Vaguery + cultural-norms 281
What if Interactivity is the New Passivity? Jonathan Sterne / McGill University | Flow
5 weeks ago by Vaguery
"What if all the bad things that media critics have been said about passivity for the past century or two are now equally applicable to all the demands to interact, to participate? What if interactivity is now one of the central hinges through which power works? In many moments today, the most compliant gesture we can make is to consent to interact on the terms presented to us by our software and machines. This pull is especially strong in those commercial platforms that celebrate their own difference from the so-called passive media of previous decades, and in the process monetize their users’ participation either directly or indirectly. What if—from time to time—we chose not to identify with the interactive promise of new media platforms or for that matter new media art? What if, when the new media savants lambast so-called old media audiences as denizens of passivity and ideology, we say, “yes, that’s me”?"
a-bit-too-theoryish
cultural-norms
ingroup-outgroup
new-media
5 weeks ago by Vaguery
Stuff Digital Humanists Like: Defining Digital Humanities by its Values
may 2011 by Vaguery
"Here are five to start us off:
Like: Twitter / Don’t like: Facebook. The first thing we have to mention, which we have mentioned a few times already, is Twitter. The reasons we like Twitter are complex and I won’t pretend to understand them all, but I’ll throw out a few suggestions. First, its “follow” rather than “friend” model is more open, allows for the collaboration and non-hierarchy that the Internet and digital humanities values. Second, and related to this, Twitter is the place where content-creators—journalists, writers, artists, web developers, etc.—tend to hang out. We overlap with those communities, or at least seek to overlap with them, in productive ways. They are the distant nodes from which we hope new innovations will come. Third, Twitter, in the way we use it, is mostly about sharing ideas whereas Facebook is about sharing relationships. Scholars are good at ideas, maybe less so at relationships.
Like: Agile development / Dislike: long planning cycles. The second thing I’ll mention is agile development, the philosophy of “releasing early and often,” which we do not only with software/code but also with our ideas and writing when we Tweet, blog, and chat. We do this as good neighbors but also in the hope that releasing our code and ideas will improve with contributions from end points of our networks.
Like: DIY / Dislike: Outsourcing. Most of the most successful digital humanities projects are those done by scholar/technologists not those imagined by scholars and implemented by technologists. Likewise, the most successful digital humanists are scholars who know the technology, often those who are self-taught, not ones who seek a client-vendor relationship with technologists. We take this insight to heart in our hiring at CHNM, looking for people with formal training in the humanities and self-taught tech skills.
Like: PHP / Dislike: C++. Fourth, and following from the last point, we like PHP not C++. This is another way of saying we like the transparent, easy-to-learn, and simple (if sometimes ham-handed) technologies of the Web more than the more powerful, more sophisticated, more elegant, but less approachable compiled code of the desktop. A focus on getting the most out of simple, transparent, vernacular technologies allows us to keep the door to the field open to new entrants.
Like: Extramural funding / Dislike: Intramural funding. In one respect, this may seem obvious: everybody likes grants. In another respect it’s probably going a little too far to say we don’t like intramural funding: it is essential to building and maintaining capacity for our centers and staff. But it seems to me the most successful digital humanities projects are those that result from competitive grant making processes, especially the federal grant making process. Why is this? I can point to at least three reasons: 1) Attracting grant money keeps us innovating, which, like it or not, is a premium in our business. Grants are given for new work, not for more of the same. 2) Writing grants and serving on panels keep us in conversation with the field. We have to keep current and keep in touch with one another to justify our projects to grantmakers and to recommend others’ projects for funding. Increasingly, funding guidelines themselves require collaboration. 3) Unlike much traditional scholarship, which often requires one big deliverable (a book) after years of close-kept study, research, and writing, grant work requires defining and meeting a set of closely timed, concrete deliverables, a mode of work which encourages the kind of agile development so valued by the Internet and digital humanities community."
digital-humanities
cultural-norms
open-access
openness
network-culture
Like: Twitter / Don’t like: Facebook. The first thing we have to mention, which we have mentioned a few times already, is Twitter. The reasons we like Twitter are complex and I won’t pretend to understand them all, but I’ll throw out a few suggestions. First, its “follow” rather than “friend” model is more open, allows for the collaboration and non-hierarchy that the Internet and digital humanities values. Second, and related to this, Twitter is the place where content-creators—journalists, writers, artists, web developers, etc.—tend to hang out. We overlap with those communities, or at least seek to overlap with them, in productive ways. They are the distant nodes from which we hope new innovations will come. Third, Twitter, in the way we use it, is mostly about sharing ideas whereas Facebook is about sharing relationships. Scholars are good at ideas, maybe less so at relationships.
Like: Agile development / Dislike: long planning cycles. The second thing I’ll mention is agile development, the philosophy of “releasing early and often,” which we do not only with software/code but also with our ideas and writing when we Tweet, blog, and chat. We do this as good neighbors but also in the hope that releasing our code and ideas will improve with contributions from end points of our networks.
Like: DIY / Dislike: Outsourcing. Most of the most successful digital humanities projects are those done by scholar/technologists not those imagined by scholars and implemented by technologists. Likewise, the most successful digital humanists are scholars who know the technology, often those who are self-taught, not ones who seek a client-vendor relationship with technologists. We take this insight to heart in our hiring at CHNM, looking for people with formal training in the humanities and self-taught tech skills.
Like: PHP / Dislike: C++. Fourth, and following from the last point, we like PHP not C++. This is another way of saying we like the transparent, easy-to-learn, and simple (if sometimes ham-handed) technologies of the Web more than the more powerful, more sophisticated, more elegant, but less approachable compiled code of the desktop. A focus on getting the most out of simple, transparent, vernacular technologies allows us to keep the door to the field open to new entrants.
