberalism continues to inform the work of international financial institutions, in a way that is misaligned with human rights understandings. This article proposes a new paradigm to advance engagement between different orders, being ‘social protection as dialogue’, to achieve more meaningful legal developments.
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Albert, Mathias. "World ordering: a social theory of cognitive evolution." International Affairs 95, no. 4 (July 1, 2019): 925–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ia/iiz110.

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Gremillion, Helen. "Psychiatry as social ordering: Anorexia nervosa, a paradigm." Social Science & Medicine 35, no. 1 (July 1992): 57–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0277-9536(92)90119-b.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Social ordering"

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Biles, Annabel, and mikewood@deakin edu au. "Envisioning Indochina: the spatial and social ordering and imagining of a French colony." Deakin University, 1997. http://tux.lib.deakin.edu.au./adt-VDU/public/adt-VDU20050815.113440.

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The emergence of Indochina in the French imagination was articulated in both representational and institutional modes. Representation involves the transmission of colonial ideals through more obtuse means; that is, through literary texts, travelogues, exhibitions, film and advertising. However, these textual sites feed from and invest in a material situation, which was the institutional arm of colonialism. Indochina was institutionally articulated in cartographic maps and surveys, in the new social spaces of cities and towns, in architectural and technological forms, through social technologies of discipline and welfare and in cultural and religious organisations. The aim of this thesis is to analyse, across a number of textual sites, the representation and institutionalisation of Otherness through the politics of space in the French colony of Indochina, Indochine in this sense becomes a spatial discourse. The French constructed a mental and physical space for Indochina by blanketing and suffocating the original cultural landscape, which in fact had to be ignored for this process to occur. What actually became manifest as a result of this projection stemmed from the French imagination. Just as the French manipulated space, language also underwent the same process of reduction. The Vietnamese script was latinised to make it more 'useable' and ‘accessible’. Through christening the union of Indochina; initiating a comprehensive writing reform; and renaming the streets in the colonial cities, the French used language us another tool for 'making transparent'. Furthermore, the colonial powers established a communication and transport network throughout the colony in an attempt to materialise their fictive (artificial) vision of a unified French Indochinese space. The accessibility and design of these different modes of transport reflected the gendered, racial and class divisions inherent in the colonial establishment. At the heart of representing and institutionalising Indochina was the desire to control and contain. This characterised French imperial ordering of space in the city and the rural areas. In rural areas land was divided into small parcels and alienated to individuals or worked into precise grids for the rubber plantation. In urban centres the native quarter was clearly demarcated from the European quarter which functioned as its modern, progressive Other. The rationale behind this segregation was premised on European, nineteenth century discourses of race, class, gender and hygiene. Influenced by Darwinian and neo-Lamarkian theories of race, this biological discourse identified the 'working class', 'women' and 'the native' as not only biologically but also culturally inferior. They were perceived as a potential, degenerative threat to the biological, cultural and industrial development of the nation. In the colonial context, space was thus ordered and domesticated to control the native population. Coextensively, the literature which springs from such a structure will be tainted by the same ideas, and thus the spaces it formulates within the readers mind feed on and reinforce this foundation. Examples of gender and indigenous narratives which contest this imaginative, transparent topography are analysed throughout this thesis. They provide instances of struggle and resistance which undermine the ideal/stereotypical level of architectural and planned space and delineate an alternative insight into colonial spatial and social relations. The fictional accounts of European women and indigenous writers both challenge and reaffirm the fixity of some of these idealised colonial boundaries. In various literary, historical, political, architectural and cinematic discourses Indochina has been und continues to be depicted as a modern city and exotic Utopia. Informed by the mood of nostalgia, exotic images of Indochina have resurfaced in contemporary French culture. France's continued desire to create, control and maintain an Indochinese space in the French public imagination reinforces the multi-layered, interconnected and persistent nature of colonial discourse.
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Costa, Lopez Julia. "The legal ordering of the medieval international." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2016. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:35f4ee39-8773-4f3f-8890-7ea04ca94e9c.

