5,369 research outputs found

    Adam

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    Touchais Gilles. Adam. In: Bulletin de correspondance hellénique. Volume 108, livraison 2, 1984. p. 801

    Violence, Mobilizations and Competing Social Orders. Questions to Adam Baczko about the Civil War in Syria

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    contribution à un site webAdam Baczko is the author, with Gilles Dorronsoro and Arthur Quesnay, of Civil War in Syria. Mobilization and Competing Social Orders (Cambridge University Press). The French version of the book (Syrie. Anatomie d’une guerre civile) has just been republished in paperback (Collection Biblis, CNRS Edition). Read our interview with Adam Baczko about the fieldwork, the emergence of violence in demonstrations, the anonymous demonstrators, the role of women, and more about the conflict in Syria. Interview by Miriam Périer, CER

    Adam Segal, Digital Dragon. High-Technology Enterprises in China ; Kellee S. Tsai, Back-Alley Banking, Private entrepreneurs in China

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    Guiheux Gilles. Adam Segal, Digital Dragon. High-Technology Enterprises in China ; Kellee S. Tsai, Back-Alley Banking, Private entrepreneurs in China. In: Perspectives chinoises, n°77, 2003. pp. 82-84

    Keynes and Economics: The Early Stage

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    The following pages offer a contribution to the understanding of Keynes’s débuts as an economist, in the hope we might dissipate a few myths, some created by Keynes himself, others by disciples or adversaries. Following some preliminary remarks on these misunderstandings, we will recall how Keynes became a professional economist, showing that he did not arrive to economics by chance, that this was indeed a natural result of his early preoccupations and thinking. But, even when he was a confirmed economist, economics remained secondary for Keynes, after ethics and politics, and this until the end of his life. We will examine this in part three of this paper, where we consider how Keynes viewed economics in the first decade of our century. We will show that certain important themes in his economic reflections, his view of laissez-faire in particular, are clearly present in early works, and that the methods he would later apply to economic studies were built up at that date. In the last part of this paper, we will turn to Keynes’s early theoretical economics, examining in particular his reflections on the quantity theory of money, in his lectures notes. We will show that his position towards this theory -- at least in its most simplified version -- was already somewhat critical at that early stage, drawing on his philosophical and methodological views.Keynes, History, Economic Thought

    Winning War Through Law in Afghanistan? Interview with Adam Baczko

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    contribution à un site webAdam Baczko is the author of a book entitled La guerre par le droit. Les tribunaux Taliban en Afghanistan ( War by Law. Taliban Courts in Afghanistan) published on 2 September by CNRS Editions within the series called “Logiques du désordre” he coedits with Adèle Blazquez, Martin Lamotte and Gilles Dorronsoro. Published three weeks after the Taliban took power in Afghanistan, this sadly very timely comparative study of the parallel legal system put in place by the Taliban for decades is likely to help us better understand more broadly the role of Law in war. Adam Baczko answers our questions on this issue and on his long-term research. Interview by Miriam Périer, CERI

    The Ethical, Epistemological, and Conceptual Need to Resume Fieldwork

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    contribution à un site webFor the “Covid-19 and the Social Sciences” series, Adam Baczko and Gilles Dorronsoro argue for the necessity of resuming fieldwork. They trace how subcontracting research or shifting to methodologies which are remote in time and space—solutions often touted in the pandemic age—in fact produce unreliable, exploitative, and undertheorized work incapable of accurately analyzing dynamic conditions on the ground. These transformations relate to broader research trends toward neoliberal privatization, and the authors outline how they can be resisted by returning, carefully, to the field

    The Ethical, Epistemological, and Conceptual Need to Resume Fieldwork

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    contribution à un site webFor the “Covid-19 and the Social Sciences” series, Adam Baczko and Gilles Dorronsoro argue for the necessity of resuming fieldwork. They trace how subcontracting research or shifting to methodologies which are remote in time and space—solutions often touted in the pandemic age—in fact produce unreliable, exploitative, and undertheorized work incapable of accurately analyzing dynamic conditions on the ground. These transformations relate to broader research trends toward neoliberal privatization, and the authors outline how they can be resisted by returning, carefully, to the field

    The Ethical, Epistemological, and Conceptual Need to Resume Fieldwork

    No full text
    contribution à un site webFor the “Covid-19 and the Social Sciences” series, Adam Baczko and Gilles Dorronsoro argue for the necessity of resuming fieldwork. They trace how subcontracting research or shifting to methodologies which are remote in time and space—solutions often touted in the pandemic age—in fact produce unreliable, exploitative, and undertheorized work incapable of accurately analyzing dynamic conditions on the ground. These transformations relate to broader research trends toward neoliberal privatization, and the authors outline how they can be resisted by returning, carefully, to the field

    Débat : Adam Baczko, Gilles Dorrondoso et Arthur Quesnay, sur leur livre Syrie, anatomie d'une guerre civile — 03/06/2016

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    Première édition de Livres en Questions du LabEx TEPSIS : Débat avec Adam Baczko, Gilles Dorronsoro et Arthur Quesnay, pour un débat autour de leur livre : Syrie, anatomie d’une guerre civile (CNRS éditions, 2016), publié avec le soutien de TEPSIS. Le vendredi 03 juin à la librairie-galerie Monte en l'air, 18h30 71 rue de Ménilmontant - 2 rue de la Mare 75020 Pari

    Variations des ancrages énonciatifs et fictionalisation d'une anecdote d'Albert Camus

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    Jean-Michel Adam and Gilles Lugrin : Variations of the enunciative utterer-centered anchor points and fictionalization of an Albert Camus autobiographical narrative In Camus's works, one can find three versions of the same autobiographical anecdote. The rewriting of an identical scene as fiction in The Stranger, clearly as fact in Reflections on the guillotine, and as mixed discourse in Camus's posthumous autofictional novel The First Man may be seen as a textbook case. This article examines the enunciative anchoring in each of these forms of discourse in order to study whether narrative fiction offers specific enunciative features that are linguistically identifiable.Adam Jean-Michel, Lugrin Gilles. Variations des ancrages énonciatifs et fictionalisation d'une anecdote d'Albert Camus. In: Langue française, n°128, 2000. L'ancrage énonciatif des récits de fiction. pp. 96-112
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