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---
---
# References
@book{ghosh2010,
address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
title = {Cybercrimes a multidisciplinary analysis},
isbn = {9783642135477},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg},
author = {Ghosh, Sumit and Turrini, Elliot},
year = {2010},
keywords = {cybernormer, information}
},
@book{sciulli1992,
address = {Cambridge {[England];} New York},
title = {Theory of societal constitutionalism: foundations of a {non-Marxist} critical theory},
isbn = {0521410401 9780521410403},
shorttitle = {Theory of societal constitutionalism},
abstract = {The problem of social authoritarianism is commonplace in practice, and yet it exceeds the scope of application of existing social and political theories. When private organizations and institutions wield their collective power arbitrarily within a modern civil society, a nation-state's government and economy may remain (or become) liberal-democratic and pluralistic. Actors, however, experience increasing social control in their everyday lives." {"Only} by distinguishing analytically between whether social order within any organization, institution, or sector of a modern civil society is based on actors' demonstrable social control or on their possible social integration can a nation-state's susceptibility to social authoritarianism be isolated empirically. Bringing this distinction to the literature and to research, the theory of societal constitutionalism leads to a critical reappraisal of the findings of comparative politics and also the findings of the sociologies of law, professions, and organizations and occupations." {"Research} findings in these fields that have hitherto appeared unrelated are now revealed both to explain historical shifts in a nation-state's direction of social change and to predict contemporary shifts. For instance, certain practices by physicians within hospitals, by chemists within corporations, and by lawyers before the bar both reflect and contribute to shifts toward greater social control and susceptibility to social authoritarianism. The theory also provides the means to examine whether these practices can be found either historically or currently in particular nation-states, whether they are present, for example, in the United States or Japan as well as in traditionally authoritarian states such as the Soviet Union, Brazil, and Argentina. The author argues that the presence of social authoritarianism is independent of whether an economy is market-based or centrally controlled or of whether Western cultural traditions are institutionalized rather than in Eastern or Third World traditions. In addition, the author argues that by specifying whether institutionalized restraints on social authoritarianism are present or absent within any modern nation-state, social scientists may predict whether any given government is susceptible to authoritarianism, whether any given legal system is susceptible to abuses of power, and whether any given corporation or profession is susceptible to criminality or {deviance."--BOOK} {JACKET.}},
publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
author = {Sciulli, David},
year = {1992},
keywords = {cybernormer}
},
@inproceedings{bjoerk2005,
title = {Socially Adaptable Games},
abstract = {This paper introduces the concept of Social Adaptability, a characteristic of games that are explicitly designed to function in changing social environments, and provides initial guidelines for how to design games so that they have this characteristic. The guidelines are based upon analysis of related concepts, types of social roles players can have in games, and how social environments in games can change during gameplay.},
booktitle = {DIGRA},
author = {Bj\"{o}rk, Staffan and Peitz, Johan and Eriksson, Daniel},
year = {2005}
},
@book{gurvitch1947,
address = {London},
title = {Sociology of law},
publisher = {Kegan Paul, Trench, Turner \& Co.},
author = {Gurvitch, Georges and Pound, Roscoe},
year = {1947},
keywords = {cybernormer, read}
},
@book{mackenzie1998,
address = {Cambridge, Mass.; London},
title = {Knowing machines: essays on technical change},
isbn = {0262631881 9780262631884},
shorttitle = {Knowing machines},
publisher = {MIT Press},
author = {MacKenzie, Donald A},
year = {1998},
keywords = {information, ontology}
},
@book{cross2008,
title = {Engineering design methods: strategies for product design},
isbn = {0470519266},
abstract = {Written in a clear and readable style by an experienced author of teaching texts, Engineering Design Methods is an integrated design textbook that presents specific methods within an overall strategy from concept to detail design. It also outlines the nature of design thinking, and sets it within broader contexts of product development and design process management. The book is much more than a manual of procedures; throughout, there is discussion and explication of the principles and practice of design. Building on the outstanding success of the previous three editions, this new edition cements the position of Engineering Design Methods at the forefront of engineering and industrial design as an essential text not only for students and lecturers but also for practitioners. The book promotes a flexible approach to the design process, and provides explicit, step-by-step advice on how to implement several separate design methods that have been shown to be of value in both education and practice. This revised fourth edition - promotes a flexible approach to the design process, provides explicit, step-by-step advice on how to implement several separate design methods that have been shown to be of value in both education and practice, contains new case studies and examples from industry that further broaden the scope of the book from engineering design into product design, includes a significant new chapter presenting user scenarios; a procedure for investigating potential product user wants and needs, that culminates in a design brief identifying an opportunity for developing a new product concept, features a book companion website with powerpoint slides for instructors. Reviewers comments: Engineering} Design Methods{\textellipsis} is a valuable contribution to the engineering design literature. The engineering design methods presented are those that are of practical significance and the book is a must for anyone wishing to raise the standard of their design work. The design methods are described clearly and succinctly, examples are used to illustrate principles and design strategies are presented that show how the methods are best employed. Professor Graham Thompson, Department of Mechanical Engineering, {UMIST}, {UK} Professor} Nigel Cross treatment of Engineering Design is a singularly successful treatment for my courses because it is short and concise enough to be read by virtually all students. Furthermore, his interpretations are open enough to allow the inquiring mind to fill out the picture, incorporating and extending the ideas to fit the reflective designers own needs. Professor Larry Leifer, Stanford Center for Design Reseach, Stanford University, {USA} This} book is an excellent book as a textbook for design methodology both for undergraduate and graduate level{\textellipsis} Students will gain a firm foundation of design methods from problem definition to design evaluations from this book. Professor {Kun-Pyo} Lee, Department of Industrial Design, Korea Institute of Science and Technology, Korea},
author = {Cross, Nigel},
year = {2008}
},
@book{benjamin1969,
title = {Illuminations},
isbn = {0805202412},
