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Practical Reason On The Theory Of Action

Uwe Fink
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The article was published on 2016-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 595 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Practical reason & Reason.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Theory of Racialized Organizations

TL;DR: The role of organizations in race and ethnicity studies is explored in this paper, where organizations are seen as race-neutral bureaucratic structures, while race-and ethnicity scholars have largely neglected the role of organisations in the social sciences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transforming power: Social science and the politics of energy choices

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address key implications in momentous current global energy choices, both for social science and for society, by considering contending forms of transformation centring on renewable energy, nuclear power and climate geoengineering.
Journal ArticleDOI

The hustle economy: Informality, uncertainty and the geographies of getting by

TL;DR: The authors deploys the conceptual frame of hustle to examine the everyday dealings associated with uncertainty and accepted informalities that pervade realms of everyday life amongst youth in pre-college life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Managing Status: How Luxury Brands Shape Class Subjectivities in the Service Encounter

TL;DR: The authors investigate how brands reconfigure the status games that surface in the service encounter and show that through the material and social cues of the servicescape, brands shape consumers' class subjectivities, making consumers behave as class subjects who have a specific understanding of their position in the social hierarchy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Losing One’s Place: Narratives of Neighbourhood Change, Market Injustice and Symbolic Displacement

TL;DR: This article examined the narratives offered by those displaced through the gentrification of neighbourhoods in Melbourne and Sydney and found that despite displacement commonly being defined in terms of physical movement, participants became dislocated and isolated by the physical and social changes that took place while still residing in neighbourhoods as they changed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Theory of Racialized Organizations

TL;DR: The role of organizations in race and ethnicity studies is explored in this paper, where organizations are seen as race-neutral bureaucratic structures, while race-and ethnicity scholars have largely neglected the role of organisations in the social sciences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transforming power: Social science and the politics of energy choices

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address key implications in momentous current global energy choices, both for social science and for society, by considering contending forms of transformation centring on renewable energy, nuclear power and climate geoengineering.
Journal ArticleDOI

The hustle economy: Informality, uncertainty and the geographies of getting by

TL;DR: The authors deploys the conceptual frame of hustle to examine the everyday dealings associated with uncertainty and accepted informalities that pervade realms of everyday life amongst youth in pre-college life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Managing Status: How Luxury Brands Shape Class Subjectivities in the Service Encounter

TL;DR: The authors investigate how brands reconfigure the status games that surface in the service encounter and show that through the material and social cues of the servicescape, brands shape consumers' class subjectivities, making consumers behave as class subjects who have a specific understanding of their position in the social hierarchy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Losing One’s Place: Narratives of Neighbourhood Change, Market Injustice and Symbolic Displacement

TL;DR: This article examined the narratives offered by those displaced through the gentrification of neighbourhoods in Melbourne and Sydney and found that despite displacement commonly being defined in terms of physical movement, participants became dislocated and isolated by the physical and social changes that took place while still residing in neighbourhoods as they changed.