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This book provides an outline for a multidisciplinary research
agenda into urban ethics and offers insights into the various ways
urban ethics can be configured. It explores practices and
discourses through which individuals, collectives and institutions
determine which developments and projects may be favourable for
dwellers and visitors traversing cities. Urban Ethics as Research
Agenda widens the lens to include other actors apart from powerful
individuals or institutions, paying special attention to activists
or civil society organizations that express concerns about
collective life. The chapters provide fresh perspectives addressing
the various scales that converge in the urban. The uniqueness of
each city is, thus, enriched with global patterns of the urban.
Local sociocultural characteristics coexist with global flows of
ideas, goods and people. The focus on urban ethics sheds light on
emerging spaces of human development and the ways in which ethical
narratives are used to mobilize and contest them in terms of the
good life. This timely book analyses urban ethical negotiations
from social and cultural studies, particularly drawing on
anthropology, geography and history. This volume will be of
interest to scholars, researchers and practitioners interested in
ethics and urban studies.
This volume examines dynamic interactions between the calculative
and speculative practices of commerce and the fruitfulness,
variability, materiality, liveliness and risks of nature. It does
so in diverse environments caught up in new trading relationships
forged on and through frontiers for agriculture, forestry, mining
and fishing. Historical resource frontiers are understood in terms
of commercial knowledge systems organized as projects to transform
landscapes and environments. The book asks: how were environments
traded, and with what environmental and landscape consequences? How
have environments been engineered, standardized and transformed
within past trading systems? What have been the successes and
failures of economic knowledge in dealing with resource production
in complex environments? It considers cases from northern Europe,
North and South America, Central Africa and New Zealand in the
period between 1750 and 1990, and the contributors reflect on the
effects of transnational commodity chains, competing economic
knowledge systems, environmental ignorance and learning, and
resource exploitation. In each case they identify tensions, blind
spots, and environmental learning that plagued commercial projects
on frontiers.
The American Reaper adopts a network approach to account for the
international diffusion of harvesting technology from North
America, from the invention of the reaper through to the formation
of a dominant transnational corporation, International Harvester.
Much previous historical research into industrial networks focuses
on industrial districts within metropolitan centres, but by
focusing on harvesting - a typically rural technology - this book
is able to analyse the spread of technological knowledge through a
series of local networks and across national boundaries. In doing
so it argues that the industry developed through a relatively
stable stage from the 1850s into the 1890s, during which time many
firms shared knowledge within and outside the US through patent
licensing, to spread the diffusion of the American style of
machines to establishments located around the industrial world.
This positive cooperation was further enhanced through sales
networks that appear to be early expressions of managerial firms.
The book also reinterprets the rise of giant corporations,
especially International Harvester Corporation (IHC), arguing that
mass production was achieved in Chicago in the 1880s, where
unprecedented urban growth made possible a break with the
constraints felt elsewhere in the dispersed production system. It
unleashed an unchecked competitive market economy with destructive
tendencies throughout the transnational 'American reaper' networks;
a previously stable and expanding production system. This is
significant because the rise of corporate capital in this industry
is usually explained as an outworking of national natural
advantage, as an ingenious harnessing of science and technology to
solve production problems, and as a rational solution to the
problems associated with the worst forms of unregulated competition
that emerged as independent firms developed from small-scale,
artisanal production to large-scale manufacturers, on their own and
within the separate and isolated US economy. The first study
dedicated to the development and diffusion of American harvesting
machine technology, this book will appeal to scholars from a
diverse range of fields, including economic history, business
history, the history of knowledge transfer, historical geography
and economic geography.
The American Reaper adopts a network approach to account for the
international diffusion of harvesting technology from North
America, from the invention of the reaper through to the formation
of a dominant transnational corporation, International Harvester.
Much previous historical research into industrial networks focuses
on industrial districts within metropolitan centres, but by
focusing on harvesting - a typically rural technology - this book
is able to analyse the spread of technological knowledge through a
series of local networks and across national boundaries. In doing
so it argues that the industry developed through a relatively
stable stage from the 1850s into the 1890s, during which time many
firms shared knowledge within and outside the US through patent
licensing, to spread the diffusion of the American style of
machines to establishments located around the industrial world.
This positive cooperation was further enhanced through sales
networks that appear to be early expressions of managerial firms.
The book also reinterprets the rise of giant corporations,
especially International Harvester Corporation (IHC), arguing that
mass production was achieved in Chicago in the 1880s, where
unprecedented urban growth made possible a break with the
constraints felt elsewhere in the dispersed production system. It
unleashed an unchecked competitive market economy with destructive
tendencies throughout the transnational 'American reaper' networks;
a previously stable and expanding production system. This is
significant because the rise of corporate capital in this industry
is usually explained as an outworking of national natural
advantage, as an ingenious harnessing of science and technology to
solve production problems, and as a rational solution to the
problems associated with the worst forms of unregulated competition
that emerged as independent firms developed from small-scale,
artisanal production to large-scale manufacturers, on their own and
within the separate and isolated US economy. The first study
dedicated to the development and diffusion of American harvesting
machine technology, this book will appeal to scholars from a
diverse range of fields, including economic history, business
history, the history of knowledge transfer, historical geography
and economic geography.
This volume examines dynamic interactions between the calculative
and speculative practices of commerce and the fruitfulness,
variability, materiality, liveliness and risks of nature. It does
so in diverse environments caught up in new trading relationships
forged on and through frontiers for agriculture, forestry, mining
and fishing. Historical resource frontiers are understood in terms
of commercial knowledge systems organized as projects to transform
landscapes and environments. The book asks: how were environments
traded, and with what environmental and landscape consequences? How
have environments been engineered, standardized and transformed
within past trading systems? What have been the successes and
failures of economic knowledge in dealing with resource production
in complex environments? It considers cases from northern Europe,
North and South America, Central Africa and New Zealand in the
period between 1750 and 1990, and the contributors reflect on the
effects of transnational commodity chains, competing economic
knowledge systems, environmental ignorance and learning, and
resource exploitation. In each case they identify tensions, blind
spots, and environmental learning that plagued commercial projects
on frontiers.
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