19 results
Search Results
2. Transformation of accounting through digital standardisation : Tracing the construction of the IFRS Taxonomy
- Author
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Troshani, Indrit, Locke, Joanne, and Rowbottom, Nick
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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3. Missed opportunities for introducing transformational government : Assessing the contentious e-toll project in South Africa
- Author
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Mawela, Tendani, Ochara, Nixon Muganda, and Twinomurinzi, Hossana
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. New Rural Community Construction or Retention Development: A Comparative Analysis of Rural Settlement Transition Mechanism in Plain Agriculture Area of China Based on Actor Network Theory
- Author
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Qu, Yanbo, Dong, Xiaozhen, Ma, Wenqiu, and Zhao, Weiying
- Published
- 2024
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5. UTOPIAN VS. DYSTOPIAN EFFECTS OF ARTIFICIAL GENERAL INTELLIGENCE (AGI) ON CONSUMER EXPERIENCES AND AGENCY.
- Author
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Felix, Reto and Xiaojing Sheng
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,ACTOR-network theory - Published
- 2020
6. On the character and production of 'active participation' in neuro-rehabilitation: an Actor-Network perspective.
- Author
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Horton, Simon, Mares, Kathryn, Coull, Neil, and Poland, Fiona
- Subjects
FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,VIDEO recording ,PATIENT participation ,LABELING theory ,REHABILITATION for brain injury patients - Abstract
The importance of patients' active involvement in neuro-rehabilitation after acquired brain injury has been consistently emphasised in recent years. However, most approaches fail to show how 'active participation' is practically enacted, focusing on individualised explanations of patient choice and behaviours, or notions of inherent patient traits. Using actor-network theory ( ANT) as a sensitising concept, we investigated neuro-rehabilitation practices, asking how participation is shaped through biological and socio-material specificities, how rights to knowledge and expertise are constructed, and how a body acclimatises and adjusts within an order of participation and transformation. We analysed video-recorded fieldwork extracts, examining the work of adjusting, testing and transforming; the construction of competence and incompetence; and material and social processes involved in the division of the body and its re-composition. Our findings show how an ANT-sensitised approach provides a critical understanding and context-specific characterisation of 'active participation', produced through the association of heterogeneous actors at any one time. Such specificity and the distribution of work suggest that efforts to account for optimum therapy 'dosages', and clinical attention to establishing individually-located levels of 'self-efficacy' or 'motivation' are misdirected. The performance of 'active participation', rather, should be re-imagined as a product of diverse, mutually attuned entities. A Virtual Abstract of this paper can be viewed at: [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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7. Machine Ex Machina: A Framework Decentering the Human in AI Design Praxis
- Author
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Cait Lackey and Zizi Papacharissi
- Subjects
artificial intelligence (ai) ,actor network theory (ant) ,human-machine communication (hmc) ,integrated thought theory (itt) ,design framework ,consciousness ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 ,Oral communication. Speech ,P95-95.6 - Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) design typically incorporates intelligence in a manner that is affirmatory of the superiority of human forms of intelligence. In this paper, we draw from relevant research and theory to propose a social-ecological design praxis of machine inclusivity that rejects the presumption of primacy afforded to human-centered AI. We provide new perspectives for how human-machine communication (HMC) scholarship can be synergistically combined with modern neuroscience’s integrated information theory (IIT) of consciousness. We propose an integrated theoretical framework with five design practice recommendations to guide how we might think about responsible and conscious AI environments of the future: symbiotic design through mutuality; connectomapping; morethan- human user storytelling, designing for AI conscious awakenings; and the revising of vernaculars to advance HMC and AI design. By adopting the boundaries HMC scholarship extends, we advocate for replacing ex machina mentalities with richer understandings of the more-than-human world formed by interconnected and integrated human, humanmade, and nonhuman conscious machines, not superior or inferior but each unique.