abstract = {Walter Benjamin was one of the most original cultural critics of the twentieth century. Illuminations includes his views on Kafka, with whom he felt a close personal affinity; his studies on Baudelaire and Proust; and his essays on Leskov and on Brecht's Epic Theater. Also included are his penetrating study {"The} Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction," an enlightening discussion of translation as a literary mode, and Benjamin's theses on the philosophy of {history.Hannah} Arendt selected the essays for this volume and introduces them with a classic essay about Benjamin's life in dark times. Also included is a new preface by Leon Wieseltier that explores Benjamin's continued relevance for our times.},
author = {Benjamin, Walter},
year = {1969}
},
@book{sundaram2009,
title = {Pirate Modernity: Delhi's Media Urbanism {(Routledge} Studies in Asia's Transformations)},
isbn = {0415409667},
author = {Sundaram, Ravi},
year = {2009},
keywords = {hacking, information, read, urban}
},
@book{michel2007,
title = {Design research now: essays and selected projects},
isbn = {3764384719},
abstract = {Design is becoming a recognised academic discipline, and design research is the driving force behind this transformation. Design Research Now a?? Essays and Selected Projects charts the field of design research with introductory essays and selected research projects. The authors of the essays, all leading international design scholars, stake out positions on the most important issues of design research. They locate the significance of design research at the interface with technological development, describe what makes it a necessary ingredient of the continued development of the design disciplines, and assign it a seminal role in the relevant developments of society. The essays are supplemented by the presentation of recently completed research projects from universities in the Netherlands, the {UK} and Italy.},
author = {Michel, Ralf},
year = {2007},
keywords = {design, read}
},
@book{goffman1990,
title = {The presentation of self in everyday life},
isbn = {0140135715},
author = {Goffman, Erving},
year = {1990},
keywords = {sociology}
},
@book{mckay2008,
address = {Falmouth},
title = {Collapse {VOLUME} {IV}},
volume = {IV}}, author = {McKay, Robin E. d. and {McKay}, Robin E. d.},
year = {2008}
},
@book{bauman2000,
address = {Cambridge, {UK;} Malden, {MA}},
title = {Liquid modernity},
isbn = {07456409X} 9780745624099 0745624103 9780745624105},
abstract = {In this text, Bauman examines how we have moved away from a "heavy" and "solid", hardware-focused modernity to a "light" and "liquid", software-based modernity. This passage, he argues, has brought profound change to all aspects of the human condition.},
publisher = {Polity Press ; Blackwell},
author = {Bauman, Zygmunt},
year = {2000},
keywords = {sociology}
},
@book{meillassoux2009,
address = {London},
title = {After Finitude: An Essay on the Necessity of Contingency},
isbn = {1441173838},
abstract = {Quentin Meillassoux, a former student of Alain Badiou, is considered to be one of the most talented and exciting new voices in contemporary French philosophy.},
publisher = {Continuum},
author = {Meillassoux, Quentin},
year = {2009},
keywords = {ontology}
},
@book{braidotti2006,
address = {Cambridge, {UK;} Malden, {MA}},
title = {Transpositions: on nomadic ethics},
isbn = {0745635954 9780745635958 0745635962 9780745635965},
shorttitle = {Transpositions},
publisher = {Polity Press},
author = {Braidotti, Rosi},
year = {2006},
keywords = {ontology, sociology}
},
@book{karppi2011,
title = {Digital Suicide and the Biopolitics of Leaving Facebook},
url = {http://www.transformationsjournal.org/journal/issue_20/article_02.shtml},
publisher = {Transformations},
author = {Karppi, T.},
year = {2011},
keywords = {information, politics}
},
@article{pedersen2007,
title = {Protocols of research and design},
number = {August},
author = {Pedersen, J.},
year = {2007}
},
@misc{barlow1996,
title = {A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace},
url = {https://projects.eff.org/~barlow/Declaration-Final.html},
author = {Barlow, J. P.},
year = {1996},
keywords = {information},
howpublished = {https//projects.eff.org/{\textasciitilde}barlow/Declaration-Final.html}}
},
@book{deleuze1988,
title = {Bergsonism},
isbn = {09422906X}},
abstract = {What is needed for something new to appear? According to Gilles Deleuze, one of the most brilliant contemporary philosophers, this question of "novelty" is the major problem posed by Bergson's work. In this companion book to Bergson's Matter and Memory, Deleuze demonstrates both the development and the range of three fundamental Bergsonian concepts: duration, memory, and the elan vital. Bergsonism is also important to an understanding of Deleuze's own work, influenced as it is by {Bergson.Gilles} Deleuze is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Paris {VIII}, {Vincennes/Saint} Denis. Among his most recent books in translation are Nietzsche and Philosophy, Cinema: Image Movement and, with Felix Guattari, {Anti-Oedipus}, Kafka, and One Thousand {Plateaus.Hugh} Tomlinson is the translator of Deleuze's Nietzsche and Philosophy and Kant's Critical Philosophy. Barbara Habberjam is a translator living in England.},
author = {Deleuze, Gilles},
year = {1988},
keywords = {ontology}
},
@book{hyden2002,
address = {Lund},
title = {Normvetenskap},
publisher = {Sociologiska institutionen, Lunds Universitet},
author = {Hyd\'{e}n, H\r{a}kan},
year = {2002},
keywords = {cybernormer, read}
},
@book{verstegen2005,
title = {Arnheim, Gestalt, and art: a psychological theory {(Google} {eBook)}},
isbn = {3211288643},
abstract = {Arnheim, Gestalt and Art is the first book-length discussion of the powerful thinking of the psychologist of art, Rudolf Arnheim. Written as a complete overview of Arnheim's thinking, it covers fundamental issues of the importance of psychological discussion of the arts, the status of gestalt psychology, the various sense modalities and media, and developmental issues. By proceeding in a direction from general to specific and then proceeding through dynamic processes as they unfold in time (creativity, development, etc.), the book discovers an unappreciated unity to Arnheim's thinking. Not content to simply summarize Arnheim's theory, however, Arnheim, Art, and Gestalt goes on to enrich (and occasionally question) Arnheim's findings with the contemporary results of gestalt-theoretical research from around the world, but especially in Italy and Germany. The result is a workable overview of the psychology of art with bridges built to contemporary research, making Arnheim's approach living and sustainable.},
author = {Verstegen, Ian},
year = {2005}
},
@inproceedings{brown1994,
title = {Borderline issues Social and material aspects of design},
volume = {9},
booktitle = {HumanComputer} Interaction},
author = {Brown, John Seely and Duguid, Paul},
year = {1994}
},
@article{halloran2002,
title = {Taking {the{\textbackslash}textbackslash\&{\textbackslash}textbackslash\#39,No{\textbackslash}textbackslash\&{\textbackslash}textbackslash\#39},out of Lotus Notes: activity theory, groupware, and student groupwork},
journal = {Proceedings of the Conference on},
author = {Halloran, John and Rogers, Yvonne and Scaife, Mike},
year = {2002}
},
@article{tanenbaum2012,
title = {Steampunk as design fiction},
doi = {10.1145/2207676.2208279},
journal = {Proceedings of the 2012 {ACM} annual conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems - {CHI} '12},
author = {Tanenbaum, Joshua and Tanenbaum, Karen and Wakkary, Ron},
year = {2012},
pages = {1583}
},
@article{hogg1991,
title = {Braitenberg creatures},
