Browsing Working Papers (DBP) by Title
Now showing items 1-20 of 80
Next Page-
A Social Constructivist ApproachNedergaard, Peter (København, 2005)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: The paper is structured as follows: Section 2 summarizes the recent debate in the political science literature on analytical approaches to learning, which has gradually developed in a direction of being less and less individualistic. Section 3 follows up on this development and introduces a social constructivist approach to learning that redefines learning as changes in language-constituted relations to others. In section 4 this argument is elaborated into a model for mutual learning. Section 5 contains a qualitative analysis of the organisation of the EES in practice with regard to the possibilities of policy diffusion of the EES learning processes as predicted in the model in section 4. Section 6 deals with the conflictual views on the size and character of the learning processes of the EES in recent studies and proposes a new methodological path to investigate the mutual learning processes based upon a social constructivist approach. Section 7 is the conclusion of the article which sums up the examination of the both the various approaches to learning analysed in the paper and the evaluation of the possibilities of policy diffusion resulting from the learning processes. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7328 Files in this item: 1
-
Networks and Meaning in the Opposition Against the Proposal for a Directive on Temporary Work in the Council of Ministers of the European UnionNedergaard, Peter (, 2005)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: This article contains a case study of the behavior of a blocking minority in the Council of Ministers. An important result is that the behavior of Member States cannot in this case be explained directly by domestic circumstances and interests as it is often done in the neoliberal literature. Instead, necessary variables offered in this article are tight networks and their ability to create meaning in being part of the blocking minority through an attractive story-line. If generalized, it means that the influence of story-lines created by discourse-coalitions has to be upgraded as explanations of the behavior in the Council of Ministers and that actors providing the network with hegemony can critically strengthen an issue network. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7910 Files in this item: 1
WP2005-2 blocking_minorities2.pdf (276.8Kb) -
A linguistic contribution to the comparative study of national ways of thinking and communicatingLundquist, Lita (Frederiksberg, 2010)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Recently, it was observed that the French President Nicolas Sarkozy ‘uses a lot of verbs’ (Calvet & Véronis 2008), what contributes to the impression he makes of being a “turbopresident”. At the same time, the (then) Minister of State in Denmark, Anders Fogh-Rasmussen, was characterised as being arrogant because of his top-down, formal, and impersonal way of communicating. If these two styles of communication stuck out as being noticeable in their French and Danish political framework respectively, it is because they were seen against the backdrop of social norms spelling out other rules for communicating in the two societies; a French norm, for presidents at least, stipulating not to use a lot of verbs, and a Danish norm telling not to be formal and impersonal. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/8207 Files in this item: 1
-
Strandsbjerg, Jeppe (København, 2008)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: It is common practice to consider global space a coherent entity that naturally contains social practices and provides the stage for actors of global politics. Yet, such a view ignores the social process of establishing a global space as a framework for other social practices. This paper suggests that an analysis of cartographic practices is key to understand the historical formation of spaces. Drawing on Bruno Latour, I show how the globe has been assembled through cartographic practices in Europe from 1450-1650. I trace how the emerging discipline of cosmography transformed knowledge of the world, and how the Spanish attempts to map the world during the 16th century put in place a system to cartographically establish a new reality of global space. Finally, the paper focuses on how the world was published by Dutch map makers which disseminated this novel global reality and, in effect, made it mobile. This leads to the conclusion that the global map preceded, and assembled, the globe as a unified abstract space enabling the expansion of European political and economic practices. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7377 Files in this item: 1
wp cbp 2008-45.pdf (951.5Kb) -