Like: Extramural funding / Dislike: Intramural funding. In one respect, this may seem obvious: everybody likes grants. In another respect it’s probably going a little too far to say we don’t like intramural funding: it is essential to building and maintaining capacity for our centers and staff. But it seems to me the most successful digital humanities projects are those that result from competitive grant making processes, especially the federal grant making process. Why is this? I can point to at least three reasons: 1) Attracting grant money keeps us innovating, which, like it or not, is a premium in our business. Grants are given for new work, not for more of the same. 2) Writing grants and serving on panels keep us in conversation with the field. We have to keep current and keep in touch with one another to justify our projects to grantmakers and to recommend others’ projects for funding. Increasingly, funding guidelines themselves require collaboration. 3) Unlike much traditional scholarship, which often requires one big deliverable (a book) after years of close-kept study, research, and writing, grant work requires defining and meeting a set of closely timed, concrete deliverables, a mode of work which encourages the kind of agile development so valued by the Internet and digital humanities community."
may 2011 by Vaguery
Privacy isn’t a ‘right’ — It’s an Indulgence of the Wealthy | Doug Saunders
december 2010 by Vaguery
"But the privacy divide is deeper than that. Are the poor begging for extra helpings of privacy? No, not much, not even where they could use it. Pollsters in England have found that when they ask people in hard-up communities what things would improve their lives, the top three items almost always include more closed-circuit TV cameras on the streets. The people who get worked up about universal ID cards, DNA databases and CCTV monitoring are almost always the wealthy elite.
It’s the poor who are forced to live with crime, violence, harassment from unstable and marginalized people — exactly the sort of stuff that these supposedly privacy-invading conveniences are designed to prevent. When your life is hard, privacy equals isolation equals death. If you consider it a right, it’s a pretty good sign that you’ve got too much money and too little to worry about."
privacy
classism
cultural-norms
celebrity
It’s the poor who are forced to live with crime, violence, harassment from unstable and marginalized people — exactly the sort of stuff that these supposedly privacy-invading conveniences are designed to prevent. When your life is hard, privacy equals isolation equals death. If you consider it a right, it’s a pretty good sign that you’ve got too much money and too little to worry about."
december 2010 by Vaguery
[1008.1096] The Naming Game in Social Networks: Community Formation and Consensus Engineering
august 2010 by Vaguery
"We study the dynamics of the Naming Game [Baronchelli et al., (2006) J. Stat. Mech.: Theory Exp. P06014] in empirical social networks. This stylized agent-based model captures essential features of agreement dynamics in a network of autonomous agents, corresponding to the development of shared classification schemes in a network of artificial agents or opinion spreading and social dynamics in social networks. Our study focuses on the impact that communities in the underlying social graphs have on the outcome of the agreement process. We find that networks with strong community structure hinder the system from reaching global agreement; the evolution of the Naming Game in these networks maintains clusters of coexisting opinions indefinitely. Further, we investigate agent-based network strategies to facilitate convergence to global consensus."
network-theory
cultural-norms
agent-based
nudge-targets
cultural-dynamics
models
complexology
august 2010 by Vaguery
Pictures of Panic
june 2010 by Vaguery
"During the century separating the 1830s from the 1930s, proponents of laissez-faire were so successful in advocating an economy that purportedly operated independent of the political system that New Deal supporters had to convince voters that the government could (and should) intervene economically on behalf of suffering Americans. In the 1930s, Dorothea Lange used a technology unavailable in 1837 to photograph the plight of economic victims in her composition "Migrant Mother." Shot in a California pea picker's camp during the Great Depression for the government's Farm Security Administration, the photograph is strikingly similar to "Specie Claws." The posture of the central characters is nearly identical. Both pictures appeal to emotion to make an argument about the effects of economic events on families.…"
history
art-history
caricature
cartoons
financial-crisis
1837
bank-panic
self-image
cultural-norms
cultural-assumptions
june 2010 by Vaguery
Volatile and Decentralized: The Secret Lives of Professors
may 2010 by Vaguery
"I came to Harvard 7 years ago with a fairly romantic notion of what it meant to be a professor -- I imagined unstructured days spent mentoring students over long cups of coffee, strolling through the verdant campus, writing code, pondering the infinite. I never really considered doing anything else. At Berkeley, the reigning belief was that the best and brightest students went on to be professors, and the rest went to industry -- and I wanted to be one of those elite. Now that I have students that harbor their own rosy dreams of academic life, I thought it would be useful to reflect on what being a professor is really like. It is certainly not for everybody. It remains to be seen if it is even for me."
hoop-dreams
academic-culture
cultural-norms
cultural-assumptions
life-o'-the-mind
disintermediation-targets
may 2010 by Vaguery
American Individualism: Exceptional? » Sociological Images
may 2010 by Vaguery
"The argument and the answers clearly revolve around how we define (or operationalize) “individualism.” In any case, the comparative data does put the U.S. into perspective and Fischer’s discussion leaves a lot to unpack."
that-word-you-keep-using
individualism
sociology
cultural-assumptions
cultural-norms
self-definition
may 2010 by Vaguery
The Monkey Cage: The Perils of Guessing the Identity of Anonymous Reviewers
may 2010 by Vaguery
"Guessing the identity of anonymous referees just seems like an activity with very little upside. If you guess wrong (which you are likely to do despite your convictions to the contrary), you may wrongly believe that someone is “against you.” You will never know whether you have guessed right and even if you have, how useful is that information really? Obviously, people will continue to do it anyway. All I can say is that you should leave open the possibility that you are wrong even if your identification of the referee seems obvious given your working assumptions about how referees write their reports."
peer-review
academic-culture
publishing
cultural-norms
anonymity
reputation
scholarship
may 2010 by Vaguery
Evolution and Economics as Different Paradigms XI: Market Fundamentalism : Evolution for Everyone
april 2010 by Vaguery
"At the end of the day, the most pressing problems of modern life require an accurate description of the real world so that the inevitable tradeoffs can be managed for the common good. Fundamentalism interferes with this enterprise and needs to be recognized for what it is. Fortunately, we can go beyond epithets and prove that a given belief system counts as fundamentalist by calling attention to the absence of tradeoffs. Market fundamentalism can be as plain as the nose on your face when you know what to look for."
evolution
cultural-norms
fundamentalism
philosophy
social-norms
policy
cultural-assumptions
pragmatism
april 2010 by Vaguery
Economist's View: Paul Krugman: Georgia on My Mind
april 2010 by Vaguery
"What’s striking about the contrast between the Texas story and Georgia’s debacle is that it doesn’t seem to have anything to do with the issues that have dominated debates about banking reform. For example, many observers have blamed complex financial derivatives for the crisis. But Georgia banks blew themselves up with old-fashioned loans gone bad."
financial-crisis
cultural-assumptions
cultural-norms
lending
diversity
public-policy
april 2010 by Vaguery
Exploration Through Example » Blog Archive » About “Business Value”
april 2010 by Vaguery
"Quite often these teams, especially Agile teams, seem obsessively focused on “Business Value”, but that’s in the context of personal relationships. “Business Value” is a shorthand, a way of keeping conversations from going astray, of keeping people focused. It is a term that signals or reminds of other things—it is not a thing in itself.
