Author:
Espeland Wendy Nelson,Stevens Mitchell L.
Abstract
AbstractOne of the most notable political developments of the last thirty years has been increasing public and governmental demand for the quantification of social phenomena, yet sociologists generally have paid little attention to the spread of quantification or the significance of new regimes of measurement. Our article addresses this oversight by analyzing quantification – the production and communication of numbers – as a general sociological phenomenon. Drawing on scholarship across the social sciences in Europe and North America as well as humanistic inquiry, we articulate five sociological dimensions of quantification and call for an ethics of numbers.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
631 articles.
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