Sound Research WIKINDX

List Resources

Displaying 1 - 4  of 4 (Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography)
Parameters
Order by

Ascending
Descending
Use all checked: 
Use all displayed: 
Use all in list: 
Attali, J. (2009). Noise: The political economy of music. B. Massumi, Trans. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. (Original work published 1984).   
Last edited by: Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard 17/10/2023, 10:47
"For twenty-five centuries, Western knowledge has tried to look upon the world. It has failed to understand that the world is not for the beholding. It is for hearing. It is not legible, but audible."
Corvellec, H. (2019). Waste as scats: For an organizational engagement with waste. Organization, 26(2), 217–235.   
Last edited by: Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard 29/03/2023, 07:29
Organisations should "develop a semiotic ability to read waste in its social and natural contexts, and to develop a corresponding sense of responsibility for the materials that the organizations consume and invite to consume."
"Challenging that organizations are carelessly given a nearly unconditional right to waste in the name of economic production, a scatolic understanding of waste makes clear that organizational wasting practices are everybody’s affair, inclusive of animals, seas, the Earth, and coming generations."
Waste is "any substance or object which the holder discards or intends or is required to discard."
Corvellec, H., & Paulsson, A. (2023). Resource shifting: Resourcification and de-resourcification for degrowth. Ecological Economics, 205.   
Last edited by: Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard 30/09/2023, 08:55

"Drawing from the recent resourcification manifesto (Hultman et al., 2021), we propose that many of the calls for socioecological transformations are, in fact, a plea for resource shifting. Resource shifting denotes the ending of unsustainable resourcification practices while at the same time promoting sustainable practices."

Reference: (Hultman et al. 2021).



Hultman, J., Corvellec, H., Jerneck, A., Arvidsson, S., Ekroos, J., & Gustafsson, C., et al. (2021). A resourcification manifesto: Understanding the social process of resources becoming resources. Research Policy, 50(9), 1–7.
De-resourceification is "the unbecoming of resources"
Hultman, J., Corvellec, H., Jerneck, A., Arvidsson, S., Ekroos, J., & Gustafsson, C., et al. (2021). A resourcification manifesto: Understanding the social process of resources becoming resources. Research Policy, 50(9), 1–7.   
Last edited by: Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard 09/03/2023, 17:59
"We define resourcification as the social processes involved in turning something into a resource. This definition shifts the focus away from essentialist queries about the amount or features of resources to the study of their becoming resources. Correspondingly, we define deresourcification as the processes through which something is no longer considered a resource."
"Our goal is the creation of a critical, interdisciplinary platform to identify, describe, and explain interactions among humans, other living organisms, and the environment."
"It follows, therefore, that although the use of resources is a condition for all life, our agenda is concerned with anthropogenic resourcification under the increasingly perilous conditions of the Anthropocene."
"Anthropogenic resourcification is founded on extractivism: the exploitation of soil nutrients, minerals, and other extractable things. Extractivism is based on the anthropocentric assumption that natural and human-made environments, materials, processes, and beings – including humans – are a cheap and ready-to-resourcify stock of inputs waiting to be dominated and exploited. Extractivism applies to what is seen as both renewable and non-renewable resources."
"Internet technology made it possible for intermediaries such as Amazon, Airbnb, and Alibaba to develop global market-making infrastructures that resourcify themselves and the suppliers and customers they connect"
"Resourcification is conditioned upon the practical possibility of abstracting and extracting the potential resource from its current setting and moving it to a new geographical, social, and technological setting."
WIKINDX 6.8.2 | Total resources: 1301 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: American Psychological Association (APA)