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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. Added by: Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard (12/3/22, 8:01 AM) |
Resource type: Journal Article Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1016/j.respol.2021.104297 BibTeX citation key: Hultman2021 View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: Space, Ultrasound Creators: Arvidsson, Corvellec, Ekroos, Gustafsson, Hultman, Jerneck, Lundh Nilsson, Wahlberg Publisher: Elsevier (Amsterdam) Collection: Research Policy |
Views: 1/19
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Abstract |
"In times of major global interconnectedness and environmental change, the pressure to identify, create, and exploit new resources is certain to intensify. Given that there are unavoidable trade-offs, conflicts, and arenas for violence involved when increasingly more material and immaterial things are turned into resources, we call for explicit research on the very process – a process that we label resourcification. The concept of resourcification shifts attention from essentialist queries about the nature of resources to a focus on the social processes through which things are turned into resources. In search of a better understanding of resources in the Anthropocene and, in particular, an understanding about the way resources emerge and are used, resourcification offers a new conceptual framework that allows for a systematic search for knowledge about the diversity of contexts, conditions, modes, and temporalities of resourcification. This Resourcification Manifesto offers a theoretical and empirical framework for a radical and disruptive approach to innovation, sustainability, and management studies and policies." |
Notes |
Not really anything to do with ultrasound, but the concept of resourcification can be applied to human colonization of not only sound space but also ultrasound space.
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