Academic literature on the topic 'Structures weberite'

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Journal articles on the topic "Structures weberite"

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Cai, Lu, and Juan C. Nino. "Complex ceramic structures. I. Weberites." Acta Crystallographica Section B Structural Science 65, no. 3 (May 19, 2009): 269–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s0108768109011355.

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The weberite structure (A 2 B 2 X 7) is an anion-deficient fluorite-related superstructure. Compared with fluorites, the reduction in the number of anions leads to a decrease in the coordination number of the B cations (VI coordination) with respect to the A cations (VIII coordination), thus allowing the accommodation of diverse cations. As a result, weberite compounds have a broad range of chemical and physical properties and great technological potential. This article summarizes the structural features of weberite and describes the structure in several different ways. This is the first time that the stacking vector and stacking angle are used to represent the weberite structure. This paper also discusses the crystallographic relationship between weberite, fluorite and pyrochlore (another fluorite-related structure). The cation sublattices of weberite and pyrochlore are correlated by an axial transformation. It has been shown that the different coordination environment of anions is due to the alternating layering of the AB 3 and A 3 B close-packed cation layers. A stability field of weberite oxides is proposed in terms of the ratio of ionic radius of cations and relative bond ionicity. In addition, a selection of weberite compounds with interesting properties is discussed.
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Kummer, S., W. Massa, and D. Babel. "Zur Struktur der Kupfer-Weberite Na2CuCrF7 und Na2CuFeF7 / Concerning the Structures of the Copper Weberites Na2CuCrF7 and Na2CuFeF7." Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B 43, no. 6 (June 1, 1988): 694–701. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/znb-1988-0610.

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AbstractThe crystal structure of the compound Na-CuCrF7 (orthorhombic, a = 710.0, b = 1033.8, c = 751.8 pm, Z = 4) was refined in space group Pmnb to Rg= 0.028 (1545 independent reflections). The Jahn-Teller distortion of the CuF6 -octahedra (Cu-F = 191.1/193.8/212.4 pm. mean 199.1 pm) reduces the symmetry compared to the body-centered orthorhombic weberite type, to which it is otherwise closely related. The CrF6 -octahedra. interconnecting parallel chains of CuF6 -octahedra, are nearly undistorted (mean Cr-F = 190.6 pm). Na2CuFeF7 exhibits a supercell with a different structure (monoclinic, a = 2468.7, b = 734.7, c = 1245.2 pm, β = 99.29°, Z = 16). It may be interpreted as a new intermediate type between orthorhombic and trigonal weberites. Preliminary results obtained from refinement in space group A2/n (Rg = 0.076) are given and discussed (mean values Cu-F = 199 pm, Fe - F = 192 pm).
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Reading, J., C. S. Knee, and M. T. Weller. "Syntheses, structures and properties of some osmates(iv,v) adopting the pyrochlore and weberite structures." Journal of Materials Chemistry 12, no. 8 (June 14, 2002): 2376–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/b201410f.

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Subramanian, M. A., W. J. Marshall, R. D. Hoffmann, and A. W. Sleight. "Synthesis and Structure of Some MII/MIII Mixed Fluorides with Pyrochlore and Weberite Related Structures." Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B 61, no. 7 (July 1, 2006): 808–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/znb-2006-0706.

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New NH4MIIMIIIF6 and MIIMIIIF5 ・ 2H2O compounds with the pyrochlore and weberite structures, respectively, are reported. Structures of NH4CoCrF6, AlZnF5 ・ 2H2O, and GaMnF5 ・ 2H2O were refined using X-ray diffraction data from single crystals. The structures of MgIIAlIIIF5 ・H2O and NH4MgIIAlIIIF6 were refined from powder X-ray diffraction data. Magnetic susceptibility data indicates antiferromagnetic ordering in NH4CoIIVIIIF6 at 7 K but no ordering in NH4CoIICrIIIF6 down to 4.2 K. Electrical conductivity presumably due to protons was observed in MgAlF5 ・ (H2O)2.
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WELSCH, M., and D. BABEL. "ChemInform Abstract: Crystal Structures of Na2CoFeF7 and a Second Modification of Na2CuFeF7: Another Weberite Variant." ChemInform 23, no. 32 (August 21, 2010): no. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chin.199232008.

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Grey, Ian E. "Kagomé networks of octahedrally coordinated metal atoms in minerals: Relating different mineral structures through octahedral tilting." Mineralogical Magazine 84, no. 5 (September 17, 2020): 640–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1180/mgm.2020.72.

