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Message posted on 31/01/2025

Call for contributions Valuation Studies: Valuing Sustainability in Technoscientific Capitalism

                Dear all,

This message is to announce a new open Theme Call in Valuation Studies.

Details below and in this link:
https://valuationstudies.liu.se/valuing_sustainibility

Best regards

Jos (co-editor Valuation Studies)

---
Call for contributions

Theme Valuing Sustainability in Technoscientific Capitalism

Editors: Cornelius Heimstdt (Humboldt University of Berlin), Tanja Schneider
(Technical University of Denmark)

The concept of sustainability is ubiquitous in contemporary economies, yet
actors invoke it to describe a wide range of practices and processes-often
with divergent, sometimes contradictory, implications. An electric car
manufacturer may call his new factory sustainable, despite it being
constructed in a water conservation area. A start-up helping polluting
industries (e.g. petrochemical, meat, aviation) offset carbon emissions may do
so in the name of sustainability. Meanwhile, an organic farmer may cite
sustainability to explain the elevated price of her carrots.

Rather than trying to tame this bewildering variety of coexisting versions of
sustainability, most social scientific research in the area, if anything,
feeds into it by adopting sustainability as a normative analytical concept,
adding new versions to the already dizzying list out there. While this kind of
research is helpful in describing how specific actors might improve their
pursuit of sustainability, it provides limited guidance for navigating the
multiple and often conflicting versions of sustainability already shaping
contemporary societies, economies, and natures.

Some researchers, working (explicitly or not) in the tradition of valuation
studies, have taken a different approach and begun to explore the different
vernacular interpretations that actors have of the concept of sustainability.
These studies seek to empirically unpack the "theories of value" and "theories
of action" (Doganova, 2024) that are inscribed into vernacular versions of the
concept of sustainability, and, where necessary, criticize them-a form of
critique that operates not by debunking these theories a priori as 'false',
but through a meticulous empirical dissection of their inherent assumptions
and, hence, their politics (see Latour, 2004). An illustrative example of such
sustainability research and critique is the work of Susanne Freidberg (2013;
2014; 2023), examining the value assumptions implicit in a device developed in
the 1970s (i.e. life cycle assessment, or LCA) by which multinational
corporations attempt to calculate, and thus govern, the sustainability of
their supply chains. Another example is the research of Liliana Doganova and
Brice Laurent (2016; 2019), which explores how sustainability as a quality of
goods is built into European market infrastructures through specific
regulatory instruments (i.e. sustainability-oriented policy directives), and
how these instruments reconfigure the boundary between policy and markets. A
further example is Doganova's (2024) already cited sociological-historical
monograph on the "discounted cash flow" (DCF) formula and how the valuations
it generates today in the name of sustainability are at odds with some of the
valuations implicit in the original concept of sustainability as it emerged in
early eighteenth-century German forestry (Hlzl, 2010).

Drawing a tentative bottom line, we can learn at least two important things
from these studies. First-analogous to Fabian Muniesa's (2017) astute
observation that a critique of finance can be more effectively formulated
without analytically relying on the "political vernaculars" (e.g., "value
creation", "true value", "financial crisis") that emanate from the "limited"
world of "financial imagination" (Ortiz, 2014)-it might be more effective to
try to formulate a critique of sustainability that dispenses with the concept
of sustainability as an analytical term. Second-more of a methodological hunch
than an irrefutable learning-it should be possible to make more generalized
statements about the specific version of "the good economy" (Asdal et al.,
2023) that unfolds around the concept of sustainability in economic activity,
based on a collection of situated analyses of vernacular interpretations,
formalizations, and performances of this concept by actors "on the ground"
(Latour, 2018). It is empirical analyses of this kind that we aim to bring
together in this special issue.

Therefore, with this call we invite papers that empirically examine valuation
practices related to sustainability within or at the margins of past, present,
and future economic activity. Possible guiding questions that we would like to
offer interested authors as orientation include, but are not limited to:


  1.  How is the concept of sustainability interpreted by actors seeking to
value it? Do the actors' interpretation of sustainability remain the same over
time or do they change? If so, what are the drivers of this change? What
tensions emerge or get resolved through changes in valuation? And how, if at
all, does the valuation of sustainability give rise to what might be referred
to-inspired by Langley's (2007) concept of "financial subjectivities"-as
"sustainable subjectivities"?
  2.  What "valuation devices" (Doganova, 2020)-i.e., instruments, tools,
methods, technologies-do actors who seek to value sustainability in economic
activity rely on? How do these devices shape actors' valuation practices and
vice versa? What are the "political qualities" (Doganova, 2024) of these
devices and how do they matter (i.e., what objects and practices do they help
to generate)?
  3.  How do the valuations of sustainability carried out by the actors under
study "perform"-whether in the Austinian (1962), Goffmanian (1956), or yet
another sense-not only the value of isolated subjects or objects, but more
generally how do they perform (successfully or not) a version of "the good
economy" (Asdal et al., (2023) that revolves around sustainability? In short,
how do they perform what might be called a "sustainability economy"?

Expressions of interest shall be submitted in the form of an extended abstract
(about 1.000 words) by email to the editors by March 31, 2025. Selected
authors will then be invited to submit full papers for peer review by October
1, 2024. Please address queries and expressions of interest to Cornelius
Heimstdt
cornelius.heimstaedt@hu-berlin.de
and Tanja Schneider tansch@dtu.dk.

Important dates


  *   March 31, 2025:
Extended abstracts due
  *   April 15, 2025:
Notification of authors
  *   October 1, 2025:
Full papers due (for peer review)


-----------------------
Jos Ossandn
Associate Professor, Organization of Markets
Department of Organization
Copenhagen Business School
jo.ioa@cbs.dk
https://www.cbs.dk/en/research/departments-and-centres/department-of-organiza
tion/staff/joioa

Co-editor Valuation Studies
Associate editor Journal of Cultural Economy
Blog Estudios de la Economa

Some recent publications:
Muniesa, F. & Ossandn, J. 2023 Theme Issue "Valuation as a semiotic,
narrative, and dramaturgical problem: re-opening the toolbox of valuation
Studies", Valuation
Studies.
Ossandn et al 2022 "Financial oikonomization: the financial government and
administration of the household." Socio-Economic
Review.
Ossandn 2022. "What Does Taking the Floor Do?"
Sociologica.
Ossandn 2021."Hirschman's Exit, Voice, and Loyalty and contemporary economic
sociology." Journal of Cultural
Economy.
Ossandn 2021. "(University) Management after Valuation Studies: Carving a
practice between the offended native, the anxious scholar, and the useless
practitioner". Valuation
Studies.
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