volume = {5},
journal = {Epistemology and Learning Group, {MIT} Media Laboratory June},
author = {Hogg, D. W. and Martin, F. and Resnick, M.},
year = {1991},
keywords = {design},
pages = {1991}
},
@unpublished{hutchins1995,
title = {Cognitive Science},
author = {Hutchins, Edwin},
year = {1995}
},
@article{norgaard2010,
title = {Ecosystem services: From eye-opening metaphor to complexity blinder},
volume = {69},
issn = {0921-8009},
shorttitle = {Special Section - Payments for Environmental Services: Reconciling Theory and Practice},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800909004583},
doi = {10.1016/j.ecolecon.2009.11.009},
abstract = {What started as a humble metaphor to help us think about our relation to nature has become integral to how we are addressing the future of humanity and the course of biological evolution. The metaphor of nature as a stock that provides a flow of services is insufficient for the difficulties we are in or the task ahead. Indeed, combined with the mistaken presumption that we can analyze a global problem within a partial equilibrium economic framework and reach a new economy project-by-project without major institutional change, the simplicity of the stock-flow framework blinds us to the complexity of the human predicament. The ecosystem services approach can be a part of a larger solution, but its dominance in our characterization of our situation and the solution is blinding us to the ecological, economic, and political complexities of the challenges we actually face.},
number = {6},
journal = {Ecological Economics},
author = {Norgaard, Richard B.},
month = apr,
year = {2010},
keywords = {Climate change, complexity, design, Ecosystem services, General equilibrium analysis, Governance, Methodological pluralism, sustainability, Sustainability},
pages = {1219--1227}
},
@article{wood2010,
title = {THE} DARKNET:} A {DIGITAL} {COPYRIGHT} {REVOLUTION}},
volume = {XVI}}
number = {4},
journal = {Richmond Journal of Law {\textbackslash}textbackslash\& {TEchnology}},
author = {Wood, Jessica A.},
year = {2010}
},
@book{spinoza2001,
title = {Etiken},
isbn = {9172350113},
author = {Spinoza, Baruch},
year = {2001}
},
@inproceedings{anderson2011,
title = {SOCIA} {INFRASTRUCTURE} {AS} A {MEANS} {TO} {ACHIEVE} {THE} {RIGHT} {TO} {THE} {CITY}},
booktitle = {Design Activism Conference},
author = {Anderson, Nadia M.},
year = {2011},
keywords = {design, design activism, read}
},
@article{omurchu2012,
title = {Designers as curators, user as designers: a reflective study of hacking and curation to extend interaction design practice},
author = {O Murch\'{u}, N.},
year = {2012},
keywords = {design, design activism}
},
@book{deleuze1995,
title = {Negotiations, 1972-1990},
isbn = {0231075812},
abstract = {Negotiations traces the intellectual journey of a man widely acclaimed as one of the most important French philosphers. A provocative guide to Deleuze by Deleuze, the collection clarifies the key critical concepts in the work of this vital figure in contemporary philosphy, who has had a lasting impact on a variety of disciplines, including aesthetics, film theory, psycho-analysis, and cultural studies.},
author = {Deleuze, Gilles},
year = {1995},
keywords = {ontology}
},
@article{pfaffenberger1992,
title = {Technological dramas},
journal = {Science, Technology, and Human Values},
author = {Pfaffenberger, B.},
year = {1992}
},
@article{posner1995,
title = {The sociology of the sociology of law: A view from economics},
volume = {2},
number = {4},
journal = {European Journal of Law and Economics},
author = {Posner, R. A.},
year = {1995},
keywords = {cybernormer, read},
pages = {265--284}
},
@book{sennett2012,
address = {New Haven, {CT}},
title = {Together: the rituals, pleasures, and politics of cooperation},
isbn = {9780300116335},
abstract = {Discusses why people tend to avoid social engagement with those unlike themselves, why increased cooperation is necessary to make society prosper, and the skills necessary for strengthening cooperation.},
publisher = {Yale University Press},
author = {Sennett, Richard},
year = {2012},
keywords = {politics}
},
@inproceedings{clark2005,
title = {Tussle in cyberspace: defining tomorrow's internet},
booktitle = {Networking, {IEEE/ACM}},
author = {Clark, David D. and Wroclawski, John and Sollins, Karen R. and Braden, Robert},
year = {2005}
},
@article{ferrara2011,
title = {Design and self-production. The advanced dimension of handcraft},
volume = {4},
issn = {19842988},
doi = {10.4013/sdrj.2011.41.02},
number = {1},
journal = {Strategic Design Research Journal},
author = {Ferrara, Marinella},
year = {2011},
pages = {5--13}
},
@article{piercey1996,
title = {The Spinoza-intoxicated man: Deleuze on expression},
volume = {29},
number = {3},
journal = {Man and World},
author = {Piercey, Robert},
year = {1996},
keywords = {ontology}
},
@book{jenkins2006,
title = {Convergence culture: where old and new media collide},
isbn = {0814742815},
abstract = {View the Table of Contents. Read the {Introduction.Henry} Jenkins at {Authors{\textbackslash}@Google} {(video)This} book rocks for anyone with concerns about the immediate and future direction of media, culture, and {omnipresence.---Business} 2 {BusinessWinner} of the 2007 Society for Cinema and Media Studies Katherine Singer Kovacs Book {AwardThe} standard convergence narrative of recent years presents media concentration as a threat both to the diversity of communication channels and to individuals opportunities to engage in public discourse. A respected and well-established media scholar, Jenkins {(MIT)} here counters such pessimistic perspectives on the brave new media world with theoretical and evidentiary attestations to the growing power of individuals and grassroots groups to affect the larger media {landscape.---ChoiceJenkins} is an astute observer of media culture and his insights are spot-on. . . . He intends his book to be a powerful tool both now and in the future. . . . This is a book to be praised. It raises many issues. {\textmdash}Los} Angeles {TimesRemarkable.} . . . Jenkins' insights are gripping and his prose is surprisingly entertaining and lucid for a book that is, at its core, intellectually rigorous. . . . Jenkins' impressive ability to break down complex concepts into readable prose makes this study vital and engaging. {\textmdash}Publishers} {WeeklyJenkins} tries to bring clarity to cultural changes that are melting and morphing into new shapes on an hourly, daily, weekly, monthly basis. Convergence Culture provides a view that looks at the restless ocean and tracks the currents rather than just looking at the individual rocks on the beach. {\textmdash}The} {McClatchy} {NewspapersI} thought I knew twenty-first century pop media until I read Henry Jenkins. The fresh research and radical insights in Convergence Culture deserve a wide and thoughtful readership. Bring on the {\textquoteleft}monolithic block of eyeballs! {\textmdash}Bruce} Sterling, author, blogger, {visionaryHenry} Jenkins offers crucial insight into an unexpected and unforeseen future. Unlike most predictions about how New Media will shape the world in which we live, the reality is turning out far stranger and more interesting than we might have imagined. The social implications of this change could be staggering. {\textmdash}Will} Wright, designer of {SimCity} and The {SimsOne} of those rare works that is closer to an operating system than a traditional book: its a platform that people will be building on for years to come. What's more, the book happens to be a briskly entertaining read---as startling, inventive, and witty as the culture it documents. It should be mandatory reading for anyone trying to make sense of todays popular culture---but thankfully, a book this fun to read doesnt need a mandate. {\textmdash}Steven} Johnson, author of the national bestseller, Everything Bad Is Good For {YouHenry} Jenkins is the 21st century {McLuhan} I've been waiting for. With all the fuzzy generalities, moral panics, and gloomy pronouncements from industry spokesmen and social critics, Jenkins' clearly communicated and nuanced analysis is sorely needed. The world {McLuhan} foretold back in the age of 'electric media' has become immensely more complicated in today's many-to-many, converged, remixed and mashed-up, digital, mobile, always-on media environment. If you are a parent, a student, an educator, a creator or consumer of popular culture, an entrepreneur, or a media industry executive, you need to understand convergence culture. And you will only after reading Henry {Jenkins.