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AbstractKagomé nets of corner-connected triangles of atoms occur in diverse minerals, from the {111} anion arrays in perovskite-group minerals to natural metallic alloys like auricupride, AuCu3, to the cation layers in atacamite-group minerals. We review here two- and three-dimensional kagomé networks in minerals where the kagomé node atoms are octahedrally coordinated in hexagonal tungsten bronze (HTB) arrays. Octahedral tilting, coupled with capping of the apical anions of the triangular groupings of octahedra in the HTB layers, gives rise to several important mineral groups, including pyrochlores, alunite-supergroup minerals, zirconolite and weberite polytypes and spinel-group minerals, as a function of the magnitude and type of the octahedral tilting.
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Welsch, Matthias, and Dietrich Babel. "Die Kristallstrukturen von Na2CoFeF7 und einer zweiten Modifikation von Na2CuFeF7: Eine weitere Weberit-Variante / The Crystal Structures of Na2CoFeF7 and a Second Modification of Na2CuFeF7: Another Weberite Variant." Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B 47, no. 5 (May 1, 1992): 685–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/znb-1992-0513.

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The monoclinic weberites Na2CoFeF7 (a = 1262.2(10), b = 736.0(4), c = 2451.6(20) pm, β = 99.71(5)°) and a second modification of Na2CuFeF7 (a = 1244.4(2), b = 734.3(1), c = 2467.2(5) pm, β = 99.27(3)°), crystallize isotypically in space group C 2/c, Ζ = 16. The structure is an intermediate type between orthorhombic and trigonal weberites, characterized by pairs ofparallel chains of octahedra [MF4F2/2]3- (M = Co, Cu) which run in turn along [110] and [110]. The average distances are Fe-F = 192 pm in the [FeF63- octahedra of both compounds. Considerable splitting of distances occurs in the [CoF6- octahedra (av. Co-F = 201 pm), and by Jahn-Teller distortion even more in those of [CuFJ4- (av. Cu-F = 199 pm). One of the copper surroundings is (pseudo)tetragonally elongated (av. 209/194 pm), the other exhibits an unusual splitting into three long and three short bonds (av. 204/193 pm) in meridional positions. Some structural relations are discussed.
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Clark, L., M. Albino, V. Pimenta, J. Lhoste, I. da Silva, C. Payen, J. M. Grenèche, V. Maisonneuve, P. Lightfoot, and M. Leblanc. "Strong magnetic exchange and frustrated ferrimagnetic order in a weberite-type inorganic–organic hybrid fluoride." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 377, no. 2149 (May 27, 2019): 20180224. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2018.0224.

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We combine powder neutron diffraction, magnetometry and 57 Fe Mössbauer spectrometry to determine the nuclear and magnetic structures of a strongly interacting weberite-type inorganic–organic hybrid fluoride, Fe 2 F 5 (H taz ). In this structure, Fe 2+ and Fe 3+ cations form magnetically frustrated hexagonal tungsten bronze layers of corner-sharing octahedra. Our powder neutron diffraction data reveal that, unlike its purely inorganic fluoride weberite counterparts which adopt a centrosymmetric Imma structure, the room-temperature nuclear structure of Fe 2 F 5 (H taz ) is best described by a non-centrosymmetric Ima 2 model with refined lattice parameters a = 9.1467(2) Å, b = 9.4641(2) Å and c = 7.4829(2) Å. Magnetic susceptibility and magnetization measurements reveal that strong antiferromagnetic exchange interactions prevail in Fe 2 F 5 (H taz ) leading to a magnetic ordering transition at T N = 93 K. Analysis of low-temperature powder neutron diffraction data indicates that below T N , the Fe 2+ sublattice is ferromagnetic, with a moment of 4.1(1) µ B per Fe 2+ at 2 K, but that an antiferromagnetic component of 0.6(3) µ B cants the main ferromagnetic component of Fe 3+ , which aligns antiferromagnetically to the Fe 2+ sublattice. The zero-field and in-field Mössbauer spectra give clear evidence of an excess of high-spin Fe 3+ species within the structure and a non-collinear magnetic structure. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Mineralomimesis: natural and synthetic frameworks in science and technology’.
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Laligant, Y., G. Ferey, G. Heger, and J. Pannetier. "Ordered Magnetic Frustration. XI. Refinement of the Crystal and Frustrated Magnetic Structures of the Direct Weberite Na2NiCrF7 by Neutron Powder Diffraction." Zeitschrift f�r anorganische und allgemeine Chemie 553, no. 10 (October 1987): 163–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/zaac.19875531019.

