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Search: swepub > Chalmers University of Technology > Social Sciences

  • Result 1-10 of 7983
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1.
  • Geissinger, Andrea, et al. (author)
  • Assessing user perceptions of the interplay between the sharing, access, platform and community- based economies
  • 2020
  • In: Information Technology and People. - : Emerald Group Publishing Limited. - 0959-3845 .- 1758-5813. ; 33:3, s. 1037-1051
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Purpose: Digitally intermediated peer-to-peer exchanges have accelerated in occurrence, and as a consequence, they have introduced an increased pluralism of connotations. Accordingly, this paper aims to assess user perceptions of the interplay between the sharing, access, platform, and community-based economies.Design/methodology/approach: The sharing, access, platform, and community-based economies have been systematically tracked in the social media landscape using Social Media Analytics (SMA). In doing so, a total material of 62,855 publicly posted user-generated content concerning the four respective economies were collected and analyzed.Findings: Even though the sharing economy has been conceptually argued to be interlinked with the access, platform, and community-based economies, the empirical results of the study do not validate this interlinkage. Instead, the results regarding user perceptions in social media show that the sharing, access, platform, and community-based economies manifest as clearly separated.Originality/value: This paper contributes to existing literature by offering an empirical validation, as well as an in-depth understanding, of the sharing economy's interlinkage to other economies, along with the extent to which the overlaps between these economies manifest in social media.
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2.
  • Zapata Campos, María José, 1972, et al. (author)
  • Residents' collective strategies of resistance in Global South cities' informal settlements: Space, scale and knowledge
  • 2022
  • In: Cities. - : Elsevier BV. - 0264-2751. ; 125
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This paper examines the strategies of resistance articulated by residents of informal settlements response to urban exclusion. Building upon resistance and urban social movements literature the paper is informed by the case of the Villa Rodrigo Bueno in Buenos Aires, a self-constructed villa miseria, and its residents' stories of resistance to attempts of evictions and upgrading programs. In the paper we show how resistance is mobilized, first through its simultaneous disconnection, due to its remoteness and isolation; and reconnection to local and global supportive networks. While disconnection facilitated self-construction, densification and the blooming of informal entrepreneurship; reconnection through relational and multiscalar sites enabled unexpected encounters with distant actors that contributed to resist evictions. Second, the long-term learning and development of self-knowledge (i.e. construction, or housing law), embedded in the remoteness of the informal settlement, contributed to shift expertise from city officers to residents; redefining the role of informal residents into active citizens and experts in policy making, and turning informal settlements into settings of wider social change.
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3.
  • Finnveden, Göran, et al. (author)
  • Evaluation of integration of sustainable development in higher education in Sweden
  • 2020
  • In: International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education. - : Emerald Group Publishing Limited. - 1467-6370 .- 1758-6739. ; 21:4, s. 685-698
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Purpose Since 2006, higher education institutions (HEIs) in Sweden, should according to the Higher Education Act, promote sustainable development (SD). In 2016, the Swedish Government asked the Swedish higher education authority to evaluate how this study is proceeding. The authority chose to focus on education. This paper aims to produce a report on this evaluation. Design/methodology/approach All 47 HEIs in Sweden were asked to write a self-evaluation report based on certain evaluation criteria. A panel was appointed consisting of academics and representatives for students and working life. The panel wrote an evaluation of each HEI, a report on general findings and recommendations, and gave an overall judgement of each HEI in two classes as follows: the HEI has well-developed processes for integration of SD in education or the HEI needs to develop their processes. Findings Overall, a mixed picture developed. Most HEIs could give examples of programmes or courses where SD was integrated. However, less than half of the HEIs had overarching goals for integration of SD in education or had a systematic follow-up of these goals. Even fewer worked specifically with pedagogy and didactics, teaching and learning methods and environments, sustainability competences or other characters of education for SD. Overall, only 12 out of 47 got a higher judgement. Originality/value This is a unique study in which all HEIs in a country are evaluated. This provides unique possibilities for identifying success factors and barriers. The importance of the leadership of the HEIs became clear.
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4.