---Howard} Rheingold, author of Smart Mobs: The Next Social {RevolutionFor} any Sony {PS3} execs out there wondering why their technological masterpiece is being ridiculed by customers before its even released . . . Convergence Culture is a must {read...Jenkins} offers numerous insights on how technology and media professionals can forge better relationships with their {customers.---SlashdotI} simply could not put this book down! Henry Jenkins provides a fascinating account of how new media intersects old media and engages the imagination of fans in more and more powerful ways. Educators, media specialists, policy makers and parents will find Convergence Culture both lively and {enlightening.---John} Seely Brown, Former Chief Scientist, Xerox Corp {\textbackslash}textbackslash\& director of Xerox {PARC} {\textuotedblright}Henry} Jenkins is the Director of {MIT's} Comparative Media Studies Program. Or, in other words, he's a genius. He's one of those rare people you meet and are instantly jealous of, wishing you could somehow transplant their amazing wealth of knowledge into your own noggin. I was privileged to have made his acquaintance when he interviewed me for his fabulous new book, Convergence {Culture...Go} read it, you just might learn {something.---The} Heather {ShowThe} book is a short, smart, buttery read on a hot topic, and it is sure to draw both popular and academic {interest.---Water} Cooler {GamesConvergence} Culture, is for anyone who is curious about future trends at the intersection of technology and humanity. Jenkins tries to bring clarity to cultural changes that are melting and morphing into new shapes on an hourly, daily, weekly, monthly basis. Convergence Culture provides a view that looks at the restless ocean and tracks the currents rather than just looking at the individual rocks on the {beach.---Ledger-EnquirerConvergence} Culture maps a new territory: where old and new media intersect, where grassroots and corporate media collide, where the power of the media producer and the power of the consumer interact in unpredictable {ways.Henry} Jenkins, one of Americas most respected media analysts, delves beneath the new media hype to uncover the important cultural transformations that are taking place as media converge. He takes us into the secret world of Survivor Spoilers, where avid internet users pool their knowledge to unearth the shows secrets before they are revealed on the air. He introduces us to young Harry Potter fans who are writing their own Hogwarts tales while executives at Warner Brothers struggle for control of their franchise. He shows us how The Matrix has pushed transmedia storytelling to new levels, creating a fictional world where consumers track down bits of the story across multiple media {channels.Jenkins} argues that struggles over convergence will redefine the face of American popular culture. Industry leaders see opportunities to direct content across many channels to increase revenue and broaden markets. At the same time, consumers envision a liberated public sphere, free of network controls, in a decentralized media environment. Sometimes corporate and grassroots efforts reinforce each other, creating closer, more rewarding relations between media producers and consumers. Sometimes these two forces are at {war.Jenkins} provides a riveting introduction to the world where every story gets told and every brand gets sold across multiple media platforms. He explains the cultural shift that is occurring as consumers fight for control across disparate channels, changing the way we do business, elect our leaders, and educate our children.},
author = {Jenkins, Henry},
year = {2006},
keywords = {FIA}}},
@article{bardzell2010,
title = {Interaction criticism: three readings of an interaction design, and what they get us},
volume = {17},
issn = {1072-5520},
number = {2},
journal = {interactions},
author = {Bardzell, Jeffrey and Bolter, Jay and L\"{o}wgren, Jonas},
year = {2010},
keywords = {design, design activism, read},
pages = {32--37}
},
@inproceedings{dastani2003,
title = {Role-assignment in open agent societies},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the second international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems},
author = {Dastani, M. and Dignum, V. and Dignum, F.},
year = {2003},
keywords = {complexity, information},
pages = {489--496}
},
@book{illich1996,
title = {The right to useful unemployment and its professional enemies},
isbn = {0714526630},
author = {Illich, Ivan},
year = {1996},
keywords = {design activism, hacking, read, sociology, sustainability}
},
@article{simondon2011,
title = {Table of contents by topic.},
volume = {69},
issn = {1524-4040},
doi = {10.1227/01.neu.0000400011.01154.68},
number = {2},
journal = {Neurosurgery},
author = {Simondon, Gilbert},
year = {2011},
pages = {N11--2}
},
@inproceedings{schialuni2011,
title = {FROM}{MAY} {\textquoteleft}68 {POSTERS} {TO} {YOUTUBE} {VIDEOS:} {DIFFERENT} {EXPRESSIONS} {OF} {COLLECTIVE} {DESIGN}},
booktitle = {Design Activism Conference},
author = {Schialuni, Silvia},
year = {2011},
keywords = {design, design activism}
},
@article{kittler2006,
title = {Thinking colours and/or machines},
volume = {23},
doi = {10.1177/0263276406069881},
number = {7/8},
journal = {THEOR} {CULTURE} {AND} {SOCIETY}},
author = {Kittler, Friedrich A.},
year = {2006},
keywords = {information}
},
@article{cohen2011,
title = {Introduction: Imagining the Networked Information Society},
journal = {Julie E. Cohen, Configuring the Networked Self: Law, Code, and the Play of Everyday Practice {(Yale} University Press, forthcoming January 2012)},
author = {Cohen, J.},
year = {2011},
keywords = {information, read}
},
@book{galloway2004,
address = {Cambridge, Mass.},
title = {Protocol: how control exists after decentralization},
isbn = {0262072475},
abstract = {Is the Internet a vast arena of unrestricted communication and freely exchanged information or a regulated, highly structured virtual bureaucracy? In Protocol, Alexander Galloway argues that the founding principle of the Net is control, not freedom, and that the controlling power lies in the technical protocols that make network connections (and disconnections) possible. He does this by treating the computer as a textual medium that is based on a technological language, code. Code, he argues, can be subject to the same kind of cultural and literary analysis as any natural language; computer languages have their own syntax, grammar, communities, and cultures. Instead of relying on established theoretical approaches, Galloway finds a new way to write about digital media, drawing on his backgrounds in computer programming and critical theory. {"Discipline-hopping} is a necessity when it comes to complicated socio-technical topics like protocol," he writes in the {preface.Galloway} begins by examining the types of protocols that exist, including {TCP/IP}, {DNS}, and {HTML.} He then looks at examples of resistance and subversion---hackers, viruses, cyberfeminism, Internet art---which he views as emblematic of the larger transformations now taking place within digital culture. Written for a nontechnical audience, Protocol serves as a necessary counterpoint to the wildly utopian visions of the Net that were so widespread in earlier days.},