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
8. Cultural editing for creativity: A framework to associate person/thing, event, road and memories.
- Author
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Okano, Hiroshi
- Abstract
This paper examines conventional actor-object dichotomy and seeks to establish a new framework of a collective of people, things, and phenomena whereby multiple actors and spaces create citizen knowledge. Citizens and others who seek to breathe new life into the city and its neighborhoods; people who are concerned about their municipalities; “things” such as the city's “memory,” its roads; “phenomena” such as its festivals, and its events—these are all components of a gestalt “actor” in this project. Observing the way seemingly disparate people and things act will surely highlight their common traits and open up possibilities for greater cooperation. The framework used to throw light on the foregoing is cultural editing. Herein, the view that only people can be the actors of adaptation is rejected; artists, their supporters, and the people who care for them are all deemed actors, and the overlapping and collectivity of their memories and thoughts coincide with the art generated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
9. Adaptive Mobile Sensing: Leveraging Machine Learning for Efficient Human Behavior Modeling; Examining Data Privacy Regulation to Protect Personal Health Records
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Adaptive Sensing ,Actor Network Theory (ANT) ,Data Privacy Regulation - Abstract
Advancement in the mobile health market presents patients new opportunities to leverage technology to monitor their own health. In the technical research, the Capstone team studied methods of sampling mobile sensing data from smartphones in conjunction with ongoing research to develop a mobile health application that can passively monitor and predict user health status. The STS research paper investigated the implementation of additional data privacy policy in response to increasing concerns about the protection of health information in electronic Personal Health Record systems not covered by the current data privacy regulations in the United States. The technical and STS research papers both investigate the use of advanced technology in the health industry. The two topics are loosely coupled because the technical research focuses on the collection of mobile sensing data to predict user health, while the STS research focuses on the security of patient data in electronic Personal Health Record systems. The technical team investigated multiple data sampling methods to determine which one most efficiently collected mobile sensing data capable of identifying user context. To do this, the team used a mobile crowdsensing application to collect data from smartphone sensors in three sensing strategies that differed in their sampling frequencies. The strategies also administered surveys to serve as ground truth data for context information such as user activity, user location, physical state, and phone position. The team created context models from the data collected in each strategy to understand the utility of the data. The Capstone team found that the dynamic adaptive sensing strategy was the most efficient method of data collection. The dynamic adaptive sensing strategy had the best balance of reducing battery consumption while maintaining data quality by smartly turning the smartphone sensors on and off based on the phone’s use. Additionally, the data collected in the dynamic adaptive sensing strategy generated better performing context models than the data collected in the other sensing strategies. The dynamic adaptive sensing strategy will be implemented for future development of the mobile health application. Electronic Personal Health Record systems provide patients the ability to manage their own health on personal computers or smartphones. However, some private companies creating these platforms are not under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, leaving sensitive information unprotected from being shared or misused. The gap in regulation led to researching how the United States can protect sensitive health information in these platforms. The STS research identified gaps in regulation using government articles outlining the current health data privacy regulation, news articles exposing misuse of health information in these platforms, and employing Actor Network Theory to determine the relevant actors and actants involved in the development of the platforms. Additionally, a global review of data privacy regulations served to compare current regulations in countries around the world. The research concluded that the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation is the most comprehensive data privacy policy upholding the necessary standards to protect personal health information. These standards include important features such as a minimum standard, informed consent, documentation, and rules for sharing data. Implementation of a data privacy regulation the United States modeled after the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation would establish appropriate protection of personal health data not protected under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, allowing patients to reap the benefits of an electronic Personal Health Record system without compromising their privacy. Implementation of technology in the health industry has the potential to significantly improve patient health outcomes. However, there are still developments that need to be made in the technical and privacy aspects for this technology to be widely accepted. Once these advancements are made, patients will be able to safely and efficiently monitor their health from their personal devices.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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10. Power of Difference Assessment System; The Impact of Augmented Reality Technology on Physical Rehabilitation
- Subjects
Physical Rehabilitation ,Actor Network Theory (ANT) ,Social Construction of Technology (SCOT) ,Augmented Reality (AR) - Abstract