  • Palmås, Karl, 1976, et al. (author)
  • The liability of politicalness : Legitimacy and legality in piracy-proximate entrepreneurship
  • 2014
  • In: International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business. - : InderScience Publishers. - 1476-1297 .- 1741-8054. ; 22:4, s. 408-425
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This article explores three entrepreneurial ventures that have evolved in proximity to online piracy. In reviewing the respective cases of Spotify, Skype, and The Pirate Bay, the argument outlines the radically divergent strategies with which the entrepreneurs have sought to legitimise their ventures and underlying technologies. The article concludes that: 1) the context of practices labelled ‘pirate’ are paradigmatic examples of fields in which entrepreneurs must work exceptionally hard to legitimise themselves; 2) in this context, it is crucial that the role of law is analytically isolated from the role of institutionalised legitimacy; 3) success in legitimisation is largely dependent upon the entrepreneur’s ability to demonstrate that the venture is governed by ‘the natural order’ of the economy. It is further argued that piracy-proximate ventures may contribute to the entrepreneurship field, inasmuch as they teeter on the border of being considered too disruptive, and thus suffer from a ‘liability of politicalness’. 
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5.
  • Andersson, Erik, et al. (author)
  • Ambio fit for the 2020s
  • 2022
  • In: Ambio. - : Springer Nature. - 0044-7447 .- 1654-7209. ; 51:5, s. 1091-1093
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
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6.
  • Biegańska, Jadwiga, et al. (author)
  • From policy to misery? The State Agricultural Farms vs. 'the rural'
  • 2019
  • In: Quaestiones Geographicae. - : Adam Mickiewicz University Poznan. - 2082-2103 .- 2081-6383 .- 0137-477X. ; 38:4
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • 1989 was a turning point within the socio-economic development in the former Eastern bloc, initiating a system transformation that affected the society at large. It also contributed to the crystallisation of certain cultural landscapes, hitherto largely illegible due to the inhibition of spatial processes encountered during Communism. In Poland, after a quarter-century of free market economy, the focus on social problems began to expand to the spatial realm as well. It became apparent that the progressive social polarisation that followed was most prominent in environments striated by a particular landscape type – the former State Agricultural Farm (PGR). Considering PGRs “the epitome of rurality” subject to ideas informing the direction of contemporary “rural development” prompts a different way of looking at the problem. In this paper, we investigate the concept of rurality in the discursive tenor of implemented policy and contrast it with contextualised empirical examples. Our findings suggest that efficient policy should be confronted with the expectations of residents at the local level, while introducing top-down actions usually ends in failure as in the case of post-PGR estates.
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7.
  • McKelvey, Maureen, 1965, et al. (author)
  • Conclusions of Innovation Spaces in Asia
  • 2015
  • In: Innovation spaces in Asia entrepreneurs, multinational enterprises and policy edited by Maureen McKelvey, Sharmistha Bagchi-Sen. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar. - 978 1 78347 567 4 - 9781783475674 ; , s. 354-368
  • Book chapter (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This chapter reflects upon the conceptualization and empirical understanding of innovation spaces in Asia, and especially the roles of entrepreneurs, multinational enterprises, and policy. This includes a theoretical conceptualization as well as relating the findings in each chapter to the overall conceptualization proposed.
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8.
  • Zapata Campos, María José, 1972, et al. (author)
  • Organising grassroots initiatives for a more inclusive governance: constructing the city from below
  • 2019
  • Reports (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The project examines how grassroots organizations and networks providing urban critical services in informal settlements contribute to improve the quality of life of urban dwellers and to more inclusive forms of urban governance, constructing the city from below. The project is informed by the study of Kisumu’s informal settlements’ Resident Associations, the Water Delegated Management Model, and the Kisumu Waste Actors Network. The study adopted an action-research approach with researchers working with citizens, politicians, officers and entrepreneurs in all stages of the research process and used a combination of methods including document studies, ethnographic and participatory observations, visual ethnography, interviews, focus groups, social media analysis and stakeholder work- shops as well as participatory videotaping. The study discusses a) the institutionalization of grassroots organizations for the delivery of critical infrastructure and services and their need to gain, regain and maintain legitimacy; b) their flexible and nested structure facili- tating their resilience; c) their embeddedness in the communities’ knowledge and assets, and their role as social and institutional entrepreneurs to bridge informal settlements with city governance; d) the redefinition of the roles of the citizen, from passive into active agents, and its transformation into more autonomous and insurgent citizens; e) the blending of civic and material rationales and the construction of more fluid identities allowing citizens to draw pragmatically from a broader repertoire of roles and resources; f) and the creation of grassroots organizations as a collective process that emerge from different directions, with the ability to become gateways but also gatekeepers, or the top of the grass at their communities. It concludes with recommendations to informal settlements’ resident grass- roots organizations, public officers, NGOs, politicians, researchers and citizens in general, engaged in constructing a more inclusive city governance from below.