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Laligant, Y., M. Leblanc, J. Pannetier, and G. Ferey. "Ordered magnetic frustration. IV. The two magnetic structures of the inverse weberite Fe2F5(H2O)2: an example of the thermal evolution of the frustration character." Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics 19, no. 8 (March 20, 1986): 1081–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0022-3719/19/8/007.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Structures weberite"

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Ruchaud, Nathalie. "Nouveaux matériaux fluorés à chaînes magnétiques : etudes physicochimiques de composés fluorés de palladium(II) de cuivre(II) et d'argent(I)." Phd thesis, Université Sciences et Technologies - Bordeaux I, 1991. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00163900.

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De nouveaux composés fluorés à chaines magnétiques appartenant aux types weberite et pyrochlore ont été isolés. Les corrélations entre propriétés structurales et magnétiques ont été étudiées. Plusieurs familles a base de palladium(II) ont été caractérisées. Des structures cristallines ont été déterminées (soit sur monocristal, soit sur des échantillons polycristallins par la méthode de Rietveld). Divers types structuraux ont été identifies (types CsPd2F5, LiSbF6 ou dérivant de Na2CuF4): le palladium y est localisé en site octaédrique ou plan carré mais peut posséder simultanément ces deux coordinences. Des structures magnétiques ont été établies par diffraction de neutrons. Dans un certain nombre de ces matériaux des transitions de phases ont été mises en évidence par micro-ATD et analyse radiocristallographique. Leur caractérisation magnétique a été réalisée. Des phases inédites à base de cuivre et d'éléments lanthanidiques apparentées au type KBrF4 ont été synthétisées. La luminescence de l'argent monovalent a été étudiée dans des composés fluorés de la structure elpasolite ou dérivée. Les propriétés ont été analysées en fonction de la coordinence de Ag+.
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White, Jack A. "Marxian and Weberian theory as explanations of the effects of industrialization on town development: A case study; Denison, Texas." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2002. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc3108/.

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While a great deal of historical literature has concentrated on the effects of industrialization on town development, most of the accounts relate to the introduction of industrialization into an established town. This study attempts to analyze, in sociological terms, the effects of industrialization (in this case, the emergence of the railroad) on the social structure of Denison, Texas which was created by industrialization. It is an attempt to combine Marxian and Weberian theory to produce a multi-dimensional theory that can explain town development without the usual economic bias as evident in most contemporary theory. This study proceeds on the assumption that the social order of a newly formed community is not based solely on economic factors. While economic considerations were important for the town of the study, social stability of the town was maintained by other “non-economic” elements. The purpose of the study is to construct a composite theory that can be utilized to analyze town development. The thrust is not the creation of new theory, rather it attempts to combine existing “classical” theories to present a balanced and, to an extent, “objective” explanation of community development. Adding the social aspects of Weber's theory to Marx's theory results in a theory that limits the economic bias associated with pure Marxian theory.
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Books on the topic "Structures weberite"

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A Weberian theory of human society: Structure and evolution. New Brunswick, N.J: Rutgers University Press, 1994.

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Bettin Lattes, Gianfranco, and Paolo Turi, eds. La sociologia di Luciano Cavalli. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-8453-644-0.

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The Faculty of Political Science of Florence – the oldest school of political and social science in Italy, founded in 1875 by Carlo Alfieri and named after his father Cesare – has a tradition of study that is widely recognised, even abroad, to which the cultural project of this series is related. The first book is dedicated to the research activity carried out by Luciano Cavalli and the profound traces that it has left on Italian and European sociology. Now Professor Emeritus, Luciano Cavalli taught and worked at the "Cesare Alfieri" for many years from 1966 on. Around his commitment as a "pioneer" of sociology in Italy he mustered an array of sociologists, active in different universities, many of whom have opened up new frontiers within the discipline and have successfully cultivated a dialogue with the other social sciences, as the contents of the book clearly illustrate. This extensive collection of essays offers a clear image of the fertile sociological work that burgeoned around the scientific commitment of Luciano Cavalli and was often generated by his own action of cultural stimulus. The three sections into which the book is divided – Portrait of an intellectual, The sociology of political phenomena and Sociological theory and social change – address issues of great relevance to the contemporary sociological debate. The rapport between the democratic construction of the modern State and the role and functions of the leadership, the relations between citizens and leaders, the various forms of the democratic institutional structures and the transformations of political culture are interwoven with the Neo-Weberian interpretation of the charisma theory that Cavalli masterfully proposed. Also particularly significant and topical are the critical reflections made by writers whose scientific itinerary has run parallel to that of Cavalli for decisive stretches, and who were and are bound to his teaching when they tackle arguments such as the changes in urban life, immigration and the problems of economic, political and social development in our times.
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Ritzinger, Justin R. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190491161.003.0001.