Physical rehabilitation is an important aspect of healthcare that affects the way people live their lives. For the technical research project, I worked on the Power of Difference Assessment for The Sum, a non-profit organization located in Charlottesville, Virginia. The reason for undertaking the project was due to my fascination with translating data values from participants who took the assessment into numerical categories that displayed the inherent demographical views of a person. Meanwhile, the STS research paper focuses on the impact of augmented reality for physical rehabilitative services. The purpose of the research is to investigate the benefits of implementing augmented reality for physical rehabilitation. Since the STS and technical projects have little overlap, the two are loosely coupled. In order to work towards an effective implementation of the Power of Difference Assessment, many smaller requirements needed to be performed. Security features had to be created in order to avoid URL manipulation of the website. Many tasks in the existing product also involved manual labor which was time-consuming. A method to approach this problem was to try and make all processes be performed automatically, including score calculation, report generation, and the sending of emails by the system. The data that was generated by the report was also stored locally on the client’s computer previously. To solve that problem, new administrative access was built into the website to allow for better storage and accessibility. The various methods implemented created a satisfactory result in the end product. The speed that user scores are calculated and sent via email occurs in under a minute. The administrative site has access to all data with easy search and organization functionality along with other features to delegate data viewing to other employees within The Sum. The assessment now supports concurrent users taking it and is scaled to support many users of the system through the use of Amazon Web Services. The end result of the technical project is an improved version of the Power of Difference Assessment system that contains added functionality, easier accessibility, and stronger security protocols. The research question my STS topic focused on was: How does the implementation of augmented reality benefit patients’ health and motivation when undergoing physical rehabilitation? The thesis seeks to explore the impacts of augmented reality in physical rehabilitation and the effects it has on the industry and other societal factors. The sources that were used to provide evidence included articles, published papers, and case studies. The sources were used to help provide factual data in order to support the thesis statement while also looking at its limitations. The evidence gathered were used to make counterarguments and showcase viable solutions of implementation of augmented reality that would widely benefit people during physical rehabilitation. A major point in the STS thesis is the parallel drawn between augmented reality technology and CAT scans to support a viable cost option for future widespread usage of augmented reality. Another major point includes data percentages of user satisfaction to support positive correlation with increased business. The evidence is necessary to provide a valid reason for healthcare industries to commercially support the use of augmented reality. One key point stems from the gamification of physical rehabilitation, which connects to increased levels of user satisfaction and is the major evidence for providing a solution to the problems that patients face during rehabilitation. The conclusion drawn from the research supports the idea that augmented reality will provide health benefits to patients while providing positive commercial effects in society. The broad conclusion that can be drawn from the research projects is to give things a chance. The STS research project currently has limited data pertaining to the topic and is reliant on future work to provide conclusive results based on the conclusions drawn from the research here. The technical is the same as people need to attempt the assessment in order to realize their hidden biases and views and use those to grow as individuals. This broad conclusion brings the two topics together despite their loose coupling.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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11. 從行動者網絡理論探析偏鄉學校108課綱 校本實踐與轉譯.
- Author
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蔡進雄 and 張堯卿
- Subjects
ACTOR-network theory ,BASIC education ,CURRICULUM planning ,RURAL schools ,RURAL geography ,HUMAN resources departments ,SCHOOL libraries - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Education Research (1680-6360) is the property of Angle Publishing Co., Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. ICT for agriculture extension: actor network theory for understanding the establishment of agricultural knowledge centers in South Wollo, Ethiopia.
- Author
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Birke, Fanos Mekonnen and Knierim, Andrea
- Subjects
ACTOR-network theory ,AGRICULTURAL technology ,INFORMATION & communication technologies ,INTERNET access ,DEVELOPING countries ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,INTERNATIONAL alliances - Abstract
This study aims at understanding how various actors interacted in establishing and managing an Information Communication Technology (ICT)- based initiative called Agricultural Knowledge Centers (AKCs) in Ethiopia. Additionally, it explores the diverging and shared interests of the actors in the benefits of the AKCs. We gathered and analyzed data from in-depth interviews in five extension offices in the South Wollo zone, Ethiopia, and supplemented it with project documents and observations. We used the Actor Network Theory (ANT), particularly the four moments of translation, to analyze the results. The findings show how people and technology came together to establish the AKCs and to provide extension experts access to digital knowledge. Factors that contributed to creating and stabilizing the AKC actor network included the presence of an actor to facilitate the process, alignment of interests among actors in the network, building the capacities and motivation of the various actors to execute their roles, and availability of computers with strong internet connections. These findings contribute to practical and policy debates on harnessing ICT's potential for facilitating socioeconomic development in the Global South; and to the theoretical discussions on the merits of the ANT perspective in analyzing the adoption of technological innovations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. ANT Ethics in Professional Communication: An Integrative Review.