publisher = {MIT} ress},
author = {Galloway, Alexander R.},
year = {2004},
keywords = {cybernormer, information}
},
@article{bourdieu1986,
title = {Force of Law: Toward a Sociology of the Juridical Field, The},
volume = {38},
shorttitle = {Force of Law},
url = {http://heinonlinebackup.com/hol-cgi-bin/get_pdf.cgi?handle=hein.journals/hastlj38§ion=33},
journal = {Hastings {LJ}},
author = {Bourdieu, Pierre},
year = {1986},
keywords = {cybernormer},
pages = {805}
},
@book{forester1999,
title = {The deliberative practitioner: encouraging participatory planning processes},
isbn = {0262561220},
abstract = {Citizen participation in such complex issues as the quality of the environment, neighborhood housing, urban design, and economic development often brings with it suspicion of government, anger between stakeholders, and power plays by many---as well as appeals to rational argument. Deliberative planning practice in these contexts takes political vision and pragmatic skill. Working from the accounts of practitioners in urban and rural settings, North and South, John Forester shows how skillful deliberative practices can facilitate practical and timely participatory planning processes. In so doing, he provides a window onto the wider world of democratic governance, participation, and practical decisionmaking. Integrating interpretation and theoretical insight with diverse accounts of practice, Forester draws on political science, law, philosophy, literature, and planning to explore the challenges and possibilities of deliberative practice.},
author = {Forester, John},
year = {1999},
keywords = {design}
},
@book{butler2006,
title = {Precarious life: the powers of mourning and violence},
isbn = {1844675440},
abstract = {Judith Butler is one of America's most daring and vibrant thinkers. In this profound appraisal of {post-September} 11th America, now with a new foreword, Judith Butler considers the conditions of heightened fear and aggression that followed the attack on the Twin Towers, and the {US} government's decision to attack Afghanistan and Iraq. She critiques this use of violence as a response to loss and grief, and argues that the vulnerability the West now feels offers a chance to imagine a world without violence, a world where the interdependency of peoples and nations becomes the basis for a global political {community.Through} five impassioned and personal essays, Butler responds to the current {US} policies to wage perpetual war, and calls for a deeper understanding of how mourning and violence might instead inspire solidarity and a quest for global justice.},
author = {Butler, Judith},
year = {2006}
},
@book{armstrong2009,
address = {Minneapolis},
title = {Reticulations: {Jean-Luc} Nancy and the networks of the political},
isbn = {9780816654895},
publisher = {University of Minnesota Press},
author = {Armstrong, Philip},
year = {2009},
keywords = {ontology, sociology}
},
@book{deleuze2001,
title = {Pure immanence: essays on a life},
isbn = {1890951242},
abstract = {The essays in this book present a complex theme at the heart of the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze, what in his last writing he called simply "a life." They capture a problem that runs throughout his work---his long search for a new and superior empiricism. Announced in his first book, on David Hume, then taking off with his early studies of Nietzsche and Bergson, the problem of an "empiricist conversion" became central to Deleuze's work, in particular to his aesthetics and his conception of the art of cinema. In the new regime of communication and information-machines with which he thought we are confronted today, he came to believe that such a conversion, such an empiricism, such a new art and will-to-art, was what we need most. The last, seemingly minor question of "a life" is thus inseparable from Deleuze's striking image of philosophy not as a wisdom we already possess, but as a pure immanence of what is yet to come. Perhaps the full exploitation of that image, from one of the most original trajectories in contemporary philosophy, is also yet to come.},
author = {Deleuze, Gilles and Boyman, Anne},
year = {2001},
keywords = {ontology}
},
@book{denward2008,
address = {Solmukohta},
title = {Playground Worlds: Creating and Evaluating Experiences of {Role-Playing} Games.},
author = {Denward, Marie and Waern, Annika and Montola, Markus and Stenros, Jaakko},
year = {2008}
},
@book{sharp2010,
title = {Self-iberation:} A Guide to Strategic Planning for Action to End a Dictatorship Or Other Oppression},
isbn = {1880813238},
abstract = {This strategic planning guide is intended to assist people who wish themselves to plan a grand strategy, or super plan, to achieve their liberation from oppression and to build a more free and democratic system. This document is not only relevant to people facing internal dictatorships. It is also meant to be useful to people facing any kind of oppression.},
author = {Sharp, Gene and Cambridge, Albert Einstein Institution and Mass},
year = {2010}
},
@article{thrift2004,
title = {Driving in the city},
volume = {21},
doi = {10.1177/0263276404046060},
journal = {Theory Culture and Society},
author = {Thrift, Nigel},
year = {2004},
keywords = {sociology, urban}
},
@book{faellman2003,
title = {In romance with the materials of mobile interaction: a phenomenological approach to the design of mobile information technology},
isbn = {9173055786},
abstract = {This thesis deals analytically and through design with the issue of {Human-Computer} Interaction {(HCI)} with mobile devices; mobile interaction. Specifically, it is an investigation and a capitalization on the multistable kinds of relations that arise between the threefold of human user, artifact, and world, and how dealing with this kind of technology and these relations in many ways must ve regarded as different from mainstream {HCI.} This subject matter is theoretically, methodologically, and empirically approached from two {HCI} unconventional outlooks: a phenomenological and a design-orientated attitude to research.},
author = {F\"{a}llman, Daniel},
year = {2003}
},
@article{christensen2012,
title = {Natural sources of normativity.},
volume = {43},
issn = {1879-2499},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2011.05.009},
abstract = {Normativity is widely regarded as being naturalistically problematic. Teleosemantic theories aimed to provide a naturalistic grounding for the normativity of mental representation in biological proper function, but have been subject to a variety of criticisms and would in any case provide only a thin naturalist platform for grounding normativity more generally. Here I present an account that identifies a basic form of valuational normativity in autonomous systems, and show how the account can be extended to encompass key aspects of the normativity of functions and practical reasons.},
number = {1},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
author = {Christensen, Wayne},
year = {2012},
pages = {104--12}
},
@article{cardenas????,
title = {Hackerspaces y* labs como lugares para explorar y configurar tecnolog\'{i}as sociales digitales autopoi\'{e}ticas},