Increasingly these days, when I hear people theorizing about Agile and Lean, they are treating “Business Value” as a thing in itself. It is treated as an end, rather than as a means. (This is in keeping with the decline of Agile as a bottom-up team-oriented insurgency.)"
agility
agilism
business-value
software-development
methodologies
cultural-norms
business-culture
figure-ground-error
Increasingly these days, when I hear people theorizing about Agile and Lean, they are treating “Business Value” as a thing in itself. It is treated as an end, rather than as a means. (This is in keeping with the decline of Agile as a bottom-up team-oriented insurgency.)"
april 2010 by Vaguery
Robert Reich (The Paper Entrepreneurs Are Winning Over the Product Entrepreneurs (A Thirty Year Retrospective))
april 2010 by Vaguery
"When paper entrepreneurs look for solutions to America’s declining productivity and international competitiveness, they come up with paper remedies to stimulate large-scale capital investment: accelerated depreciation, tax credits, government subsidies, relaxation of antitrust laws.
Product entrepreneurs focus on techniques for improving output: better quality controls, improved labor-management relations, more effective incentives for managers and employees, more aggressive marketing and sales.
If we are to increase the economic pie, we will need to redress the balance of entrepreneurial effort. Which strategies will stimulate more paper, and which more product? "
entrepreneurship
economics
cultural-norms
history
opinion
financial-crisis
Product entrepreneurs focus on techniques for improving output: better quality controls, improved labor-management relations, more effective incentives for managers and employees, more aggressive marketing and sales.
If we are to increase the economic pie, we will need to redress the balance of entrepreneurial effort. Which strategies will stimulate more paper, and which more product? "
april 2010 by Vaguery
The Collapse of Complex Business Models « Clay Shirky
april 2010 by Vaguery
"…But there is one compensating advantage for the people who escape the old system: when the ecosystem stops rewarding complexity, it is the people who figure out how to work simply in the present, rather than the people who mastered the complexities of the past, who get to say what happens in the future."
coworking
disintermediation-in-action
sociology
business-culture
business-model-failure
cultural-norms
april 2010 by Vaguery
Content wants to be paid for – Jeffrey Zeldman Presents The Daily Report
march 2010 by Vaguery
"Go there, read it, and understand why (just like newspaper reporting and books) web content costs money and must be paid for or subsidized. Either that or it must serve some secondary benefit that brings in the bucks: for instance, a free web design blog might lead to paying web design gigs for its author, or so they say.
Then read Part Two: Paying For It, where Kissane considers each of these methods of subsidizing content “and how they relate to our work as content and editorial strategists.”"
content
publishing
economics
design
cultural-norms
cultural-assumptions
pricing
Then read Part Two: Paying For It, where Kissane considers each of these methods of subsidizing content “and how they relate to our work as content and editorial strategists.”"
march 2010 by Vaguery
internet and “solutions for problems that no longer exist” :: net critique by Geert Lovink
march 2010 by Vaguery
WORTH TATTOOING: “The adult human being simply knows too many solutions for problems that no longer exist.”
social-dynamics
commentary
metacommentary
disintermediation-in-action
cultural-norms
plus-ca-change
march 2010 by Vaguery
Economist's View: "Don't Save the Press"
february 2010 by Vaguery
"So it probably would not take much for politicians to be persuaded that the press is essential to democracy, and that its survival ... depends on government support. Advertising revenue would be replaced by government subsidies, raising predictable questions about the impact on content.
The alternative is to focus on what communication technology cannot do: create rather than transmit a good story or a good policy. There will always be a market for quality. The disruption caused by emerging communications technologies consists in the fact that the best pens may not be on the staffs of newspapers, and that policies need not be formulated only in the corridors of government."
media
financial-crisis
public-policy
propaganda
cultural-norms
cultural-assumptions
social-engineering
innovation
communication
The alternative is to focus on what communication technology cannot do: create rather than transmit a good story or a good policy. There will always be a market for quality. The disruption caused by emerging communications technologies consists in the fact that the best pens may not be on the staffs of newspapers, and that policies need not be formulated only in the corridors of government."
february 2010 by Vaguery
Did Dungeons & Dragons Motivate Dr. Amy Bishop's Murder Spree? - Crime - io9
february 2010 by Vaguery
"You'd think by now that pop media would have gotten beyond the idea that nerdiness leads to crime. Apparently they haven't. I am cringing as I await the next round of evil geek TV specials, featuring mad scientists building biological computers while playing "Mazes and Monsters" and plotting the murders of their colleagues."
Dungeons-and-Dragons
cultural-norms
cultural-assumptions
crime
MSM
satanism-panics-all-over-again
february 2010 by Vaguery
Aimee Mullins: The opportunity of adversity | Video on TED.com
february 2010 by Vaguery
"The thesaurus might equate "disabled" with synonyms like "useless" and "mutilated," but ground-breaking runner Aimee Mullins is out to redefine the word. Defying these associations, she hows how adversity -- in her case, being born without shinbones -- actually opens the door for human potential."
adversity
Aimee-Mullins
TED
inspiration
inspiration-appears-wherever-you-break-something
cultural-norms
helpfulness
diversity
you-do-not-need-to-be-fixed
february 2010 by Vaguery
Contrary Brin: The Real Struggle Behind Climate Change - A War on Expertise
february 2010 by Vaguery
"But that isn't the faux-narrative. Instead it boils down to "I hate smartypants." And it is thereupon understandable that (being human) the boffins are losing patience with the new Know Nothings."
public-policy
cultural-norms
culture-war
scientism
know-nothings
why-does-the-ironist-always-sit-sighing
february 2010 by Vaguery
How a New Jobless Era Will Transform America - The Atlantic(March 2010)
february 2010 by Vaguery
'“We haven’t seen anything like this before: a really deep recession combined with a really extended period, maybe as much as eight years, all told, of highly elevated unemployment,” Shierholz told me. “We’re about to see a big national experiment on stress.”'