- Author
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ROUNDTREE, AIMEE K.
- Subjects
PROFESSIONAL ethics ,COMMUNICATION ethics ,ETHICAL problems ,ANTS ,DRIVERLESS cars ,ACTOR-network theory ,SOCIAL networks - Abstract
This integrative review synthesizes the literature on addressing morality and ethics in actor-network theory (ANT). When humans and non-humans have equal agency (self-driving cars, diagnostic algorithms, for example), how do we evaluate ethical and moral implications? What perspectives or practices can professional communicators adopt? Examining 38 articles published in communication journals about ethical dilemmas involving technologies such as self-driving cars and social networks, this meta-analysis revealed insights about how ANT impacts ethical deliberation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
14. JOURNALISM, PRACTICE AND…POETRY: Or the unexpected effects of creative writing on journalism research.
- Author
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Archetti, Cristina
- Subjects
HISTORY of journalism ,ACTOR-network theory ,CREATIVE writing ,POETRY (Literary form) ,FOREIGN correspondents ,FOREIGN news ,REPORTERS & reporting - Abstract
This article examines the role of creative writing in understanding journalism. It argues that non-academic writing—poetry in this case—can play a far more significant part in journalism research than that of an entertaining genre for disseminating a study’s findings, mainly to audiences beyond academia. Not only can poetry complement traditional “academic” texts by filling the gaps of the vivid details of the situated practices of journalism as they are lived in real life. It also has far-reaching epistemological and ontological implications: it raises fundamental questions about the world where journalists operate, the role of imagination, sensory perceptions and materiality in everyday manifestations of journalism, as well as the place of the scholar in the research process. The benefits of creative writing are illustrated through examples of actual poems written while conducting a comparative study of foreign journalists in the United Kingdom, Norway and Somalia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Non-Invasive Identification of Mechanisms of Atrial Flutter; Investigating the Long-Term Outcomes of Patients with Legg-Calve-Perthes: How Treatment is Influenced by Surgeon Bias
- Subjects
Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease (LCPD) ,Atrial Flutter ,Actor Network Theory (ANT) - Abstract
As technology improves within the healthcare industry, new diagnosis and treatment methods provide an opportunity to enhance the patient experience. The technical project focuses on new diagnostic methods such as the Medtronic CardioInsight Vest can be used on patients to diagnose the second most common atrial arrhythmia, otherwise known as atrial flutter. The vest provides a noninvasive way of diagnosing arrhythmias, leading to a more comfortable and less risky way of identifying electrical abnormalities in the heart. The STS topic focuses on improving the treatment method of patients, especially for patients who have rare diseases like Legg-Calve-Perthes disease (LCPD). LCPD is a rare orthopedic disease that presents in young children, and presents much controversy when deciding what surgical or nonsurgical methods to employ when treating the patient. While these topics are loosely coupled, both emphasize the importance of improving overall care for a patient. When diagnosing a heart arrhythmia, most patients must undergo an electrophysiology study. This study requires catheters to be intravenously placed into the heart, where pacing maneuvers will be performed to capture the arrhythmia. The Medtronic CardioInsight Vest used for the technical project provides an optimal, noninvasive technique to diagnose heart arrhythmias without the use of intracardiac catheters. This method has proven useful in diagnosing arrhythmias such as atrial fibrillation and premature ventricular complexes, and has the potential to diagnose atrial flutter as well. Through 252 electrodes sending signals to the vest, 3-dimensional atrial maps are created that display the electrical activity of the heart. From these maps, conclusions can be drawn about types of atrial flutter and where they are located. Two types of maps were used for the project, propagation maps and phase maps. Propagation maps provide information on the directionality of the electrical circuit and how signal conducts across the atria. These maps were used to compare the directionalities between different types of flutter to determine if the vest accurately captured the conduction signals. Phase maps were then used to display false hinge points, which can be used as pattern identifiers