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ID130913
Title ProperWhat do numbers do in transnational governance?
LanguageENG
AuthorHansen, Hans Krause ;  Porter, Tony
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This study examines how numbers in transnational governance constitute actors, objects, and relationships, including relationships of power. We review the existing literatures on numbers for insights relevant to their role in transnational governance, including the ontology of numbers, the history of numbers and their role in governance. On this basis, we set out the main distinctive ways that numbers are implicated in transnational governance. We conclude that studies of transnational governance would benefit from paying more attention to the much overlooked performative role of numbers in governance processes. Numbers have properties that differ from words, and shifts from one to the other in governance, for instance in the displacement of laws or norms with risk models or rankings based on numbers, have particular effects, including political effects on states, firms, individuals, and other actors and institutions.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Political Sociology Vol.6, No.4; December 2012: p.409-426
Journal SourceInternational Political Sociology Vol.6, No.4; December 2012: p.409-426
Key WordsTransnational Governance ;  International Politics ;  International Relations - IR ;  History ;  Governance Processes ;  Political Effects ;  Mystical Powers ;  Cross Border Mobility ;  Ontology ;  Epistemological Thought ;  Number Theory ;  Willingness