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The introduction presents the anomaly at the heart of the study: namely, that the “reform faction” of modern Chinese Buddhism, which is generally portrayed as demythologized, promoted devotion to the bodhisattva Maitreya and rebirth in his heavenly pure land. It frames this anomaly in the context of scholarship on modern Buddhism and Chinese religions and lays out a “pull” model of religious modernization derived from the thought of Charles Taylor as a counterbalance to the prevailing “push” models derived from Weberian and postmodernist models. It also introduces the four key aspects of the earlier Maitreyan tradition and offers a discussion of the sources, structure, and significance of the work.
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Wacquant, Loïc. Four Transversal Principles for Putting Bourdieu to Work. Edited by Thomas Medvetz and Jeffrey J. Sallaz. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199357192.013.30.

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Chapter abstract This chapter spotlights four transversal principles that undergird and animate Bourdieu’s research practice, and can fruitfully guide inquiry on any empirical front: the Bachelardian imperative of epistemological rupture and vigilance; the Weberian command to effect the triple historicization of the agent (habitus), the world (social space, of which field is but a subtype), and the categories of the analyst (epistemic reflexivity); the Leibnizian-Durkheimian invitation to deploy the topological mode of reasoning to track the mutual correspondences between symbolic space, social space, and physical space; and the Cassirer moment urging us to recognize the constitutive efficacy of symbolic structures. The chapter also flags three traps that Bourdieusian explorers of the social world should exercise special care to avoid: the fetishization of concepts, the seductions of “speaking Bourdieuse” while failing to carry out the research operations Bourdieu’s notions stipulate, and the forced imposition of his theoretical framework en bloc.
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Eatwell, Roger. Charisma and the Radical Right. Edited by Jens Rydgren. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190274559.013.13.

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Although the concept of “charismatic” leaders is commonplace in political discourse, many academics hold that the notion is vague and these leaders’ alleged appeal to voters untestable. This chapter sets out a conceptualization of such leaders, focusing on radical mission, personal presence, symbiotic hierarchy, and Manichean demonization. It then considers four broad theories about why charismatic leaders have notable effects (and why the radical right gathers support): socioeconomic change and crisis, political opportunity structures, cultural legitimation, and psychological affinities. While it is important not to overstate the powers of most leaders, the chapter concludes by arguing that we need to appreciate the role of “coterie” charisma over an inner core, helping to keep parties together. Moreover, charismatic leaders exert a centripetal appeal, particularly to authoritarians and/or those least interested in politics, creating a more differentiated following than the affective bond stressed in the classic Weberian model.
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Book chapters on the topic "Structures weberite"

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Touko, Piiparinen. "Part VII Structure and Operations, Ch.39 Secretariats." In The Oxford Handbook of International Organizations. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780199672202.003.0039.

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This chapter analyzes the traditional, ‘Weberian’ bureaucratic powers of the international secretariats of international organizations (IOs). It argues that globalization is opening up new, post-Weberian power bases for secretariats and IOs at large which were not envisaged in Weber's time. These new power bases include emerging global networks of cooperation between secretariats and other actors involved in global governance, which further reinforce the bureaucratic powers of secretariats by enabling them to exchange expertise and specialized information, best practices, and lessons learned in a flexible and swift manner. The chapter draws upon an in-depth case study of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Secretariat to illustrate the way in which secretariats exert the aforementioned Weberian and post-Weberian powers in practice.
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Ahmed, Humayun, Adalsteinn Brown, and Mike Saks. "Patterns of medical oversight and regulation in Canada." In Professional Health Regulation in the Public Interest, 135–60. Policy Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447332268.003.0008.