for certain types of flutter. Both of these maps appeared to have patterns that allow the electrophysiologist to approximate what type of flutter is present and where it originates from. The STS project focuses on the variables that affect what treatment options are presented to pediatric patients. The research question pertaining to the topic concerns what is the best treatment option for children diagnosed with LCPD. This question is examined using Callon and Law’s Actor Network Theory, where factors such as long-term outcomes from treatment methods, what classification system was used to diagnose the hip, and why surgeons are more likely to promote certain treatment options over others. All of these factors are crucial when treating Perthes patients, especially when considering most of them will need a hip replacement much earlier in life. To closely examine the options available to Perthes patients, research was completed with papers that detailed long-term outcomes for eight of the most common treatment methods. The outcomes were evaluated to determine the lifespan of the hip joint post treatment, and whether the patient still experienced significant pain. In addition, surgeon bias was examined to determine why orthopedic surgeons may be more or less likely to perform complex osteotomies on pediatric patients. After close examination of the treatment options, one option presented itself as the optimal one for treating Perthes disease. While it is beneficial to have one option that stands out, it appears as though surgeons are less likely to offer complex surgeries to young children. This can be attributed to age, especially since the patients have not reached skeletal maturity, as well as location. Hospitals located in rural areas are less likely to have surgeons capable of performing difficult procedures on small patients, and are therefore less likely to offer the surgery as a treatment option. In addition, surgeons are more comfortable with some procedures than others, and prefer to not deviate from typical surgical procedures that they perform. From these points, it can be concluded that Perthes is a complicated disease to treat, and may not result in an optimal outcome due to the ambiguity of treatment. These projects aim to provide patients additional information about devices that diagnose common heart arrhythmias, as well as treatments available for patients with a rare hip disease. Doctors should aim to provide the best care possible for their patients through the integration of new diagnosis and treatment methods available to them.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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16. A Cross-Border Railway Bridge Non-Reconstruction: Actor-Network Analysis of its Design, Non-Development, and Non-Action
- Author
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Savić, Marko, Abramović, Borna, Cole, Nicki Lisa, Jahrbacher, Michaela, and Getzinger, Günter
- Subjects
Railway ,Actor-Network Analysis ,Cross-Border ,Bridges ,Mapping ,Traffic ,Transport ,Actor Network Theory (ANT) - Abstract
We describe the story of the railway missing links, particularly of the crossborder railway bridge in the Mura-Drava-Rails network. Eight railway lines formed this railway network from 1857 to 1924. We introduce our research with the historical case of design and innovation development of the semi- parabolic railway bridges. The central time frame of this paper is delimited to the post-second world war years to the present. With actor-network analysis, we describe the non-development and nonaction in the two cross-border railway regional lines, each with its missing link. These two missing links in an estimated length of twelve railway kilometres prevent the network from being reformed. Additionally, we draw insights from urban studies, development studies, and machine theory. We followed the logic of the nonreconstruction of the railway bridge on the border of the former Yugoslavia with the Republic of Austria and the rationalisation of the passenger railway transport in the former country in 1968 on the one side. That is how we tried to understand also the commissioning of the cross-border road bridge between the two countries over the Mura river only a year later, in 1969, on the other side. We had to broaden our research perspective to all the railway border crossing od today’s Slovenia with Austria, Hungary, and Italy. By mapping these railway border crossings, we were able to describe the strategic intent of the former country, which was to close the majority of the railway borders crossing— seven out of ten railway border crossings existing before the second world war—on its northern borders.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Journalism and the City.
