Veranstaltung

Jan 23, 2018
Talk with Malte Doehne

Malte studied economics, management and sociology at the University of Witten/Herdecke and defended his dissertation in economic sociology at ZU Friedrichshafen. In his thesis, Malte developed and operationalized a relational definition of product quality that incorporates the outcomes of non-pecuniary valuation processes on markets into a formal model of market formation and reproduction. This work is the result of a longstanding engagement with the socioeconomic models of production of mathematical sociologist Harrison White. Malte was a visiting scholar at the sociology department of Columbia University and at the Network Analysis Center of Duke University, and has visited Stanford University. He has designed and taught university courses on microeconomics, the sociology of markets, and on sociological network theory.

Organisatoren
Adresse

MPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland

Raum
Raum 265
Kontakt und Registrierung

Die Brown Bag Lunch Workshops stehen allen offen. Vorkenntnisse in Digital Humanities werden keine benötigt. Externe Teilnehmende bitten wir, sich per Email anzumelden. Weitere Anfragen zu der Digital Humanities Brown Bag Lunch Reihe bitte ebenfalls per Email an die Research IT Group.

Über diese Reihe

Der Digital Humanities Brown Bag Lunch Workshop findet alle zwei Wochen statt. Die Workshops behandeln jeweils ein Thema aus den Digital Humanities, dienen dem Informationsaustausch und der Diskussion, und beinhalten regelmäßig Gastvorträge. Bitte den eigenen Laptop und natürlich das Mittagessen mitbringen.

2018-01-23T12:30:00SAVE IN I-CAL 2018-01-23 12:30:00 2018-01-23 14:00:00 Network Analytic Methods Researching Scientific Innovations Malte studied economics, management and sociology at the University of Witten/Herdecke and defended his dissertation in economic sociology at ZU Friedrichshafen. In his thesis, Malte developed and operationalized a relational definition of product quality that incorporates the outcomes of non-pecuniary valuation processes on markets into a formal model of market formation and reproduction. This work is the result of a longstanding engagement with the socioeconomic models of production of mathematical sociologist Harrison White. Malte was a visiting scholar at the sociology department of Columbia University and at the Network Analysis Center of Duke University, and has visited Stanford University. He has designed and taught university courses on microeconomics, the sociology of markets, and on sociological network theory. Florian Kräutli Florian Kräutli Europe/Berlin public