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Although International Relations scholars make frequent reference to the Middle Ages, most of our ideas about the period are not based on extensive empirical studies. Instead, they rely on a common imaginary of Medieval Europe as an unspecified and idealised system of overlapping authority and multiple loyalties. This thesis recovers a historical understanding of the late-medieval international order by focusing on the fundamental conceptions of the organization of the social held by medieval international practitioners. In particular, it examines a specific community of practice: lawyers of the ius commune from the twelfth to the fourteenth centuries. In doing so, this thesis makes three contributions to the IR literature. From a theoretical point of view, it adds to both English School and constructivist studies of historical international order by focusing on the process of differentiation through representation, as well as on contestation within it. In doing so, it argues for a move from a static understanding of order to the more dynamic notion of ordering. Secondly, it contributes methodologically to the historical study of ideas by proposing a methodological emphasis on communities of practitioners as a middle-ground between abstract constructivism and narrow Skinnerian analysis that facilitates the historically grounded consideration of the ordering role of language and ideas. Finally, empirically, this thesis demonstrates the analytical leverage gained from these theoretical moves by providing a detailed account of the international order from the twelfth to the fourteenth centuries, focusing not only on stability, but also on the contentious process of ordering. As a result, this thesis provides a new understanding of late-medieval notions of political authority, community, polity, and identity, while simultaneously highlighting the politics of representation behind them.
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Petousis, Francois George. "The organisational capacity for social innovation: an experiential exploration in re-ordering institutional practices." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22876.

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This study is an exploratory attempt to develop theoretical insights into the organisational capacity for social innovation, utilising a qualitative inquiry into the internal and external practices of a socially focussed organisation. By appreciating the lived experiences of engaging in these practices, the research looks to surface elements that contribute to the social sensitivity required to engage the complexity of social systems. Based in the social constructivism of Berger & Luckman (1966), and the associated institutional theory, seeing the structures which "enable and constrain agents" (Cajaiba-santana, 2014), the research contributes to the fields of collaborative experiential surfacing (W. Nilsson & Paddock, 2013) and resilience within social innovation (Westley, 2013). Through an autoethnographic data collection process, the findings of this study come to witness the different elements of how experiential practises can bring to an organisation a deep connection to social nuances, and challenge traditional structures of authority. The emerging nature of the social innovations developed and the dialogical relationships that support this, are found to be key elements in the context of this study.
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Larsson, Tobias. "Ordering the streets : The establishment of Sweden’s first police in 1776." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Historiska institutionen, 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-294499.

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This thesis considers the perceptions and enactment of social and urban order in the estate society of eighteenth-century Sweden. The central concept of order is approached as something which becomes most readily available when it has been transgressed against, and attempts are made to regain it. This is employed by exploring the practices of Sweden’s first proper police, the Royal Police Chamber of Stockholm founded in 1776, during its establishing year. The analytical part of the thesis is divided into three chapters. The first considers contemporary ideas of order in connection to the new organization, as to give a hint of the ideals which were said to be strived for. The second analytical chapter explores the nature of disorder, asking what, who and where made its way into the registers of the Chamber. Through these questions categories of disorder, norms of identification and abstract geographies are identified and used to tell of the things perceived as disorderly. In the third analytical chapter the how of ordering is considered as the acts taken against disorder are studied. Correction dominated, rather than punishment, thus echoing the ideas of order to a significant degree. Overall, this thesis can be said to accomplish in-depth basic empirical research on a hereto little studied material. The Chamber is shown to from the start to have taken an extremely active part in controlling and constructing society around it, something done by making a good effort towards fulfilling the panoptic ideal. Though not perfectly achieved, its practices are thus shown to adhere to a larger European trend of the period. Three concepts emerge as essential and fundamental to how social and urban order was perceived. These are the street and particularly the visibility thereupon exhibited, adding that order often only could be regained by establishing responsibility for those moving there. The centrality of the public sphere of the streets even goes beyond expectations and it appears as the main feature of enacting order. As such it is found to be both a material concept and imbued with meaning in itself.
Se ståndssamhället! Olikheternas kultur i Sverige under tidigmodern tid
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Santos, Jader de Oliveira. "Fragilidade e riscos socioambientais em Fortaleza-CE: contribuições ao ordenamento territorial." Universidade de São Paulo, 2011. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8135/tde-30032012-131857/.