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Physicians in Canada are entrusted with one of the highest degrees of self-regulatory privilege of medical professionals, associated in neo-Weberian terms with exclusionary social closure in a competitive marketplace. To protect the public, though, such power must be accompanied by structures which successfully ensure that standards of professional quality are well defined and rigorously implemented. Yet little is known about the performance of presently implemented regulatory structures in medicine in Canada in terms of quality definition and assurance. Drawing on original research, this chapter provides an overview of the standards and regulatory goals and the various formal mechanisms for implementing these in Canada. As such, it will outline how provincial and territorial medical colleges explicitly and implicitly understand, describe, and put into practice their own standards of performance. Appropriate alignment of the colleges with quality assurance in this respect is considered vital in terms of the wider public good.
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Mathew, Leemamol, and H. S. Ashok. "Women in Religious Leadership." In Handbook of Research on New Dimensions of Gender Mainstreaming and Women Empowerment, 346–63. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-2819-8.ch019.

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The chapter proposes a framework to understand women religious leaders. This operates on two axes: The first axis is that of power where the extremes are 1) Weberian idea of power as authority and 2) power as radical source. While power as authority views it individualistically reinforces patriarchy, power as radical source views it systemically and aims to reverse the power relations in the society. The second axis used in this chapter is that of societal change. In the societal change axis, the extremes are prophetic leaders and institutionalist leaders. While institutionalist leaders focus on reform of the religious structures, prophetic leaders act as the conscience keepers against any injustice in religion. These two axes give us four types of religious women leaders: traditional prophetic (TP), traditional institutional (TI), radical prophetic (RP), and radical institutional (RI). Mother Teresa, Matha Amruthandamaye, Marie Dentiere, and Jamida Beevi are few women leaders of religion the authors explore in this chapter to explain this framework.
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Mathew, Leemamol, and H. S. Ashok. "Women in Religious Leadership." In Research Anthology on Challenges for Women in Leadership Roles, 209–26. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-8592-4.ch012.

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The chapter proposes a framework to understand women religious leaders. This operates on two axes: The first axis is that of power where the extremes are 1) Weberian idea of power as authority and 2) power as radical source. While power as authority views it individualistically reinforces patriarchy, power as radical source views it systemically and aims to reverse the power relations in the society. The second axis used in this chapter is that of societal change. In the societal change axis, the extremes are prophetic leaders and institutionalist leaders. While institutionalist leaders focus on reform of the religious structures, prophetic leaders act as the conscience keepers against any injustice in religion. These two axes give us four types of religious women leaders: traditional prophetic (TP), traditional institutional (TI), radical prophetic (RP), and radical institutional (RI). Mother Teresa, Matha Amruthandamaye, Marie Dentiere, and Jamida Beevi are few women leaders of religion the authors explore in this chapter to explain this framework.
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Rothstein, Bo. "Getting to Sweden II." In Controlling Corruption, 69–83. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192894908.003.0004.

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Issues about corruption and other forms of bad government have become central in the social sciences. An unresolved question is how countries can solve the issue of transformation from systemic corruption to the quality of government. Based on Elinor Ostrom’s theory of common pool resource appropriation, a new theoretical model for explaining this type of institutional change is developed. Sweden during the nineteenth century is used as an illustration by showing how the country made a transition from being largely patrimonial, nepotistic, and corrupt to a modern, Weberian, efficient, and impartial state structure. In addition to the “national trauma” of losing a major war, this chapter stresses the importance of three additional factors in Sweden: previous changes in courts and the legal system; recognition of the problem by the main contemporary political actors; and the new liberal ideology that made an important impact on the Swedish political scene.
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Aliverti, Ana. "Introduction." In Policing the Borders Within, 1–18. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198868828.003.0001.

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The Introduction presents the main arguments advanced in the book, details the methodology used, and describes the structure followed. As an institutional ethnography of inland migration policing, the book examines the growing emphasis on borders in policing, and describes the range of challenges, dilemmas, and contradictions that the task of maintaining order and exercising state power in an interconnected and polarized world animate. State power, as wielded by the officers I observed, defies the Weberian rational paradigm of bureaucracy and unsettles conventional models, built on rigid rules and constrained discretion, since to a large extent it relies on non-rational, magic-like elements to solve policing problems in an increasingly complex world. The random, confusing, and informal nature of power in this domain also pervades questions of access and negotiations to research its institutions, and ultimately shaped the fate of this study. In attending to and making sense of these border paradoxes, I rely on an eclectic theoretical scaffold drawing from a wide range of sociological and anthropological accounts of the police and the state in diverse settings, including the bourgeoning policing literature on postcolonial societies in the global South, and place emphasis on the global and historical continuities and connections in the police’s institutional practices and cultural norms.
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