financial-crisis
economics
unemployment
not-an-employee
sociology
cultural-norms
American-cultural-assumptions
politics
capitalism
capital
types-of
great-employment-shift
february 2010 by Vaguery
The Top of Our Game: Interesting Times : The New Yorker
february 2010 by Vaguery
"Anyone covering Washington, not excluding me, will sooner or later turn to a phrase like “refocus its image” or “a perception that the President has come to look” or “a pitch-perfect recital of the populist message,” because they come so easily, and because they make it unnecessary to say anything substantial, which means thinking hard and perhaps suffering the consequences. Still, as an exercise in accountability, political journalists should ask themselves from time to time: Would I write this about a war, or a depression? In the same vein, a government official once told me that the best way to cover Washington is as a foreign capital—as Baghdad, or Kabul."
politics
journalism
writing
cultural-norms
propaganda
mainstream
fashion
fads-and-fallacies
february 2010 by Vaguery
PeteSearch: How to split up the US
february 2010 by Vaguery
"Stretching from New York to Minnesota, this belt's defining feature is how near most people are to their friends, implying they don't move far. In most cases outside the largest cities, the most common connections are with immediately neighboring cities, and even New York only has one really long-range link in its top 10. Apart from Los Angeles, all of its strong ties are comparatively local."
social-networks
cultural-norms
sociology
American-cultural-assumptions
Facebook
geography
network-culture
visualization
GIS
february 2010 by Vaguery
Why People Pirate
january 2010 by Vaguery
"Note that his findings regarding pricing is interesting: he dropped his prices, and is still selling the same number of games, just making half as much money."
DRM
piracy
piracy-not-a-problem
intellectual-property
cultural-norms
economics
january 2010 by Vaguery
Crayola Crayon Colors Multiply Like Rabits | FlowingData
january 2010 by Vaguery
"In 1903, Crayola had eight colors in its standard package. Today, there are 120, along with special packs like Gem Tones and Silver Swhirls. What happened? Above, from Weather Sealed, shows the growing color selection (and a few color retirements) in the standard package from 1903 to now."
color
cultural-norms
collecting
crayons
nanohistory
visualization
january 2010 by Vaguery
Contrary Brin: The betrayal of the smart sons
december 2009 by Vaguery
"It doesn’t have to be science, though that is where I found these refugees from the aristocracy, most often. It might also be the arts, or starting a new company from scratch, in a completely different field. Any way you look at it, this trend has to be viewed with admiration.
Alas, it may also be one of the principal reasons that American capitalism is going down the toilet. Because... who is left behind, minding the store? Oh. Yeah. I already answered that question. "
politics
cultural-norms
aristocracy
elitism
American-cultural-assumptions
Babbittism
survivorship-bias
testable-hypotheses
sociology
social-networks
Alas, it may also be one of the principal reasons that American capitalism is going down the toilet. Because... who is left behind, minding the store? Oh. Yeah. I already answered that question. "
december 2009 by Vaguery
The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs : A not-so-brief chat with Randall Stephenson of AT&T
december 2009 by Vaguery
"You, Randall Stephenson, and your lazy stupid company — you are the problem. You are what’s wrong with this country."
infrastructure
telephone
AT&T
iPgibw
Apple
economy
financial-crisis
cultural-norms
business-model-failure
december 2009 by Vaguery
No Moods, Ads or Cutesy Fucking Icons (Re-reloaded) » Because As We All Know, The Green Party Runs the World.
november 2009 by Vaguery
"Science doesn’t work despite scientists being asses. Science works, to at least some extent, because scientists are asses. Bickering and backstabbing are essential elements of the process. Haven’t any of these guys ever heard of “peer review”?
There’s this myth in wide circulation: rational, emotionless Vulcans in white coats, plumbing the secrets of the universe, their Scientific Methods unsullied by bias or emotionalism. Most people know it’s a myth, of course; they subscribe to a more nuanced view in which scientists are as petty and vain and human as anyone (and as egotistical as any therapist or financier), people who use scientific methodology to tamp down their human imperfections and manage some approximation of objectivity."
science
academic-culture
cultural-norms
cultural-assumptions
mythology
logic
academia
There’s this myth in wide circulation: rational, emotionless Vulcans in white coats, plumbing the secrets of the universe, their Scientific Methods unsullied by bias or emotionalism. Most people know it’s a myth, of course; they subscribe to a more nuanced view in which scientists are as petty and vain and human as anyone (and as egotistical as any therapist or financier), people who use scientific methodology to tamp down their human imperfections and manage some approximation of objectivity."
november 2009 by Vaguery
FT.com / Columnists / Christopher Caldwell - Enemies need not be insane
november 2009 by Vaguery
"We used to gasp at the way the Soviet Union stuck opponents of the regime in asylums. But the USSR is not the only country in history that has had a hard time seeing its adversaries as rational. The present generation of Americans is made uncomfortable by the idea that their country might have enemies whose enmity is the result of something other than fanaticism or mental illness. Maj Hasan’s colleagues, the Economist writes, say he thought the war on terror was a war on Islam. According to what we think Islam is, he is wrong. But according to a fundamentalist idea of what Islam is, he is right. There is rationality in such enmity, even if that rationality is built on different assumptions."
terrorism
American-cultural-assumptions
diversity
insanity
dehumanization
war
public-policy
cultural-norms
november 2009 by Vaguery
[0910.3989] Naming the extrasolar planets
november 2009 by Vaguery
"Extrasolar planets are not named and are referred to only by their assigned scientific designation. The reason given by the IAU to not name the planets is that it is considered impractical as planets are expected to be common. I advance some reasons as to why this logic is flawed, and suggest names for the 403 extrasolar planet candidates known as of Oct 2009. The names follow a scheme of association with the constellation that the host star pertains to, and therefore are mostly drawn from Roman-Greek mythology. Other mythologies may also be used given that a suitable association is established."
astronomy
science-fiction
naming
conventions
cultural-norms
november 2009 by Vaguery
Lowess is great : Applied Statistics
november 2009 by Vaguery
"One of the discussants in Brain and Behavioral Sciences of Seth Roberts's article on self-experimentation was by Martin Voracek and Maryanne Fisher. They had a bunch of negative things to say about self-experimentation, but as a statistician, I was struck by their concern about "the overuse of the loess procedure." I think lowess (or loess) is just wonderful, and I don't know that I've ever seen it overused."
regression
models
statistics
received-wisdom
cultural-norms
academia
communities-of-practice
november 2009 by Vaguery
Growthology: Replace all Entrepreneurship Programs with Sales Training
november 2009 by Vaguery
"...A colleague once suggested that if our aim is to create more entrepreneurs or at least better prepare potential entrepreneurs, we should replace all entrepreneurship education programs with basic sales courses. After all, and to Fox's point, entrepreneurs are engaged at every step of the way in selling something: an idea, themselves, a product, a vision."