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Trata da problemática dos riscos socioambientais, relacionando-os às fragilidades do ambientes, à vulnerabilidade da sociedade e ao uso e ocupação da terra. Maior ênfase, no entanto, é dada às áreas urbanizadas, em especial na cidade de Fortaleza-CE. Referida cidade passou por um crescimento desordenado, que trouxe uma série de problemas socioambientais. O estudo da fragilidade ambiental tem bases teóricas, metodológicas e conceituais na análise ambiental integrada, que perpassa a funcionalidade dos ambientes, considerando, inclusive, os processos históricos de produção e construção do território. A vulnerabilidade social e os padrões de uso e ocupação da terra definem a exposição dos grupos sociais aos riscos. A associação dessas características possibilitou o estabelecimento de diferentes categorias de susceptibilidade aos riscos, considerando de um lado as fragilidades ambientais em face do desenvolvimento das atividades humanas, e, de outro lado, por meio do índice sintético da vulnerabilidade social à distribuição desigual da população e dos riscos no território. Deste modo, foram estabelecidas bases que possam conduzir a um adequado ordenamento do território, com vistas a minimizar a incidência dos riscos socioambientais.
This research is about the issue of socioenvironmental risks and its relations with environmental fragility, the societies vulnerability and land use and occupation. Its focused on urban areas, especially in Fortaleza (CE). The accelerated and disordered occupation in Fortaleza has bought several socioenvironmental problems. The environmental fragility issue has its theoretical, methodological and conceptual bases on integrated analysis that encompasses the environments functionality considering the historical production processes and the construction of territory. The social vulnerability and the land use and occupation patterns define the social groups exposure to risks. The association of such characteristics was used to establish different susceptibility categories to the risks, considering on one hand the environmental fragilities face to human activities development, and in the other, the population distribution and risks on the territory by the synthetic index of social vulnerability. In this sense, bases that lead to an adequate territorial ordering were established aiming to minimize the incidence of socioenvironmental risks.
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Gardner, John. "The ordering of medical things : medical practices and complexity : a thesis submitted to the Victoria University of Wellington in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Sociology /." ResearchArchive@Victoria e-thesis, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10063/1178.

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Moreira, Rafael de Lacerda. "Impression management strategies: the effects of attribution and presentantion order." reponame:Repositório Institucional do FGV, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10438/24500.

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Submitted by Rafael de Lacerda Moreira (rafaeldelacerdamoreira@gmail.com) on 2018-07-21T22:14:47Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Versão Final - Tese Rafael .pdf: 1250031 bytes, checksum: 3abf55725921846132052a1324efd6fa (MD5)
Approved for entry into archive by ÁUREA CORRÊA DA FONSECA CORRÊA DA FONSECA (aurea.fonseca@fgv.br) on 2018-07-26T16:40:59Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 Versão Final - Tese Rafael .pdf: 1250031 bytes, checksum: 3abf55725921846132052a1324efd6fa (MD5)
Made available in DSpace on 2018-07-27T19:56:45Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Versão Final - Tese Rafael .pdf: 1250031 bytes, checksum: 3abf55725921846132052a1324efd6fa (MD5) Previous issue date: 2018-05-30
Purpose - This research analyzes how corporate narrative disclosure can be manipulated by preparers of accounting information to create a favorable impression of the company through an examination of two different impression-management (IM) strategies: (i) attribution, and (ii) ordering or physical location of information. Design/Methodology - We conducted a 4×2 mixed-design experiment to examine the impact of attribution and optimal direction of information order on earnings forecast and the impression created about the company. Findings - Results show that the favorable report read first, without attribution, positively affects the investor, and that the favorable information read first, with attribution, undermines the positive effect. Conversely, presenting unfavorable information, with attribution, first, minimizes the impact of this information. Our findings confirm self-promoter’s paradox idea. We also tested a sandwich and an interspersed ordering (control) group; these had the worst results. In a mediation analysis, we found that perceived impression about the company mediates the relationship between information and decision-making. In addition, our results show a significant difference in decision-making influenced by users’ characteristics. In a robustness test, we tested credibility of information as an alternative explanation, finding that credibility was not an alternative explanation for investors’ decision found in the experiment. We conclude by offering suggestions for further study of IM. Originality – To our knowledge, this is the first study that analyses the effects of both attribution and ordering strategies at the same time. Literature has addressed both strategies separately but has not discussed their interactive effect. This research addresses this gap.
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Kjellberg, Hans. "Organising distribution : Hakonbolaget and the efforts to rationalise food distribution, 1940-1960." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm : Economic Research Institute, Stockholm School of Economics [Ekonomiska forskningsinstitutet vid Handelshögsk.] (EFI), 2001. http://www.hhs.se/efi/summary/560.htm.