author = {C\'{a}rdenas, O. V. L.},
keywords = {cybernormer, design, design activism, information}
},
@article{haraway1988,
title = {Situated knowledges: The science question in feminism and the privilege of partial perspective},
journal = {Feminist studies},
author = {Haraway, Donna},
year = {1988}
},
@article{tamanaha2000,
title = {A {Non-Essentialist} Version of Legal Pluralism},
volume = {27},
issn = {1467-6478},
url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1467-6478.00155/abstract},
doi = {10.1111/1467-6478.00155},
abstract = {The concept of legal pluralism has been touted by many socio-legal scholars as a key concept in the analysis of law. Yet, after almost twenty years of such claims, there has been little progress in the development of the concept. This article will argue that the underlying cause of this lack progress lies in the fact that promoters of the concept have relied upon function-based, essentialist concepts of law. It will describe the problems generated by such concepts and, following this general analysis, will review the versions of legal pluralism articulated by Boaventura de Sousa Santos and Gunther Teubner. The critique of their versions of legal pluralism will lead into the posing of a non-essentialist alternative which avoids the conceptual problems of prevailing versions of legal pluralism, and provides a better tool for purposes of research and analysis of the relationship between law and society.},
number = {2},
journal = {Journal of Law and Society},
author = {Tamanaha, Brian Z.},
year = {2000},
keywords = {cybernormer},
pages = {296{\textendash}321}
},
@article{unep2003,
title = {Product-service systems and sustainability: Opportunities for sustainable solutions},
author = {UNEP},
year = {2003}
},
@article{thrift1993,
title = {An Urban Impasse?},
volume = {10},
issn = {0263-2764},
doi = {10.1177/026327693010002012},
number = {2},
journal = {Theory, Culture {\textbackslash}textbackslash\& Society},
author = {Thrift, Nigel},
year = {1993},
keywords = {sociology}
},
@incollection{negarestani2010,
address = {Roma},
title = {SOLAR {INFERNO} {AND} {THE} {EARTHBOUND} {ABYSS}},
booktitle = {Our Sun},
publisher = {Istituto Svizzero di Roma},
author = {Negarestani, Reza},
year = {2010},
pages = {3--8}
},
@article{margarit2012,
title = {Deleuze and the Expression of Jurisprudence},
volume = {4},
abstract = {Review to: Edward Mussawir, Jurisdiction in Deleuze. The expression and representation of law, New York: Routledge, 2011, 193 p.},
number = {1},
journal = {Meta},
author = {Margarit, Emilian},
year = {2012},
keywords = {cybernormer, ontology, read},
pages = {227--230}
},
@inproceedings{binder2012,
title = {What is the Object of Design?},
isbn = {9781450310161},
booktitle = {CHI'1}},
author = {Binder, Thomas},
year = {2012},
keywords = {design}
},
@book{luhmann2004,
address = {Oxford; New York},
title = {Law as a social system},
isbn = {9780198262381},
publisher = {Oxford University Press},
author = {Luhmann, Niklas},
year = {2004},
keywords = {cybernormer}
},
@article{kaptelinin1999,
title = {Methods {\textbackslash}textbackslash\& tools: The activity checklist: a tool for representing the {\textquotedblleft}space of context},
journal = {interactions},
author = {Kaptelinin, Victor and Nardi, Bonnie A. and Macaulay, Catriona},
year = {1999}
},
@article{lester1997,
title = {The Pedagogical Design Studio: Exploiting {Artifact-Based} Task Models for Constructivist Learning},
journal = {ACM}}
author = {Lester, James C. and {FitzGerald}, Patrick J. and Stone, Brian A.},
year = {1997}
},
@book{stengers2011,
address = {Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York},
title = {Capitalist sorcery: breaking the spell},
isbn = {0230237622},
abstract = {An English translation of La Sorcellerie Capitaliste - a passionate but pragmatic critique in political philosophy. It diagnoses capitalism as a 'system of sorcery without sorcerers'. Capitalism paralyses us in ways that resembles sorcery and the book is concerned to look at ways we might defend ourselves against such a system.},
publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
author = {Stengers, Isabelle and Pignarre, Philippe and Goffey, Andrew},
year = {2011},
keywords = {ontology, politics, read}
},
@article{frazer1995,
title = {An evolutionary architecture},
author = {Frazer, J.},
year = {1995},
keywords = {design}
},
@techreport{projectwebecology2009,
title = {Reimagining Internet Studies: A Web Ecology Perspective},
author = {Project Web Ecology},
year = {2009}
},
@article{moriwaki2006,
title = {Lessons from the scrapyard: creative uses of found materials within a workshop setting},
volume = {20},
issn = {0951-5666},
doi = {10.1007/s00146-006-0036-7},
number = {4},
journal = {Ai \& Society},
author = {Moriwaki, Katherine and {Brucker-Cohen}, Jonah},
year = {2006},
pages = {506--525}
},
@article{tuomi2005,
title = {Beyond user-centric models of product creation},
url = {http://www.springerlink.com/index/G361490N53766817.pdf},
journal = {Everyday Innovators},
author = {Tuomi, Ilkka},
year = {2005},
keywords = {design, information},
pages = {21{\textendash}38}
},
@article{kirk2010,
title = {Home video communication: mediating'closeness'},
journal = {\textllipsis}of the 2010 {ACM} conference on {\textellipsis}},
author = {Kirk, D. S.},
year = {2010}
},
@book{bataille1985,
title = {Visions of excess: selected writings, 1927-1939},
isbn = {0816612838},
abstract = {Printbegr{\ae}nsninger: Der kan printes 10 sider ad gangen og max. 40 sider pr. session.},
author = {Bataille, Georges and Stoekl, Allan},
year = {1985}
},
@article{glennie1996,
title = {Reworking E. P. Thompson's {`Time}, {Work-Discipline} and Industrial capitalism},
volume = {5},
doi = {10.1177/0961463X96005003001},
number = {275},
journal = {Time Sociey},
author = {Glennie, Paul and Thrift, Nigel},
year = {1996},
keywords = {sociology}
},
@article{disalvo????,
title = {FCJ-12} Spectacles and Tropes: Speculative Design and Contemporary Food Cultures},
journal = {Fibreculture Journal},
author = {DiSalo}, C.},
keywords = {design, design activism}
},
@inproceedings{wensveen2000,
title = {Touch me, hit me and I know how you feel: a design approach to emotionally rich interaction},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 3rd},
author = {Wensveen, Stephan and Overbeeke, Kees and Djajadiningrat, Tom},
year = {2000}
},
@article{jaervinen2007,
title = {Action Research is Similar to Design Science},
volume = {41},
issn = {0033-5177},
doi = {10.1007/s11135-005-5427-1},
number = {1},
journal = {Quality \& Quantity},
author = {J\"{a}rvinen, Pertti},
year = {2007},
keywords = {design},
pages = {37--54}
},
@book{delalex2006,
address = {Helsinki, Finland},
title = {Go with the flow: architecture, infrastructure and the everyday experience of mobility},
isbn = {9515581672},
publisher = {Univ. of Art and Design Helsinki},
author = {Delalex, Gilles},
year = {2006},
keywords = {cybernormer, information, urban}
},
@article{boyd2011,
title = {Six Provocations for Big Data},
author = {Boyd, D. and Crawford, K.},
year = {2011},
keywords = {information}
},
@inproceedings{cohn2010,
title = {Tracing design (ed) authority in critical modes of making},
isbn = {9781450301039},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 8th {ACM} Conference on Designing Interactive Systems},
author = {Cohn, Marisa and Kerridge, Tobie and Light, Ann and Lindtner, Silvia and Ratto, Matt},
year = {2010},
pages = {440{\textendash}441}
},
@book{parisi2004,
title = {Abstract sex: philosophy, bio-technology and the mutations of desire},
isbn = {0826469906},