entrepreneurs
entrepreneurship-as-pathology
economic-development
training
cultural-norms
pedagogy
november 2009 by Vaguery
Stopping the Next McVeigh - Page 1 - The Daily Beast
november 2009 by Vaguery
"Experts on extremist groups say that the outcries of right-wing tea-partiers, death panellers, birthers, and the like are accompanied by increased activity all along the paranoid fringe—from radical border-patrol groups to skinheads to sovereign citizens. Two camps are particularly restive: militia enthusiasts and white supremacists; their members are seething because of the persistence of two wars and the election of a black (and Democratic) president with an ambitious agenda. The previous upsurge of antigovernment activity in the 1990s—of which McVeigh’s attack marked the apex—was set off in part by a recession and the election of a liberal president."
secession
Civil-War
conversation
cultural-norms
American-cultural-assumptions
november 2009 by Vaguery
Eugene Fama defends the efficient market hypothesis, sort of - The Curious Capitalist - TIME.com
november 2009 by Vaguery
"I guess that's what's kind of disappointing to me about Fama's post. I'm thrilled that he's read my book, and is saying halfway nice things about it in public. In general, I'm a big Fama fan—his willingness to keep testing his theories against the evidence, and to support the work of students and younger professors whose research undermined those theories, is hugely admirable. But he and a lot of other people in academic finance just don't seem interested in directly engaging in many of the most interesting questions raised by the financial crisis. Such as: Can the financial sector get too big, and if so how can we tell? Can derivatives markets concentrate risk as well as spread it? Is financial innovation fundamentally different and more dangerous than innovation in other fields, and if so what should we do about it? Should central banks and financial regulators try to snuff out asset-price bubbles, and if so how should they go about determining when we're in bubble territory?…"
financial-crisis
pedagogy
cultural-norms
economics
models-and-modes
november 2009 by Vaguery
Future Trends for Same-Sex Marriage Support? - Statistical Modeling, Causal Inference, and Social Science
november 2009 by Vaguery
"We plot explicit support for allowing same-sex marriage broken down by state and by age. Seven states cross the 50% mark overall as of our current estimates, but the generation gap is huge. If policy were set by state-by-state majorities of those 65 or older, none would allow same-sex marriage. If policy were set by those under 30, only 12 states would not allow-same-sex marriage."
rights
politics
demographics
law
prejudice
cultural-norms
statistics
november 2009 by Vaguery
Tran|script, by Mike Caulfield » Blog Archive » Abstinence-only Web Education
november 2009 by Vaguery
"Shockingly crazy worldview, I hereby name you “Abstinence-only Web Education”.
Adding this: there is always this resentment of people in the Academy toward the term “real world” — as in what we teach them “in here” has to pertain to the real world “out there”. I sympathize with that resentment, and even commiserated about the inappropriateness of the term with a coworker a couple nights ago.
But it’s things like abstinence-only web education that make that term relevant and, yes, often a legitimate critique. It’s not everybody, true, but the belief of even a percentage in higher education that what we really need to do is get back to printed books to solve the information filter problem is evidence enough that we are insulated from the world outside the campus, and to a stunning degree."
cultural-norms
academia
education
pedagogy
web2.0
disintermediation-targets
Adding this: there is always this resentment of people in the Academy toward the term “real world” — as in what we teach them “in here” has to pertain to the real world “out there”. I sympathize with that resentment, and even commiserated about the inappropriateness of the term with a coworker a couple nights ago.
But it’s things like abstinence-only web education that make that term relevant and, yes, often a legitimate critique. It’s not everybody, true, but the belief of even a percentage in higher education that what we really need to do is get back to printed books to solve the information filter problem is evidence enough that we are insulated from the world outside the campus, and to a stunning degree."
november 2009 by Vaguery
Dusty Diary: “Cabbage Night” was Ypsilanti’s original Halloween
november 2009 by Vaguery
"Though one of our most ancient holidays, Halloween wasn’t celebrated widely in America until the latter part of the 1800s. Ypsilanti likely didn’t celebrate Halloween for half a century after the city’s founding in 1823—the quote above is the first Halloween story to appear in old newspapers dating back to the 1840s."
nanohistory
history
local
Halloween
cultural-norms
cultural-assumptions
november 2009 by Vaguery
Thunderbirds will grow a generation of mad engineers
october 2009 by Vaguery
"Thunderbirds says that science is awesome because you get to fly in space and live on a high-tech island full of booze. Beat that for incentive."
via:cshalizi
SCIENCE!!eleven!
television
cultural-norms
cultural-engineering
childhood
philosophy
Warren-fucking-Ellis-SAYS-SO
october 2009 by Vaguery
Communiqué from an Absent Future « we want everything
september 2009 by Vaguery
"If the university teaches us primarily how to be in debt, how to waste our labor power, how to fall prey to petty anxieties, it thereby teaches us how to be consumers. Education is a commodity like everything else that we want without caring for. It is a thing, and it makes its purchasers into things. One’s future position in the system, one’s relation to others, is purchased first with money and then with the demonstration of obedience."
academia
academic-culture
cultural-norms
politics
education
future
activism
ashes-make-glass
september 2009 by Vaguery
William Deverell: Our national snobbery disorder - Full Comment
september 2009 by Vaguery
"That attitude carried on to seduce academic libraries and graduate English courses, where students were made to believe that Hugo and Dostoevsky, Maugham and Conrad had not written crime and spy novels. The virus still flourishes in our schools and cultural institutions; our self-appointed guardians of culture still leave genre writers off the literary tea guest lists. She writes mysteries, my dear, she'll show up reeking of gin. Or you get: He writes thrillers? How crass. It's so American.
