miranda_lubbers

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Professor at UAB Barcelona studying #socialcohesion, #exclusion, and #polarization from a #networkscience perspective. Director COALESCE lab (coalesce-lab.com); #ERC Advanced Grant holder (PATCHWORK); #ICREA Acadèmia fellow. Opinions are my own. #sociology #anthropology #socialnetworks. mirandalubbers.com
My new paper in the European Sociological Review:
"The role of social networks in institutional trust during economic downturns": https://doi.org/10.1093/esr/jcaf011 Exposure to distress via our networks is quite relevant for whether we trust institutions. Hope you like it!

Extreme inequality between rich and poor is a feature of capitalism, an inevitable and desired result. Another feature is contemptible disregard for those less fortunate.

As the world continues heating up, millions or even billions of disadvantaged humans in the Global South will suffer the consequences of rampant consumerism and capitalist greed in the Global North.

This is all deliberate. It's not an accident.

That's how capitalism works: shift the damage of our lifestyles far away so we don't have to see it or think about it.

#History #Science #Environment #Climate #ClimateChange #ClimateJustice #Capitalism

At Coalesce Lab at UAB we look for a post-doc in the ERC-funded project on network-scientific approach to social cohesion. Spread the word, share, apply! https://euraxess.ec.europa.eu/jobs/319601 @sna @sociology
Post-doctoral researcher (2025DILIFRUA24)

Job position

EURAXESS
Fun looking paper: The Homo Economicus as a Prototype of a Psychopath?
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10551-024-05638-7
The Homo Economicus as a Prototype of a Psychopath? A Conceptual Analysis and Implications for Business Research and Teaching - Journal of Business Ethics

Since the beginning of business research and teaching, the basic assumptions of the discipline have been intensely debated. One of these basic assumptions concerns the behavioral aspects of human beings, which are traditionally represented in the construct of homo economicus. These assumptions have been increasingly challenged in light of findings from social, ethnological, psychological, and ethical research. Some publications from an integrative perspective have suggested that homo economicus embodies to a high degree dark character traits, particularly related to the construct of psychopathy, representing individuals who are extremely self-centered and ruthless, without feelings of remorse or compassion. While a growing body of research notes such a similarity on a more or less anecdotal basis, this article aims to explore this connection from a more rigorous perspective, bridging insights from psychological, economic, and business research to better understand the potentially dark traits of homo economicus. The analysis shows that homo economicus is not simply some kind of psychopath, but specifically a so-called subclinical or Factor 1 psychopath, who is also referred to as a “corporate psychopath” in business research. With such an analysis, the paper adds an additional perspective and a deeper psychological level of understanding as to why homo economicus is often controversially debated. Based on these insights, several implications for academic research and teaching are discussed and reflected upon in light of an ethics of virtue and care.

SpringerLink

Interesting study by Schuster et al. suggesting that cycling in urban areas has a positive effect on the common good (i.e. political participation, social participation in organizations, neighbourhood solidarity, and neighbourly helpfulness)

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0272494423001731?dgcid=author

#PublicSpace #EnvironmentalPsychology
@sociology @politicalscience @geography

Excited to be mentoring another group of talented students in the 2024 Summer Incubator Program at MPIDR.

The focus of our team will be on "Network and Gender Dynamics on Mobility and Migration".

More info and Apply link below & please repost!

https://www.demogr.mpg.de/en/career_6122/jobs_fellowships_1910/population_and_social_data_science_summer_incubator_program_12710

MPIDR - Population and Social Data Science Summer Incubator Program

Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
Hear, hear! If you work on Network Scale-Up Method theory, practice or applications, or Aggregate Relational Data in general, consider submitting to the special issue of Social Networks journal we edit together with @miranda_lubbers and Beate Volker! Abstract submission by February 1, 2024. More info at https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/social-networks/about/call-for-papers#the-network-scale-up-method-and-aggregate-relational-data-in-social-network-research @sociology @sna @academicchatter Please share with potentially interested parties!

Fewer words are sweeter than "your manuscript has been accepted." My theory of social trauma - integrating collective and cultural #trauma processes and grounding them in the neurophysiology of social pain - will soon see the light of day in #Society and #mentalhealth #sociology

@[email protected]
@sociology

I managed to see the magic! Using my private account on #OpenAI w/ a Plus subscription & #GPT4 model, I used page 46 of the #EthicaComplementoria & the prompt: "The image I provide is of a 1674 print of the Ethica Complementoria. It's in early new high German. The font is a Fraktur. Please take your time and transcribe the first 10 lines of text. Here is the image:"
Devastating story from the Washington Post:
In the early 1980s, people in the poorest communities were 9% more likely to die each year, but the gap grew to 49% in the past decade and widened to 61% when covid struck. And yes, opioids and violence are real, but the data show it's chronic disease that's wrecking Americans in middle age. Huge disparities, but even wealthier people get subpar care.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/interactive/2023/american-life-expectancy-dropping/ #healthcare #inequality #healthdisparities