Traces how cities evolved from autonomous entities with citizens to modern corporations without citizens. "A remarkable book.... explains the origins of modern Canadian cities as corporations."--"Imprint" "A useful canvas on which to rethink the polarity of governments."--"Montreal Mirror"
Engin F. Isin Orden de los libros
Engin F. Isin examina críticamente los orígenes y las transformaciones de la ciudadanía, considerándola una institución política y legal fundamental. Su obra profundiza en cómo la ciudadanía moldea modos particulares de ser político, permitiendo a los individuos convertirse en reclamantes de justicia. La erudición de Isin se dedica a una comprensión teórica de la ciudadanía y su naturaleza cambiante en las sociedades contemporáneas. Ofrece una perspectiva única sobre la intrincada relación entre el estado, la sociedad y el sujeto individual.


- 2024
- 2021
Data Practices
- 368 páginas
- 13 horas de lectura
What is 'Europe' and who are 'Europeans'? This contemporary political and theoretical question is approached as a practical problem of counting. Through various data practices, such as censuses, EU member states ascertain their national populations, which the EU then uses to understand Europe's demographics. This volume examines data practices not merely as reflections of populations but as performative; they both constitute a European population and contribute to the formation of a European people. The work develops a conception of data practices to analyze findings from collaborative ethnographic multisite fieldwork conducted by an interdisciplinary team as part of a five-year project, Peopling Europe: How Data Make a People. It focuses on how data practices categorize people and the implications of these categorizations in enacting Europe as a population and people. Five core chapters delve into categories such as usual residents, refugees, homeless individuals, migrants, and ethnic minorities, exploring how they are defined, estimated, recalibrated, and inferred through specific data practices. Two additional chapters discuss the key roles produced by data practices: the data subject and the statistician subject.