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Näslund, Rebecka. "“The World at Your Fingertips if You Know the Computer”: Agency, Information and Communication Technologies and Disability." Doctoral thesis, Luleå tekniska universitet, Arbetsvetenskap, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-60909.

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This thesis focuses on the relationships between agency, Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) and people with disability (in various ages). The aim has been to create an understanding by describing and analysing, and as such, to develop knowledge of how people with disabilities experience agency, ICT, and disability in their everyday lives. The frame of reference is inspired by disability studies, feminist studies and science and technologies studies (STS). The empirical material was collected in, Norrbotten (Sweden’s northernmost region) and Muscat (the capital area of the Sultanate of Oman) by an autobiographical account, audio-visual material, drawings, interviews, observations, and reading of textual documents. The thesis consists of six papers. The main findings outline that agency, ICT, disability, and gender are part of intra-actions between material entities (such as bodies, technologies, etc.) and practices. The thesis also explores that disability in Sweden and Oman are understood in a variety of ways. Additionally, it presents that the combination of the notions of interference with situated knowledges can contribute with alternative methodological insights about the interference of disability, gender, ICT, the participants’ and researchers’ experiences and understandings to make accountable knowledge claims. Moreover, the thesis presents that material entities (bodies and technologies) and practices are part of different modes of ordering disability which bear effects on the lives of people with disabilities. It additionally disentangles that materialities such as the Internet intra-act with other material entities (for instance, bodies) and practices which enact various forms of agency which bear effects on the everyday lives of people with disability and their ways to participate. Finally, the thesis outlines some implications that an intra-acting understanding of the use of Internet can contribute with in research which focuses on disability, participation, and agency.
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Hild, Andreas. "Modes of orderings and standardisation : enacting medical and social conditions through care planning and record keeping within acute inpatient care and community care settings." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.601117.

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This thesis investigates the relationship between objects and organisational forms, with particular reference to the transformation and enactment of clinical and administrative objects, practices and relations within NHS inpatient and community care settings. Through the use of an ethnographic style of enquiry this thesis investigates inpatient admission and discharge processes in the light of various health and social care practices, service commissioning issues, the Department of Health's initiative of the Care Planning Approach and other local electronic-based initiatives, and how this relates to the notions of "good" and "bad" practices, changing regimes of trust from practitioners to administrators, and from experts to documentary evidence. In particular, a range of narratives associated with mental health care which seek to provide a coordinating frame for different relations are reviewed. This involves exploring the attempts to link different information practices and ontologically distinct objects, and how this process relies on both multiplicity and singularity (e.g. both a sense of stability and heterogenous relations). Finally, this research examines how these mediating objects and processes in acute inpatient care settings seek to contribute to the creation of composite conditions and multiple bodies that fractionally relate to one another, but also the many problems experienced by those involved in the process of mental health care. In conclusion, this thesis explores several issues relating to specific organisational practices of care planning and record keeping, as well as broader questions of how objects are both enacted and enact practices in relation to complex modes of orderings and standardisation.
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Books on the topic "Social ordering"

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The badlands of modernity: Heterotopia and social ordering. London: Routledge, 1997.