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9.
  • Roos, Magnus, et al. (author)
  • Traits and Transports : The Effects of Personality on the Choice of Urban Transport Modes
  • 2022
  • In: Applied Sciences. - : MDPI AG. - 2076-3417. ; 12:3
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We examine the influence of personality on car driving, usage of public transport and cycling. Personality is measured through the Big Five personality traits (i.e., Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness and Neuroticism) and Environmental personality. Data were collected through a Web-based panel of adult citizen in the city of Gothenburg, Sweden (N = 1068). Age, gender, income, children at home and residential area were used as control variables. Car driving is influenced by low degree of Openness, high degree of Conscientiousness, and low degree of Environmental personality. Usage of public transport is influenced by low degree of Conscientiousness, high degree of Agreeableness, and high degree of Environmental personality. Cycling is foremost influenced by a high degree of Environmental personality.
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10.
  • Geissinger, Andrea, et al. (author)
  • How sustainable is the sharing economy? On the sustainability connotations of sharing economy platforms
  • 2019
  • In: Journal of Cleaner Production. - : Elsevier. - 0959-6526 .- 1879-1786. ; 206, s. 419-429
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The sharing economy has evolved and spread to various sectors of the economy. Its early idea linked to the creation of more sustainable uses of resources. Since then, the development of the sharing economy has included a professionalization with self-employed suppliers rather than peers, and the question is whether the platforms following this development maintain the focus on sustainability. This paper describes and classifies the sustainability connotation of sharing economy platforms. It analyses 121 platforms derived through social media analytics to figure out whether they describe themselves as sustainable. The findings suggest that the sustainability connotation closely connects to specific sectors such as fashion, on-demand services and logistics. Meanwhile, the dominant role model platforms do not communicate about being sustainable. These findings contribute to previous research through (1) giving a systematic empirical account on the way various sharing economy platforms describe themselves in terms of sustainability, (2) pointing out the differences among the platforms, and (3) indicating the diversity in sustainability connotation among various sectors of the economy.
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  • Result 1-10 of 7983
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journal article (3230)
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other academic/artistic (3248)
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Author/Editor
McKelvey, Tomas, 196 ... (171)
Karlsson, MariAnne, ... (136)
McKelvey, Maureen, 1 ... (120)
Styhre, Alexander, 1 ... (117)
Palmås, Karl, 1976 (107)
Adawi, Tom, 1970 (99)
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Christie, Michael, 1 ... (92)
Bröchner, Jan, 1948 (89)
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Baumann, Henrikke, 1 ... (81)
Jacobsson, Staffan, ... (79)
Jonsson, Patrik, 196 ... (78)
Azar, Christian, 196 ... (78)
Gromark, Sten, 1951 (78)
Räisänen, Christine, ... (78)
Bohlin, Erik, 1961 (74)
Williams Middleton, ... (72)
Stöhr, Christian, 19 ... (71)
Kåberger, Tomas, 196 ... (69)
Gluch, Pernilla, 196 ... (66)
Gustafsson, Magnus, ... (64)
Josephson, Per-Erik, ... (58)
Sandén, Björn, 1968 (57)
Dozza, Marco, 1978 (56)
Sochor, Jana, 1973 (55)
Lantz, Björn, 1967 (54)
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Wijk, Helle, 1958 (53)
Strömberg, Helena, 1 ... (52)
Thuvander, Liane, 19 ... (51)
Stenberg, Jenny, 195 ... (51)
Fredberg, Tobias, 19 ... (50)
Sprei, Frances, 1977 (50)
Persson, Martin, 197 ... (50)
Femenias, Paula, 196 ... (50)
Holgersson, Marcus, ... (49)
Svanström, Magdalena ... (48)
Ollila, Susanne, 196 ... (47)
Bergek, Anna, 1973 (45)
Gadde, Lars-Erik, 19 ... (45)
Västfjäll, Daniel, 1 ... (45)
Larsson, Jörgen, 196 ... (44)
Lundqvist, Mats, 196 ... (43)
Gremyr, Ida, 1975 (43)
Halldorsson, Arni, 1 ... (42)
Berndes, Göran, 1966 (42)
Grange, Kristina, 19 ... (42)
Koch, Christian, 195 ... (42)
Thodelius, Charlotta ... (42)
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Engineering and Technology (3332)
Natural sciences (1440)
Humanities (989)
Medical and Health Sciences (350)
Agricultural Sciences (154)

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