"Popular fiction" has become a term of vulgar connotation, but it reeks of ironic paradox: obviously we sobersided Canadians ought to be reading unpopular fiction. (As an aside, reflecting an antithetical American attitude, I once got a rejection from a publisher down there who complained a manuscript was "too literary for the genre.")"
prejudice
fiction
writing
authors
literature
cultural-norms
scholarship
snobbery
"Popular fiction" has become a term of vulgar connotation, but it reeks of ironic paradox: obviously we sobersided Canadians ought to be reading unpopular fiction. (As an aside, reflecting an antithetical American attitude, I once got a rejection from a publisher down there who complained a manuscript was "too literary for the genre.")"
september 2009 by Vaguery
How Did Economists Get It So Wrong? - NYTimes.com
september 2009 by Vaguery
"But there was something else going on: a general belief that bubbles just don’t happen. What’s striking, when you reread Greenspan’s assurances, is that they weren’t based on evidence — they were based on the a priori assertion that there simply can’t be a bubble in housing. And the finance theorists were even more adamant on this point. In a 2007 interview, Eugene Fama, the father of the efficient-market hypothesis, declared that “the word ‘bubble’ drives me nuts,” and went on to explain why we can trust the housing market: “Housing markets are less liquid, but people are very careful when they buy houses. It’s typically the biggest investment they’re going to make, so they look around very carefully and they compare prices. The bidding process is very detailed.”"
economics
public-policy
forecast
cultural-norms
received-wisdom
financial-crisis
september 2009 by Vaguery
Fistful of Talent: What the Future of HR is not Learning... But Should Be...
september 2009 by Vaguery
"The second driver is a consistent ignorance, apathy and a serious underestimation of the impact of new technology on the businesses that HR supports (particularly social technologies). Technology moves so quickly and for HR leaders and professionals it can seem so easy (and sometimes necessary) to remain in their comfort zone of policy creation and enforcement, employee relations, or compliance reporting."
via:rlanhman540
human-resources
corporatism
pedagogy
academia
learning-by-doing
cultural-norms
business-culture
september 2009 by Vaguery
A Manifesto for Slow Communication - WSJ.com
september 2009 by Vaguery
"We need context in order to live, and if the environment of electronic communication has stopped providing it, we shouldn't search online for a solution but turn back to the real world and slow down. To do this, we need to uncouple our idea of progress from speed, separate the idea of speed from effi ciency, pause and step back enough to realize that efficiency may be good for business and governments but does not always lead to mindfulness and sustainable, rewarding relationships. We are here for a short time on this planet, and reacting to demands on our time by simply speeding up has canceled out many of the benefits of the Internet, which is one of the most fabulous technological inventions ever conceived. We are connected, yes, but we were before, only by gossamer threads that worked more slowly. Slow communication will preserve these threads and our ability to sensibly choose to use faster modes when necessary…."
manifesto
cultural-norms
slow-X
community
communication
attention
conversation
september 2009 by Vaguery
Clive Thompson on the New Literacy
august 2009 by Vaguery
"It's almost hard to remember how big a paradigm shift this is. Before the Internet came along, most Americans never wrote anything, ever, that wasn't a school assignment. Unless they got a job that required producing text (like in law, advertising, or media), they'd leave school and virtually never construct a paragraph again."
writing
literacy
cultural-norms
cultural-assumptions
pedagogy
transformation
social-media
education
social-norms
august 2009 by Vaguery
Pointless babble « The New Adventures of Stephen Fry
august 2009 by Vaguery
"Why do these asinine reports jump onto a bandwagon they don’t understand and why do those reporting on them relate with such glee that a service that was never supposed in the first place to be more than gossipy tittle-tattle and proudly banal verbal doodling is “failing to deliver meaningful commercial or political content”. Bollocky bollocks to the lot of them. They can found their own “enterprise oriented” earnest microblogging service. Remind me to avoid it."
via:nielsen
blogging
Stephen-Fry
Twitter
cultural-norms
web2.0
misunderstanding
advertising
how-many-cultures?
august 2009 by Vaguery
Edge: THE IMPENDING DEMISE OF THE UNIVERSITY By Don Tapscott
august 2009 by Vaguery
"In the industrial model of student mass production, the teacher is the broadcaster. A broadcast is by definition the transmission of information from transmitter to receiver in a one-way, linear fashion. The teacher is the transmitter and student is a receptor in the learning process. The formula goes like this: "I'm a professor and I have knowledge. You're a student, you're an empty vessel and you don't. Get ready, here it comes. Your goal is to take this data into your short-term memory and through practice and repetition build deeper cognitive structures so you can recall it to me when I test you."... The definition of a lecture has become the process in which the notes of the teacher go to the notes of the student without going through the brains of either."
academia
academic-culture
universities
disintermediation-targets
cultural-norms
cultural-engineering
business-model
futurism
intellectual-property
credentials
august 2009 by Vaguery
The Management Myth - The Atlantic(June 2006)
august 2009 by Vaguery
"In a sense, management theory is what happens to philosophers when you pay them too much."
business-culture
management-consulting
business-school
received-wisdom
cultural-norms
august 2009 by Vaguery
The Good, The Bad and The Etsy: Bye, all, thanks for reading!
august 2009 by Vaguery
"So, the claims of copyright infringement were doubtful, but I was willing to consider the issue further. The claims that I was hurting anyone's livelihood were laughable. The claims that I was hurting people's feelings were kind of heart-string tugging, and I did consider taking the blog down then, but I didn't. But the death threats, I can live without."
humor
sad
cultural-norms
snark
sorry-to-see-it-go
august 2009 by Vaguery
Frenetic Japanese AR | Beyond The Beyond
august 2009 by Vaguery
"Judging by the teams creating and trying to sell this stuff, I’m surmising we may see bursts of *regional* augmented reality. Like Augmented Singaporean Reality, Augmented Korean Reality, Augmented Dutch Reality and Augmented Austrian Reality. The USA is going to specialize in the monetizable stuff, like fan movie tie-ins and augmented diaper ads."
augmented-reality
demonstration
cultural-norms
video
demo
diversity
technology
august 2009 by Vaguery
Confessions of a Community College Dean: Editing and Intimacy
july 2009 by Vaguery
"Judging by the quality of much of the popular press, most of what gets published these days doesn't get edited in any meaningful way. Some of that is probably the fruit of cost cuts over the years, but I worry that some of it is a loss of the sense that it's supposed to happen at all."
editing
authors
reading
cultural-norms
intellectual-property
disintermediation
reintermediation-is-what-we-need
july 2009 by Vaguery
Agile Commentary: Post agile, one third of you will be gone...
july 2009 by Vaguery
This needs to happen to Universities: "…yes, we lost a lot of people. The people that just wanted to tell other people what to do were gone. They either left or were removed. The people who liked sitting in cubes and being told what to do left also."
agility
management
business-culture
academic-culture
scalability
cultural-norms
buh-bye
july 2009 by Vaguery
Journalistic narcissism « BuzzMachine
july 2009 by Vaguery
"The press has become journalism’s curse, not only because it now brings a crushing cost burden but also because it led to all these myths: that we journalists own the news, that we’re necessary to it, that we decide what’s reported and what’s important, that we can package the world for you every day in a box with a bow on it, that what we do is perfect (with rare, we think, exceptions), that the world should come to us to be informed, that we deserve to be paid for this service, that the world needs us."
publishing
received-wisdom
mythology
journalism
MSM
disintermediation
cultural-norms
marketing
editing
presumption
july 2009 by Vaguery
http://www.sba.gov/advo/research/us88_06.pdf
july 2009 by Vaguery
Trends in non-employer and small business firms, establishments and companies from 1997-2006, United States. Note the rates at which nonemployer and <20 employee firms are growing, compared to larger firms over the same period.