Seabrooke, Leonard; Hobson, John (, 2006)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Our everyday actions have important consequences for the constitution and transformation of the local, national, regional and global contexts. How, what, and with whom we spend, save, invest, buy and produce in our ordinary lives shapes markets and how states choose to intervene in them. The political, economic, and social networks with which we associate ourselves provide us not only with meaning about how we think economic policy is made, but also constitute vehicles for how economic policy, both at home and abroad, should be made. And while elite actors in politics and economics obviously have more direct influence, this should not obscure the point that peripheral actors can challenge the legitimacy of how power is exercised. Nor should it obscure the point that such actors have a good deal more agency in terms of determining their own life experiences as well as those of others through their everyday actions than is commonly recognised. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7912 Files in this item: 1
WP CBP 2006-26.pdf (156.3Kb) -
Rocha, Robson (København, 2008)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: This paper is based on a longitudinal case study of a Brazilian multinational company which has changed its way of organizing work processes by implementing a highperformance work system (HPWS). The article argues that, as the firm attempts to improve its internal processes, it requires access to internal and external resources, as well as the expertise that may increase and support this change. However, when these resources are not easily found locally, the firm needs to pool and recombine different sources of expertise to succeed in its efforts. At this stage, the balance of power between different organizational actors starts to shift towards greater mutual dependence, thus reducing power imbalances. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7349 Files in this item: 1
wp cbp 2008-56.pdf (149.8Kb) -
The Political Implications of Limited Liability, Legal Personality and CitizenshipThompson, Grahame (Frederiksberg, 2011)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: This paper investigates the legal and commercial consequences of companies being considered as both an entity and a person in law – hence the notion of ‘cyborg’ in its title. It concentrates upon legal personhood and relates this particular feature to the issue of corporate citizenship. In turn corporate citizenship provides a link to considering the political role of companies, since in claiming citizenship they are implicitly at least claiming a particular set of political rights consequent upon that status, and announcing a particular politically constrained context associated with their operational characteristics. But what would be involved in granting companies full citizenship rights in the image of natural person citizenship? The paper explores this issue in connection to the differences between corporate social responsibility and an earlier idea of the socially responsible corporation that arose in the debate between Adolph Berle and Edwin Dodd in the 1930s, focussing on the notion of ‘enterprise entity analysis’ that was posed in that debate, and which has reappeared more recently. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/8323 Files in this item: 1
-
An institutionalist perspective on international managementHull Kristensen, Peer; Morgan, Glenn (København, 2005)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Multinationals are faced with the problem of how to coordinate different actors and stop ‘fiefdoms’ emerging that inhibits the achievement of transnational cooperation? We identify this as a problem of ‘constitutional ordering’ in the firm. Drawing on Varieties of Capitalism approaches, we explore how multinationals from different contexts seek to create constitutional orders. We argue that the models which exist appear to be destructive of coordination. We explore the implications for MNCs. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7340 Files in this item: 1
-
Varieties of Institutionalism: varieties of capitalismHull Kristensen, Peer; Morgan, Glenn (København, 2005)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: The paper argues that the contrast between studies of MNCs which emphasise isomorphism and those which emphasise social embeddedness is unhelpful. Following recent institutionalist discussions which have emphasised the dynamic nature of firms, and institutions, it is argued that the transnational social space of the multinational encompasses a variety of different forms of actors which are engaged in processes that partially produce isomorphism and partially reproduce institutional difference. This perspective is proposed not as a middle way between the two institutionalisms but as a way to capture the ongoing dynamics of MNCs. The paper illustrates this approach through considering four ideal-typical ‘games’ which occur inside MNCs. These games are analysed in terms of the actors, the institutional resources brought into the game, the emerging rules of the game, the outcomes of the game and how these processes relate to institutional theory. These games reveal the complex interaction of processes of isomorphism and social differentiation and suggest an agenda for further research on MNCs that will focus on examining how these games interact and with what effect in different sorts of multinationals. Keywords: Multinationals; institutionalism; varieties of capitalism; isomorphism; embeddedness. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7355 Files in this item: 1