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Communication in modern social ordering: History and philosophy. New York: Continuum, 2011.

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Life sentences: The modern ordering of mortality. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2008.

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Carina, Ren, and Jóhannesson Gunnar Thór, eds. Actor network theory and tourism: Ordering, materiality and multiplicity. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2012.

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Bronislaw, Szerszynski, and Grove-White Robin, eds. Re-ordering nature: Theology, society and the new genetics. Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 2003.

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Ritual practice in modern Japan: Ordering place, people, and action. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press, 2004.

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Satterwhite, Robb. What's what in Japanese restaurants: A guide to ordering, eating, and enjoying. 3rd ed. Tokyo: Kodansha International, 2010.

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What's what in Japanese restaurants: A guide to ordering, eating, and enjoying. Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1988.

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Katanga Evenkis in the 20th century and the ordering of their life-world. Edmonton: Canadian Circumpolar Institute (CCI) Press, 2007.

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The law of open societies: Private ordering and public regulation in the conflict of laws. Amersfoort, the Netherlands]: Brill Nijhoff, 2015.

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Book chapters on the topic "Social ordering"

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Simon, Catherine A. "Morality, education and social ordering." In Sociology for Education Studies, 48–57. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2020. | Series: The routledge education studies series: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429397585-6.

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Alm, Mikael. "The Ordering of Difference." In Sartorial Practices and Social Order in Eighteenth-Century Sweden, 111–51. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003193258-4.

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Yoshihara, Naoki. "On Non-Welfarist Social Ordering Functions." In Studies in Choice and Welfare, 43–67. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-79832-3_4.

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Arnold, Barry C., and José María Sarabia. "Multivariate Majorization and Multivariate Lorenz Ordering." In Statistics for Social and Behavioral Sciences, 145–66. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-93773-1_7.

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Chen, Jiyang, Osmar R. Zaïane, Jörg Sander, and Randy Goebel. "ONDOCS: Ordering Nodes to Detect Overlapping Community Structure." In Data Mining for Social Network Data, 125–48. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-6287-4_8.

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Klüver, Jürgen, Jörn Schmidt, and Ralph Kier. "Ordering Parameters in the Rule Space of Social Systems." In Tools and Techniques for Social Science Simulation, 351–72. Heidelberg: Physica-Verlag HD, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-51744-0_18.

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Choudhury, Masudul Alam. "Formation of Social Ordering in an Islamic Welfare Economy." In Contributions to Islamic Economic Theory, 108–20. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-07728-1_9.

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O’Hara, Kenton, Mark Perry, and Simon Lewis. "Situated Web Signs and the Ordering of Social Action." In Public and Situated Displays, 105–40. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-2813-3_5.

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Rosenbaum, Julia B. "Ordering the Social Sphere: Public Art and Boston’s Bourgeoisie." In The American Bourgeoisie, 193–208. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230115569_12.

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Saari, Donald G. "Election Relations and a Partial Ordering for Positional Voting." In Collective Decision-Making: Social Choice and Political Economy, 93–110. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-8767-9_5.

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Conference papers on the topic "Social ordering"

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Henkel, Malte. "Phase-ordering kinetics: ageing and local scale-invariance." In MODELING COOPERATIVE BEHAVIOR IN THE SOCIAL SCIENCES. AIP, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2008610.

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Qian Li and J. J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves. "Opportunistic routing using prefix ordering and self-reported social groups." In 2013 International Conference on Computing, Networking and Communications (ICNC 2013). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccnc.2013.6504048.

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Wu, Xuejing, and Hongli Liang. "Tentative Discussion on Simplification, Unification and Ordering." In 2017 International Conference on Economics and Management, Education, Humanities and Social Sciences (EMEHSS 2017). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/emehss-17.2017.57.

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Castellano, Claudio. "Effect of network topology on the ordering dynamics of voter models." In MODELING COOPERATIVE BEHAVIOR IN THE SOCIAL SCIENCES. AIP, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2008600.

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LIU, Heng. "Retailer’s Optimal Ordering Decision Based on Cost Curve." In 2021 5th International Seminar on Education, Management and Social Sciences (ISEMSS 2021). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210806.022.