abstract = {Astract Sex investigates the impact of advances in contemporary science and information technology on conceptions of sex. Evolutionary theory and the technologies of viral information transfer, cloning and genetic engineering are changing the way we think about human sex, reproduction and the communication of genetic information. Abstract Sex presents a philosophical exploration of this new world of sexual, informatic and capitalist multiplicity, of the accelerated mutation of nature and culture.{\textgreater}},
author = {Parisi, Luciana},
year = {2004}
},
@book{vonbusch2006,
title = {Abstract Hacktivism: The Making of a Hacker Culture},
isbn = {0955479622},
abstract = {In recent years, designers, activists and businesspeople have started to navigate their social worlds on the basis of concepts derived from the world of computers and new media technologies. According to Otto von Busch and Karl Palms, this represents a fundamental cultural shift. The conceptual models of modern social thought, as well as the ones emanating from the 1968 revolts, are being usurped by a new worldview. Using thinkers such as Michel Serres, Gilles Deleuze and Manuel {DeLanda} as a point of departure, the authors expand upon the idea that everyday technologies are profoundly interconnected with dominant modes of thought. In the nineteenth century, the motor replaced the clockwork as the universal model of knowledge. In a similar vein, new media technologies are currently replacing the motor as the dominant 'conceptual technology' of contemporary social thought. This development, von Busch and Palms argue, has yielded new ways of construing politics, activism and innovation. The authors embark on different routes to explore this shift. Otto von Busch relates the practice of hacking to phenomena such as shopdropping, craftivism, fan fiction, liberation theology, and Spanish social movement {YOMANGO.} Karl Palms examines how publications like Adbusters Magazine, as well as business theorists, have adopted a computer-inspired worldview, linking this development to the dot.com boom of the late 1990s. Hence, the text is written for designers and activists, as well as for the general reader interested in cultural studies.},
author = {Von Busch, Otto and Palm\r{a}s, Karl},
year = {2006},
keywords = {design activism}
},
@book{hughes2003,
title = {Understanding classical sociology: Marx, Weber, Durkheim},
isbn = {0761954678},
abstract = {Instructors: Please click here to request a review copy of this title for adoption {consideration.Desk} copies are available by calling {1-800-818-7243.Praise} for the First Edition: {`Totally} reliable\^{a}{\texteuro}{\textbrokenbar} the authors have produced a book urgently needed by all those charged with introducing students to the classics\^{a}{\texteuro}{\textbrokenbar} quite indispensable' - Times Higher Education Supplement This is a fully updated and expanded new edition of the successful undergraduate text. Providing a lucid examination of the pivotal theories of Marx, Durkheim and Weber, the authors submit that these figures have decisively shaped the discipline. They show how the classical apparatus is in use, even though it is being directed in new ways in response to the changing character of society. Written with the needs of undergraduates in mind, the text is essential reading for students in sociology and social theory.},
author = {Hughes, J. A. and Sharrock, Wes W. and Martin, Peter J.},
year = {2003}
},
@article{kuznetsov2010,
title = {Rise of the expert amateur: {DIY} projects, communities, and cultures},
journal = {Proceedings of {NordiCHI}},
author = {Kuznetsov, Stacey and Paulos, Eric},
year = {2010}
},
@book{butler2009,
title = {Frames of war: when is life grievable?},
isbn = {1844673332},
abstract = {In Frames of War , Judith Butler explores the media's portrayal of state violence, a process integral to the way in which the West wages modern war. This portrayal has saturated our understanding of human life, and has led to the exploitation and abandonment of whole peoples, who are cast as existential threats rather than as living populations in need of protection. These people are framed as already lost, to imprisonment, unemployment and starvation, and can easily be dismissed. In the twisted logic that rationalizes their deaths, the loss of such populations is deemed necessary to protect the lives of 'the living.' This disparity, Butler argues, has profound implications for why and when we feel horror, outrage, guilt, loss and righteous indifference, both in the context of war and, increasingly, everyday life. This book discerns the resistance to the frames of war in the context of the images from Abu Ghraib, the poetry from Guantanamo, recent European policy on immigration and Islam, and debates on normativity and non-violence. In this urgent response to ever more dominant methods of coercion, violence and racism, Butler calls for a re-conceptualization of the Left, one that brokers cultural difference and cultivates resistance to the illegitimate and arbitrary effects of state violence and its vicissitudes.},
author = {Butler, Judith},
year = {2009}
},
@article{swamidass2008,
title = {Why university inventions rarely produce income? Bottlenecks in university technology transfer},
volume = {34},
issn = {0892-9912},
doi = {10.1007/s10961-008-9097-8},
number = {4},
journal = {The Journal of Technology Transfer},
author = {Swamidass, Paul M. and Vulasa, Venubabu},
year = {2008},
pages = {343--363}
},
@misc{latour2009,
title = {Tarde Debate},
author = {Latour, Bruno},
year = {2009},
keywords = {sociology}
},
@book{gross2006,
address = {Cambridge},
title = {Law in times of crisis: emergency powers in theory and practice},
isbn = {0521833515},
abstract = {The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and the ensuing 'war on terror' have focused attention on issues that have previously lurked in a dark corner at the edge of the legal universe. This book presents a systematic and comprehensive attempt by legal scholars to conceptualize the theory of emergency powers, combining {post-September} 11 developments with more general theoretical, historical and comparative perspectives. The authors examine the interface between law and violent crises through history and across jurisdictions, bringing together insights gleaned from the Roman republic and Jewish law through to the initial responses to the July 2005 attacks in London. Three models of emergency powers are used to offer a conceptualization of emergency regimes, giving a coherent insight into law's interface with and regulation of crisis and a distinctive means to evaluate the legal options open to states for dealing with crises.},
publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
author = {Gross, Oren and Ni? Aola?in, Fionnuala},
year = {2006},
keywords = {cybernormer, information, politics, read}
},
@article{barthes1967,
title = {The Death of the Author},
number = {5-6},
journal = {Aspen},
author = {Barthes, Roland},
year = {1967}
},
@inproceedings{ananian2012,
title = {Growing up with Nell: a narrative interface for literacy},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Interaction Design and Children},
author = {Ananian, C. S. and Ball, C. J. and Stone, M.},
year = {2012},
keywords = {design, design activism, information},
pages = {228--231}
},
@article{bang????,
title = {Smart {City??A} New Mentality for Resource-based Cities? Sustainable Development},
author = {Bang, F. and Chenyu, Z.},
keywords = {cybernormer, information, urban}
},
@book{iek2007,
title = {How to read Lacan},
isbn = {0393329550},