-
[More information][Less information]
-
Hull Kristensen, Peer (København, 2005)[More information][Less information]
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7363 Files in this item: 1
danmarks_innovationsstyrker_phk.pdf (93.14Kb) -
Danske og internationale udviklingstendenserSchulze, Christiane; Greve, Carsten (Frederiksberg, 2011)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Kontraktbaseret styring har været på den politiske agenda i OECD landene siden de tidlige 1980’erne og i dag er kontrakter et helt centralt element i den moderne regering ((Ejersbo & Greve 2005: 62, Greve 2008a: 4). Internationalt var det især med Reagon-regeringen i USA og Thatcher-regeringen i Storbritannien, at der blev rettet interesse mod kontraktstyring1. Denne udvikling bør ses i lyset af New Public Management (NPM) reformerne, som blev skyllet ind over OECD landene siden 1980’erne (Fortin 2000, Kettl 2000, Bouckaert og Pollitt 2004). NPM kan overordnet forstås som ”brug af ledelsesinspiration fra den private sektor og [som] brug af markedsmekanismer”(Greve 2003). Ved siden af privatisering og deregulering iagttages kontrakter som et determinerende element i NPM (Fortin 2000:1). Kontrakter kan helt grundlæggende defineres som en aftale mellem bestiller og leverandør, der angiver vilkårene for levering af en service eller et produkt (Domberger 1998:12). Kontrakter er dog ikke bare en entydig formel aftale, der forstås på samme måde af enhver aktør. Tværtimod er kontrakter også afhængige af læsernes perspektiv såvel som omgivelsens normer, traditioner og legale rammer. Den er derved ikke uafhængig af de institutioner, som eksisterer i omverdenen og en kontrakt kan have forskellige betydninger i forskellige kulturer og lande. Desuden bliver kontrakten også selv en institution, der skaber en helt bestemt måde at omgås med hinanden, som adskiller sig fra de mere traditionelle hierarkiske styringsformer. Sidst men ikke mindst er kontraktens form også afgørende for, hvilken form for samarbejde og styring der vælges til og fra. En kontrakt er således langt fra et neutralt styringsværktøj, men påvirker tværtimod aktivt organisationernes organisering og styringsform. Det er derfor, at denne rapport skal belyse, hvorledes kontraktstyring i både eksterne og interne relationer af den offentlige sektor blev introduceret, hvilke udfordringer og ændringer det har medført for offentlige og private, samt hvordan det har påvirket forholdet mellem staten og samfundet... URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/8383 Files in this item: 1
-
[More information][Less information]
-
Pedersen, Ove K. (København, 2005)[More information][Less information]
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7331 Files in this item: 1
denmarks_negotiated_economy_19.pdf (122.6Kb) -
Pedersen, Ove K. (, 2009)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: The aim of discourse analysis is to reveal the ontological and epistemological premises which are embedded in language, and which allows a statement to be understood as rational or interpreted as meaningful. Discourse analysis investigates whether – in statements or texts - it is possible to establish any regularity in the objects which are discussed; the subjects designated as actors; the causal relations claimed to exist between objects (explanans) and subjects (explanadum); but also the expected outcome of subjects trying to influence objects; the goal of their action; and finally the time dimension by which these relations are framed. Discourses thus comprise the underlying conditions for a statement to be interpreted as meaningful and rational. At the same time, discourse analysis is the study of rationality and how it is expressed in a particular historical context. Discourse analysis is part of the Constructivist (or Social Constructivist) approach within the humanities and social sciences. It assumes that basic assumptions with regard to being, self and the world are constructed by individuals living in a historical and cultural context which is produced and reproduced by their speech acts. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7792 Files in this item: 1
WP CBP 2009-65.pdf (77.48Kb) -