Workantile
statistics
demographics
economics
business-culture
worklife
cultural-norms
public-policy
july 2009 by Vaguery
The Old Solutions Have Become the New Problems - BusinessWeek
july 2009 by Vaguery
"The emphasis shifts from contracts and legal sanctions to trust and transparency as companies work together, aligned with their customers' interests—sharing core values, business practices, infrastructure, and systems. Amazon's marketplace and eBay's webs of buyers and sellers are early prototypes of these federated networks. Apple and Facebook are struggling to understand the rules of engagement that should govern relationships with their applications developers. You can see them climbing a new learning curve through trial and error as they figure out how to build and sustain economies of trust."
collaboration
planning
business-culture
business-model
management
innovation
cultural-norms
july 2009 by Vaguery
Very off topic: Why I won't be at my high school reunion : Good Math, Bad Math
july 2009 by Vaguery
"My reaction to them... What the fuck is wrong with you people? Why would you think that I would want to have anything to do with you? How do you have the chutzpah to act as if we're old friends? How dare you? I see the RSVP list that one of you sent me, and I literally feel nauseous just remembering your names."
high-school
sociology
cultural-norms
abuse
geek
psychology
bullying
social-psychology
reunions
Facebook
july 2009 by Vaguery
Reuters Editors » Blog Archive » Rethinking rights, accreditation, and journalism itself in the age of Twitter | Blogs |
june 2009 by Vaguery
"But the point, I hope, is clear.
The old means of control don’t work.
The old categories don’t work.
The old ways of thinking won’t work.
We all need to come to terms with that.
Fundamentally, the old media won’t control news dissemination in the future. And organisations can’t control access using old forms of accreditation any more."
news
copyright
MSM
media
journalism
twitter
cultural-norms
business-model
control
remnant
The old means of control don’t work.
The old categories don’t work.
The old ways of thinking won’t work.
We all need to come to terms with that.
Fundamentally, the old media won’t control news dissemination in the future. And organisations can’t control access using old forms of accreditation any more."
june 2009 by Vaguery
"Go and Do Likewise": Militant Christianity v The Great Command | Media/Culture | ReligionDispatches
june 2009 by Vaguery
"The second, and maybe more surprising, claim is that after decades of struggle, moderate and liberal Christianity is experiencing an unexpected renewal in North America. Many people now refer to this energized cluster as “progressive” or “emerging” Christianity. I have come to think of it as beyond existing categories of conservative-moderate-liberal. Instead, I refer to it as generative Christianity. In congregations and as individuals, people have stumbled into meaningful spiritual practices and a renewed sense of social justice without knowing, perhaps, that these new discoveries have long histories in the Christian tradition...."
Christianity
religion
cultural-norms
culture-war
sensibility
American-cultural-assumptions
antifundamentalism
june 2009 by Vaguery
thoughtbox
may 2009 by Vaguery
"I think you're logic is backwards. You make it public so that people can refractor the umich-specific parts if that's useful to them. Every OSS project starts out only meeting the specific needs of its creators. You make it public so it can become generally applicable, not make it generally applicable so it can become public."
cultural-norms
academia
academic-culture
open-source
collaboration
value-divergence
FAIL
may 2009 by Vaguery
Unstable ground « Thinking Out Loud
may 2009 by Vaguery
"And I worry that the idea that learning in relation to history can easily be kept within some type of bounds implies, to a degree, that the importance of history is its factual content. Generations of captive history students, face-down and drooling on their desks, indicate that approaches of this nature are not only unfortunately limited, but also a fatal blow to any intrinsic interest in examining historical/cultural change."
via:tsuomela
history
pedagogy
learning-by-doing
learning
cultural-norms
memory
pragmatism
may 2009 by Vaguery
Compensatory Consumption vs. Budgetary Bliss
may 2009 by Vaguery
"In recent research experiments, Derek Rucker and Adam Galinsky, found that people who felt powerless were willing to pay more money for luxury or status items than people who’d been conditioned to feel more powerful and in control."
via:tsuomela
cultural-norms
worklife
consumerism
psychology
heuristics
self-esteem
economics
may 2009 by Vaguery
The Art of Community | O'Reilly Media
may 2009 by Vaguery
"Building communities is vital today, whether it's to build a reliable support network, serve as a valuable source of new ideas, or provide a powerful marketing tool. In The Art of Community, you'll learn about the broad range of talents required to recruit, motivate, and manage community members. The book takes you through the stages of community, and covers topics ranging from software tools to conflict resolution skills. "
community
engineering
social-engineering
social-dynamics
business-model
cultural-norms
cultural-engineering
book
want
may 2009 by Vaguery
Urban Oasis » Should You Get a PhD?
april 2009 by Vaguery
"I’ve heard a variation on Benton’s phrase “good people get good jobs” in a number of venues, some from clueless, privileged wankers who said it in earnest, sometimes from professors who said that the phrase was the extent of the advice they got from their grad school advisors shortly before being turned out to the wolves of the mid-70s job market. Don’t believe it. Sometimes good people get bad jobs or no jobs at all; sometimes terrible people get great jobs. Not only is there a shortage of jobs, the search process is totally capricious and inscrutable."
academia
academic-culture
cultural-norms
pedagogy
PhD
graduate-school
april 2009 by Vaguery
Ascription is an Anathema to any Enthusiasm › the briar patch
april 2009 by Vaguery
"Dan manages to imply that the problem he encountered can be tagged open-source. Coordinating consistent builds across a tangle of libraries would seem to be hard enough that it would require some orchestration. It’s actually kind of striking how well this works in the loosely inter-project world of open source. Stefano has been known to point out that the friction that rises out of solving this problem creates inter-project social energy that’s extremely valuable. Which I’ll admit to wondering if it’s not a good thing that these problems arise."
