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Jiří Kabele

Researcher at Charles University in Prague

Publications -  14
Citations -  85

Jiří Kabele is an academic researcher from Charles University in Prague. The author has contributed to research in topics: Economic Justice & Trade union. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 14 publications receiving 75 citations.

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The Agency/Structure Dilemma: A Coordination Solution

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a coordination solution to the agency/structure dilemma, which takes social structures as game/play frameworks and explains their discontinuous transitions in extraordinary times.
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Critically evaluating collaborative research: Why is it difficult to extend truth tests to reality tests?:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that critical evaluation achieves the reflexivity needed to facilitate collaboration by proposing boundary-negotiating artefacts to configure a joint action domain, and that these objects become mediators for innovation by triggering controversies, conceived preventatively via an organized extension of what Boltanski calls ‘truth tests’ to ‘reality tests, so that they dynamize ongoing affairs.
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Political discourse and mobility of worlds: Arguments for methodological narrative\institutional dualism:

TL;DR: In this article, a methodological narrative\institutional dualism was developed as an epistemological strategy to facilitate an approach to the study of political discourse that incorporates figures of disorder into the discourse.
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A General Interpretation of Transition in the Czech Republic (1989-1993)

Jiří Kabele
Abstract: General interpretations of societal transition provide overall pictures of fundamental changes, their basic trends, their time scales, and the clashes between the main players. These interpretations allow both participants and analysts to focus on the important historical facts and the key social processes. The fundamental changes in the Czech Republic since November 1989 are shown here as a transition brought about by the interplay of the drama of the erosion of the old regime with that of the birth of a new order. The old order was partly dismantled and society found itself in transitional anomie, which made it possible to gradually build a new one. This transitological view sees a transition as a provisional state of affairs constructed by many different persons (individuals, groups, communities and organisations). This provisional situation is characterised by a rich dynamic of social problems, together with an unbalanced and changing distribution of gains and losses. The resulting conflicts become – in successful cases – part of the universe of myth. In this universe of myth these conflicts are seen as a series of crises/tests which push the society indirectly from the old order to the new. The originally open transition comes to a close when the participants cease to see the current events as provisional. The main task then becomes the normalisation of the new order, the enforcement of its regime and coping with the formerly provisional arrangements which were in many ways ‘justified’ by the apparent anomie. Czech Sociological Review, 1999, Vol. 7 (No. 1: 3-21)