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Lukovics, Miklós, Bence Zuti, Erik Fisher, and Béla Kézy. "Autonomous cars and responsible innovation." In The Challenges of Analyzing Social and Economic Processes in the 21st Century. Szeged: Szegedi Tudományegyetem Gazdaságtudományi Kar, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14232/casep21c.2.

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Abstract:
Digitalization, a dominant megatrend in today’s global world, offers numerous intriguing technological possibilities. Out of these novelties, self-driving cars have rapidly come to be a primary focus; the literature categorizes them as a radical innovation due to the possibility that the mass adoption of self-driving cars would not only radically change everyday life for members of industrialized societies, but calls into question the infrastructural, legal, and social ordering of towns and numerous aspects of transportation in the societies that adopt them. Meanwhile, the results of several international surveys with large samples show that public opinion of self-driving cars is ambivalent, indicating parallel signals of enthusiasm and concern. The aim of this paper is to develop key components of a general strategy for addressing the societal challenges associated with self-driving cars as identified in international surveys and relevant literature and using the framework of responsible innovation.
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Liang, Lili, and Lin Yan. "Discussion on Supply Chain Coordination of Apparel Industry from Perspective of the Secondary Ordering Method." In 3rd International Conference on Management Science, Education Technology, Arts, Social Science and Economics. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/msetasse-15.2015.50.

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Chen, Wenbo, and Weilun Huang. "A Study on the Consumer Behavior of Online Ordering Platforms and Its Influencing Factors." In Proceedings of the 2019 3rd International Seminar on Education, Management and Social Sciences (ISEMSS 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/isemss-19.2019.90.

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CHRZANOWSKA, Mariola, and Monika ZIELIŃSKA-SITKIEWICZ. "EVALUATION OF SPATIAL DIFFERENTIATION OF SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF RURAL AREAS IN MAZOWIECKIE PROVINCE IN YEARS 2004-2016." In RURAL DEVELOPMENT. Aleksandras Stulginskis University, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.15544/rd.2017.225.

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Mazowieckie Province is a unique area of Poland. It is characterised by social and economic diversification. Located in this province, Warsaw strongly influences the development of neighbouring rural areas. On the other hand, rural municipalities whose socio-economic parameters are among the lowest in the country are located within several dozen kilometres from the centre of the capital. Such disparities show that Mazowieckie is characterised by large interregional differences in its internal structure. This is an interesting research area that requires the analysis of socio-economic development in this region to be conducted in a multidimensional way. The aim of this study is to evaluate the spatial differentiation of the level of socio-economic development of rural areas in Mazowieckie Province. Linear ordering was used to determine the level of socio-economic development. The results of the study are consistent with core-periphery theory. The large urban centres that function as the centres for the surrounding rural areas have the greatest impact on the level of rural development. The impact of smaller towns can also be noticed. They often are the local development centres for surrounding villages.
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Munar, Antoni, and Esteban Chiner. "Know your customer from Twitter contacts: automatic discrimination of peers contacts from news sources." In CARMA 2016 - 1st International Conference on Advanced Research Methods and Analytics. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/carma2016.2016.3597.

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Know your customer is a core element of any customer relationship management system for mass service organizations. The emergence of social networking services has provided a radically new dimension, creating a more personalized, deeper, ubiquitous and almost real time relation with customers. At the same time, some of the more widespread social network platforms seem to be evolving not only as social networks between individuals but also as mass information distribution media. When knowing your customer through social networking services, it may be of interest to disambiguate which part of the customer context in the network relates to his peers from other sources. In this paper we present an algorithmic approach to disambiguate one aspect of such relation, as expressed in the nature of the contacts established in the social network: with peers or with organizations, news media or influencers. We focus in the case of Twitter where a simple supervised linear regression can provide a ranking score, effectively discriminating and ordering by closeness peer and other types of contacts (mass media or influencers). Such discrimination can serve as a preliminary step for deeper analysis or privacy protection of customer interaction and is suitable for implementation in automated Big Data systems.
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