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  1. Is there demand for formality among informal firms?
    evidence from microfirms in downtown Lima
  2. Is there demand for formality among informal firms? Evidence from microfirms in downtown Lima
    Published: 2008

    Abstract: "Experimental data from microfirms in downtown Lima is exploited to analyse the demand for formality, i.e., obtaining an operating license. The results are paradoxical: most firms report greater disadvantages than advantages of being... more

     

    Abstract: "Experimental data from microfirms in downtown Lima is exploited to analyse the demand for formality, i.e., obtaining an operating license. The results are paradoxical: most firms report greater disadvantages than advantages of being informal, yet when encouraged to obtain the license, only one out of four firms takes up the incentive. Thus, for some firms formalisation may not be desirable at any cost. This is likely to be associated with the recurrent costs of being formal, the low perceived value of the benefits of formalisation, and the limited growth perspectives of these firms." (author's abstract)

     

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  3. Der Essay als Form der Darstellung sozialwissenschaftlicher Erkenntnisse
    Author: Bude, Heinz
    Published: 1989

    Abstract: Refering to the long tradition of essayistic writing in sociology, beginning with Georg Simmel over Albert Salomon, Alfred Schütz, Kurt H. Wolff and Theodor W. Adorno up to Erving Goffman, the essay is conceived as a classical form of... more

     

    Abstract: Refering to the long tradition of essayistic writing in sociology, beginning with Georg Simmel over Albert Salomon, Alfred Schütz, Kurt H. Wolff and Theodor W. Adorno up to Erving Goffman, the essay is conceived as a classical form of presenting sociologcal ideas. The formal principles of this sociological art form are reconstructed: the steps of the essayistic sequence, the rhetoric figures used, the type of phrases essays are typically using. Discussing the theoretical implications of these formal principles it is stated that the essay is not only a form of presenting sociological ideas but also a form of finding sociological ideas. Essayistic theorizing turns out to be a specific type of sociological thinking. Taking the example of Karl Weik's Social Psychology of Organizing it is shown how the essayistic "account" works

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: German
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    oai:gesis.izsoz.de:document/4086
    DDC Categories: 301
    Subjects: Essayist; Erkenntnis
    Other subjects: Adorno, Theodor W. (1903-1969); Musil, Robert (1880-1942); Bude, Heinz (1954-); Bütow, Hans (1900-1991); (thesoz)Transfer; (thesoz)Wissenschaft; (thesoz)Essay; (thesoz)Erkenntnis; (thesoz)Rhetorik; (thesoz)Sozialwissenschaft; (thesoz)Soziologie; (thesoz)Formalisierung
    Scope: Online-Ressource
    Notes:

    Veröffentlichungsversion

    begutachtet

    In: Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie ; 41 (1989) 3 ; 526-539

  4. The form of game formalism
    Published: 2018

    Abstract: This article explores how the concept of formalism and the resulting method of formal analysis have been used and applied in the study of digital games. Three types of formalism in game studies are identified based on a review of their uses... more

     

    Abstract: This article explores how the concept of formalism and the resulting method of formal analysis have been used and applied in the study of digital games. Three types of formalism in game studies are identified based on a review of their uses in the literature, particularly the discussion of essentialism and form that resulted from the narratology-ludology debate: 1) formalism focused on the aesthetic form of the game artifact, 2) formalism as game essentialism, and 3) formalism as a level of abstraction, related to formal language and ontology-like reasoning. These three are discussed in relation to the distinctions between form and matter, in the Aristotelian tradition, to highlight how the method of formal analysis of games appears to be dealing with matter rather than form, on a specific fundamental level of abstraction, and in turn how formal analysis becomes a misleading concept that leads to unnecessary confusion. Finally, the relationship between game essentialism and the mor

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    oai:gesis.izsoz.de:document/57817
    DDC Categories: 070
    Other subjects: (thesoz)Digitalisierung; (thesoz)Spiel; (thesoz)Computerspiel; (thesoz)Formalisierung; (thesoz)Ästhetik; (thesoz)Russland; (thesoz)Forschung; (thesoz)Methode; (thesoz)Ideologie; (thesoz)Ontologie; Essentialismus
    Scope: Online-Ressource
    Notes:

    Veröffentlichungsversion

    begutachtet (peer reviewed)

    In: Media and Communication ; 6 (2018) 2 ; 137-144