abstract = {Lacan's motto of the ethics of psychoanalysis involves a profound paradox. Traditionally, psychoanalysis was expected to allow the patient to overcome the obstacles that prevented access to "normal" sexual enjoyment; today, however, we are bombarded by different versions of the injunction {"Enjoy!"} Psychoanalysis is the only discourse in which you are allowed not to enjoy. Slavoj Zizek's passionate defense of Lacan reasserts Lacan's ethical urgency. For Lacan, psychoanalysis is a procedure of reading, and each chapter reads a passage from Lacan as a tool to interpret another text from philosophy, art, or popular ideology. Book jacket.},
author = {\v{Z}i\v{z}ek, Slavoj},
year = {2007},
keywords = {ontology}
},
@article{portes2000,
title = {Social capital: Its origins and applications in modern sociology},
journal = {Knowledge and social capital: foundations and applications},
author = {Portes, A.},
year = {2000},
keywords = {information, politics},
pages = {43--67}
},
@article{urry????,
title = {Mobile cultures},
journal = {Dept of Sociology, Lancaster University at www. comp. lancs. ac. uk/sociology/soc030ju. htm},
author = {Urry, John},
keywords = {urban}
},
@article{alliez2001,
title = {Diff\'{e}rence et r\'{e}p\'{e}tition de Gabriel Tarde},
journal = {Multitudes},
author = {Alliez, \'{e}ric},
year = {2001}
},
@article{light2009,
title = {Research Project as Boundary Object: negotiating the conceptual design of a tool for International Development},
number = {September},
journal = {ECSCW 2009},
author = {Light, Ann},
year = {2009},
pages = {7--11}
},
@book{hansen2006,
address = {New York; London},
title = {Bodies in code: interfaces with digital media},
isbn = {9780415970167},
publisher = {Routledge},
author = {Hansen, Mark B. N.},
year = {2006},
keywords = {information, ontology}
},
@book{bataille2004,
title = {On Nietzsche},
isbn = {0826477089},
author = {Bataille, Georges},
year = {2004}
},
@inproceedings{antonowicz-tamm2011,
title = {THE} DRAMATURGICAL} {CONCEPTION} {OF} {DESIGN} {BY} {JANUSZ} {KRUPINSKI} {APPLIED} {IN} {DESIGN} {THEORY} {AND} {PRACTICE} {BASED} {ON} {THE} {EXAMPLE} {OF} {ITALIAN} {RADICAL} {DESIGN} {AND} {THE} {MEMPHIS} {GROUP}},
booktitle = {Design Activism Conference},
author = {Antonwicz-Tamm}, Agata},
year = {2011},
keywords = {design, design activism}
},
@book{agamben1998,
title = {Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life},
isbn = {0804732183},
author = {Agamben, Giorgio},
year = {1998},
keywords = {politics}
},
@book{stoekl2007,
title = {Bataille's peak: energy, religion, and postsustainability},
isbn = {0816648190},
abstract = {As the price of oil climbs toward {\textbackslash}textbackslash\$100 a barrel, our impending post-fossil fuel future appears to offer two alternatives: a bleak existence defined by scarcity and sacrifice or one in which humanity places its faith in technological solutions with unforeseen consequences. Are there other ways to imagine life in an era that will be characterized by resource depletion? The French intellectual Georges Bataille saw energy as the basis of all human activity---the essence of the human---and he envisioned a society that, instead of renouncing profligate spending, would embrace a more radical type of energy expenditure: la dpense, or {\textquotedblleft}spending without return. In Batailles Peak, Allan Stoekl demonstrates how a close reading of Bataille---in the wake of Giordano Bruno and the Marquis de Sade--- can help us rethink not only energy and consumption, but also such related topics as the city, the body, eroticism, and religion. Through these cases, Stoekl identifies the differences between waste, which Bataille condemned, and expenditure, which he celebrated. The challenge of living in the twenty-first century, Stoekl argues, will be to comprehend---without recourse to austerity and self-denial---the inevitable and necessary shift from a civilization founded on waste to one based on Bataillean expenditure. Allan Stoekl is professor of French and comparative literature at Penn State University. He is the author of Agonies of the Intellectual: Commitment, Subjectivity, and the Performative in the {Twentieth-Century} French Tradition and translator of Batailles Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 1927{\textendash}1939 {(Minnesota}, 1985).},
author = {Stoekl, Allan},
year = {2007},
keywords = {design activism, hacking, ontology, sustainability}
},
@unpublished{deschamps-sonsino2010,
title = {RECYCING} {TODAY}},
author = {Deschmps-Sonsino}, Alexandra},
year = {2010}
},
@article{ehn2008,
title = {Participation in design things},
journal = {Tenth Anniversary Conference on Participatory Design},
author = {Ehn, Pelle},
year = {2008}
},
@article{bentley2003,
title = {The meaning of code},
journal = {Ars Electronica},
author = {Bentley, P. J.},
year = {2003},
keywords = {information, ontology, read}
},
@article{street2003,
title = {Stabilizing flows in the legal field: illusions of permanence, intellectual property rights and the transnationalization of law},
volume = {3},
copyright = {2003 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. \& Global Networks Partnership},
issn = {1471-0374},
shorttitle = {Stabilizing flows in the legal field},
url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1471-0374.00048/abstract},
doi = {10.1111/1471-0374.00048},
abstract = {In this article I examine some of the problems that {\textquoteleft}modern legal theory poses for a consideration of the extended reach of social actors and institutions in time and space. While jurisprudence has begun to engage with the concept of globalization, it has done so in a relatively limited manner. Thus legal theory's encounters with highly visible transnational practices have, for the most part, resulted not in challenging the prevailing formal legal paradigm, but in a renewed if slightly modified search for a general jurisprudence that ultimately takes little account of the manner in which the work of law is carried out transnationally. In the first part of this article I examine how legal theory's concern to maintain its own integrity places limitations on its ability to examine the permeability of social boundaries. In the latter part I draw on critical human geography, post{\textendash}structuralism and actor{\textendash}network theory {(ANT)}, to examine the manner in which transnational actors have been able to mobilize law, and in particular intellectual property rights {(IPRs)}, as a necessary strategy for both maintaining the meanings of bio{\textendash}technologies through time and space, and enrolling farmers into particular social networks.},
number = {1},
journal = {Global Networks},
author = {Street, Paul},
year = {2003},
keywords = {cybernormer},
pages = {7{\textendash}28}
},
@article{disalvo2011,
title = {Community and conflict},
volume = {18},
number = {6},
journal = {interactions},
author = {DiSalo}, C.},
year = {2011},
keywords = {design activism, read},
pages = {24--26}
},
@article{teubner2006,
title = {Rights of Non-humans? Electronic Agents and Animals as New Actors in Politics and Law},
volume = {33},
shorttitle = {Rights of Non-humans?},
url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-6478.2006.00368.x/full},
number = {4},
journal = {Journal of Law and Society},
author = {Teubner, Gunther},
year = {2006},
keywords = {cybernormer, read, sociology},
pages = {497{\textendash}521}
},
@book{miller1995,
address = {Oxford},
title = {Material culture and mass consumption.},
isbn = {06311001X} 9780631180012},
publisher = {Basil Blackwell},
author = {Miller, Daniel},
year = {1995},
keywords = {sociology}
},
@book{wark2004,
address = {Cambridge},
title = {A hacker manifesto, Volume 4},