Pedersen, Ove K. (, 2009)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: The aim of discourse analysis is to reveal the ontological and epistemological premises which are embedded in language, and which allows a statement to be understood as rational or interpreted as meaningful. Discourse analysis investigates whether – in statements or texts - it is possible to establish any regularity in the objects which are discussed; the subjects designated as actors; the causal relations claimed to exist between objects (explanans) and subjects (explanadum); but also the expected outcome of subjects trying to influence objects; the goal of their action; and finally the time dimension by which these relations are framed. Discourses thus comprise the underlying conditions for a statement to be interpreted as meaningful and rational. At the same time, discourse analysis is the study of rationality and how it is expressed in a particular historical context. Discourse analysis is part of the Constructivist (or Social Constructivist) approach within the humanities and social sciences. It assumes that basic assumptions with regard to being, self and the world are constructed by individuals living in a historical and cultural context which is produced and reproduced by their speech acts. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7792 Files in this item: 1
WP CBP 2009-65.pdf (77.48Kb) -
Pedersen, Ove K. (København, 2008)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Den borgerlige statsform har forskellen mellem stat og individ til lokus; den udgør en forestilling om rationel handling (en ratio); og en forestilling om hvordan den selv tilbliver (dens tempus) og forandres (dens historie). Den indeholder også en forestilling om magt (dominans). Hvordan skal vises i det følgende! URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7341 Files in this item: 1
wp cbp 2008-51.pdf (148.5Kb) -
Pedersen, Ove K. (København, 2008)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: I århundreder har formuestand sat grænser for normalsubjektivitet. Fra 1500-tallet var alle besiddelsesløse frataget retten til at råde over egen arbejdsevne uanset køn og alder. Deres personlige myndighed omfattede alene pligten til at indgå i et arbejdsforhold; ikke retten til at lade være. I århundreder blev de pålagt at finde arbejde; og hvis de ikke kunne eller ikke ville, blev de straffet, spærret inde, sat i tvangsarbejde. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7359 Files in this item: 1
wp cbp 2008-52.pdf (189.5Kb) -
Pedersen, Ove K. (København, 2008)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Bønder med fæste og tyende i hus var ikke løsgængere. De var heller ikke privilegerede. De var i arbejde”; men havde ingen formue, var ikke født til stands eller rang og udgjorde således en gruppe mellem løsgængere og de privilegerede. Det samme gjorde håndværkersvende og lærlinge i forhold til mestre og borgere og næringsdrivende kvinder i forhold til andre kvinder. Gennemgangen af landboforholdet indebærer et skift i perspektiv i forhold til gennemgangen af de besiddelsesløse. I stedet for arbejdspligtens arkæologi, skal jeg nu give et rids over hvilke forpligtigelser bonde og husmand, tyende og tjener blev pålagt ved fæste, stavnsbinding eller på anden vis. Perspektivet skifter til, hvilke rettigheder de privilegerede havde over deres bonde og husmand; og derigennem hvilke begrænsninger disse rettigheder satte på bondens og husmandens personlige myndighed og retlige evner, men også hvilke former og grader for myndighed bonde og husmand opnåede i forhold til adel og proprietær. Jeg beskriver de besiddelsesløses situation i arbejde”, i modsætning til de besiddelsesløses situation uden arbejde”. Det er stadig arbejdsevnen, eller evnen til at påtage sig arbejde og retten til at lade være, der står i centrum. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7375 Files in this item: 1
wp cbp 2008-53.pdf (132.8Kb) -
Pedersen, Ove K. (København, 2008)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Også i byen var standssamfundet struktureret ved hjælp af privilegier; ligesom forholdet mellem by og land var det. Købstaden havde eneret på handel og næring; kun købmænd måtte drive handel; kun håndværkere måtte drive håndværk; og ingen undtagen byens borgere måtte udøve håndværk eller afsætte håndværksprodukter inden for byens grænser. Håndværkere fra byen måtte ikke drive håndværk på landet; håndværkere fra landet måtte ikke arbejde for byerne. Indenfor byen var håndværkernes arbejdsevne bestemt af laugens privilegium på næring. Både adel og borger var således indplaceret i et symmetrisk forhold, ligesom bonde og håndværkersvend, og husmand og håndværkerdreng. Den ene stands privilegier satte grænser for den næste. De vigtigste forskelle var mellem by og land, og her indenfor mellem borger og ikke-borger. Sammen med forskellene mellem de besiddelsesløse og de privilegerede, og adel og bonde udgjorde forskellen mellem by land samt borger og ikke-borger grundstrukturen i den absolutistiske regulering. De privilegerede havde for-rettigheder i forhold til stand eller formue og i forhold til om de boede på land eller i by. Købstadsprivilegiet var oprindeligt naturgroet; senere blev det delegeret af kongen som privilegium; det var både før-moderne og tidligt-moderne. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7366 Files in this item: 1
wp cbp 2008-54.pdf (248.8Kb)
Now showing items 1-20 of 80
Next Page