open-source
cultural-norms
standards
software-development
libraries
community
the-public-and-its-problems
april 2009 by Vaguery
100 Best Blogs for Those Who Want to Change the World | Best Universities
april 2009 by Vaguery
Apparently scientists and engineers are not among the Best
best-of
change
prejudice
cultural-norms
two-cultures-FAIL
april 2009 by Vaguery
Strange Horizons Reviews: The Shock of the Old by David Edgerton, reviewed by Bruce Sterling
march 2009 by Vaguery
"Most inventors are unsuccessful, and most patents never get used. Countries that are full of inventive genius don't necessarily have booming economies. Spreading innovations is a haphazard process dependent on luck, or culture, or fickle government support... it's not a golden road to wealth and power. Innovating is an easy process compared to "un-inventing" huge installed technologies. Asbestos got yanked out of American schools, but asbestos bricks are all over the "poor world.""
history
futurism
innovation
technology
philosophy
prediction
cultural-norms
march 2009 by Vaguery
ghetto of our mind: Why it's ok to feel stupid - especially in Science
march 2009 by Vaguery
"I was amazed that the Journal of Cell Science has the wherewithal to publish an essay like this. Kudos to the author of the essay and the editors of the journal. "
science
self-image
learning-by-doing
academia
cultural-norms
article
stupidity
why-we-are-not-cowboys
march 2009 by Vaguery
He kept his shoes on. « The Edge of the American West
march 2009 by Vaguery
"On his authority as Admiral of the battlestar Galactica, Edward James Olmos addresses a crowd in the United Nations chamber and gets them to condemn the use of the constructed term [edited] “race” with a shout of “So say we all!”"
race
BSG
Edward-James-Olmos
Adama
United-Nations
cultural-norms
language
history
youth-culture-killed-my-assumptions
march 2009 by Vaguery
Mass collaboration - Meta Collab
march 2009 by Vaguery
"Mass collaboration differs from mass cooperation in that the creative acts taking place requires the emergence of jointly developed shared understandings. Conversely, group members involved in a cooperation needn't engage in a joint negotiation of understanding (from which shared understandings emerge), they may simply execute instructions willingly.
Another important distinction is the borders around which a mass cooperation can be defined. Due to the extremely general characteristics and lack of need for fine grain negotiation and consensus when cooperating, the entire Internet, a city and even the global economy may be regarded as a mass cooperation. Thus a mass collaboration is more refined and complex in its process and production on the level of collective engagement."
mass-collaboration
collaboration
community
wikinomics
sharing
cultural-norms
Another important distinction is the borders around which a mass cooperation can be defined. Due to the extremely general characteristics and lack of need for fine grain negotiation and consensus when cooperating, the entire Internet, a city and even the global economy may be regarded as a mass cooperation. Thus a mass collaboration is more refined and complex in its process and production on the level of collective engagement."
march 2009 by Vaguery
collabforge | collaboration :: cooperation :: coordination
march 2009 by Vaguery
"Collabforge is developing the online collaboration strategy for what will be a Web portal that helps Australians to find, navigate, understand and act on federal, state and local government environmental efficiency programs. The site will provide information for households, schools and small businesses, and is investigating options to best engage the public including via social media and web 2.0 opportunities."
via:srose
collaboration
transparency
government
business-models
openness
participation
cultural-norms
disintermediation
march 2009 by Vaguery
Wunderkind - Ta-Nehisi Coates
march 2009 by Vaguery
"If you're a conservative and you care about this kid, you don't give him a public forum. You give him your card, and you take his e-mails. You give him a list of books that he needs to read. Then when you see him, you quiz him on those books. You tell him that you're glad he showed the initiative to write and publish himself, but his thesis is actually banal. That if he's going to play in the big leagues, he should expect to get hit and prepare himself thusly. You warn him away from sideshows, and teach him to pride hearing over being heard. You teach him that these are his weapons and his shield in the great war of ideas."
politics
conservatism
liberalism
education
cultural-norms
children
self-image
self-criticism
Republicans
march 2009 by Vaguery
Museum 2.0: Deliberately Unsustainable Business Models
march 2009 by Vaguery
"At one point, Mark commented that they have a "deliberately unsustainable" business model. In other words: do great stuff while you can, and when you can't do it anymore, stop. This is the model that governs most businesses and artistic endeavors. It's the reason terms like "jump the shark" exist. Most companies, rock bands, and sports teams are only brilliant for so long. Then they start to slide. Then they die."
coworking
business-plan
business-model
cultural-norms
innovation
Viridianism's-rule
distraction-as-a-plan
march 2009 by Vaguery
Gene Expression: Will information criteria replace p-values in common use? Some trends
march 2009 by Vaguery
"It's promising that both are increasing over the past 30-odd years, since that means more people are bothering to be quantitative. Still, less than 5% of articles mention p-values or information criteria -- some of that is due to the presence of arts and humanities journals, but there's still a big slice of the hard and soft sciences that needs to be converted. Also encouraging is the steady decline in the dominance of p-values to the AIC: they're still about 4.5 times as commonly used in academia at large, but that's down from about 15.5 times as common in the mid-1970s, a 71% decline. Graduate students and young professors -- the writing is on the wall. Aside from being intellectually superior, information criteria will give you a competitive edge in the job market, at least in the near future. After that, they will be required."
AIC
statistics
p-values
habits
cultural-norms
academia
publishing
credentials
trends
march 2009 by Vaguery
OnTheCommons.org » The City Belongs to All of Us
march 2009 by Vaguery
"One of the most compelling ideas now beginning to be discussed is the need to shift from a market-based society to a commons-based society. In America today, the ideal of “The Market” has become an out-of-control engine reshaping nearly every aspect of life from education to the environment to our private lives. The commons—all the things we all own together that are not for sale to the highest bidder—has been lost in this process, impoverishing us all to a larger or smaller degree. Many things fall within that definition of the commons– air, water, health of the land, the internet, public health, scientific knowledge, cultural traditions, even languages. For the most part, commons do not have price tags. Imagine them for a moment as properties in which each of us holds an equal share of stock."
commons
politics
philosophy
political-philosophy
urbanism
culture
cultural-norms
economics
march 2009 by Vaguery
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