- Author
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Archetti, Cristina
- Subjects
FOREIGN correspondents ,FOREIGN news ,MASS media ,JOURNALISTS - Abstract
Place matters a great deal in journalism, even in the era of the “death of geography.” Yet space never produces effects through its existence alone. To understand the relevance of location beyond its most immediate assigned role of “logistic constraint,” we must rework not only our understanding of journalism, but of the whole social world. This article presents a comparative analysis of foreign correspondents' practices in London and Oslo. The foreign journalists' experiences in the case studies are analytically dissected through the lens of Bruno Latour's Actor Network Theory (ANT). The analysis shows the utility of the application of Latour's framework to the study of international journalism in two respects. First, by mapping how local practices—identities, newsgathering routines and story outputs—are relationally constructed through the interactions of social actors, technologies and material infrastructures, ANT provides an understanding of the role of location that transcends the merely physical and geographical dimensions. Second, by showing how situated practices are the outcomes of unique network configurations, ANT questions the validity of any generalized one-size-fits-all statements about the current state of foreign correspondence. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Assembling Welfare Landscapes:Lessons from Danish Post-war Social Housing
- Author
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Jessen, Asbjørn and Tietjen, Anne
- Subjects
actor-network theory ,welfare politics ,open spaces ,Actor Network Theory (ANT) ,Faculty of Science ,spatial design ,Social housing ,Heritage ,socio-material assemblage - Abstract
Post-war social housing estates are commonly problematised as socially and spatially segregated places in European cities. Physical transformations – often framed as ‘upgrading’ – are considered to stimulate better social and spatial integration: many estates are being ‘opened up’ by converting open spaces into public spaces, other estates are being densified to achieve a better social mix. In these transformations, social housing’s designed landscapes play a central role, but often with no awareness of their inherited socio-material qualities. This paper makes a case for reappraising the heritage of open spaces in post-war social housing as welfare landscapes to inform current debates, policies and practices regarding social housing and future heritage making in its renewal. We look back at the development processes of three paradigmatic Danish estates which literally materialised the emerging welfare state by concrete, asphalt, plantings and earthworks. Guided by actor-network theory we recount how their welfare landscapes materialised as socio-material assemblages. We show that non-human things played a crucial role in the development of welfare landscapes which focused on child welfare and community development, offered architectural and ecological diversity, and co-shaped the urban landscape beyond the individual estates. Understanding welfare landscapes as socio-material assemblages does not only acknowledge the role of non-human things in their historical production. Ultimately it also calls for the inclusion of the welfare of non-human species and may offer inspiration for developing future welfare landscapes for more than humans.
- Published
- 2020
19. Komunikasi Bencana di Twitter: Studi Kasus Bencana Banjir Perkotaan di Daerah Khusus Ibukota (DKI) Jakarta'
- Author
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Sri Rum Giyarsih, Bevaola Kusumasari, Ahmad Maulana, Kusumasari Bevaola, Universitas Gadjah Mada, and Giyarsih Sri R
- Subjects
corpus assisted discourse studies (cads) ,actor network theory (ant) ,Actor–network theory ,social media ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Social Sciences ,Politics ,Political science ,AZ20-999 ,Personality ,Social media ,media_common ,H1-99 ,Flood myth ,business.industry ,flood ,Public relations ,Disaster response ,Social sciences (General) ,Local government ,disaster communication ,Position (finance) ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,business ,Disaster communication ,Flood ,Corpus Assisted Discourse Studies (CADS) ,Actor Network Theory (ANT) - Abstract
Social media occupies increasingly important roles in disaster response management. However, there are still doubts regarding the effectiveness of social media-based disaster communication. This paper aims to understand the discourse that emerge in Twitter containing facts or opinion regarding the flood disaster communication in DKI Jakarta under the different leadership of Basuki Tjahaja Purnama (2014- 2017) and Anies Rasyid Baswedan (2017-2020). This research used the methods of Corpus Assisted Discourse Study (CADS) and Actor Network Theory (ANT). These methods collected data on the discourse that is happening on Twitter and analyzes the network of actors who are active in discussions about floods in DKI Jakarta at different periods of leadership. This research found that the discourse that has developed on Twitter about floods in DKI Jakarta covers the personal problems of the leaders, the personality of the leaders, and the political position of the leaders, offered little messages that leads to solving the problem of flooding in DKI Jakarta. The active actor network is dominated by the local government of Jakarta as the responsibility holder or the main actor in delivering in information is only played by BPBD Jakarta.
- Published
- 2021
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