Bernadette Loacker
Lancaster University
27 Papers
71 Citations
Bernadette Loacker is an academic researcher from Lancaster University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Subjectification & Business ethics. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 25 publications. Previous affiliations of Bernadette Loacker include Lund University & University of Innsbruck.
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Papers
How Can I Become a Responsible Subject? Towards a Practice-Based Ethics of Responsiveness
TL;DR: In this article, the concept of a practice-based "ethics of responsiveness" in which ethics is never final but rather always "to come" is investigated, in which the ethical self is understood as being continuously constituted within power/knowledge relations.
93
A quarter of a century of job transitions in Germany
Ralph Kattenbach,Thomas M. Schneidhofer,Janine Lücke,Markus Latzke,Bernadette Loacker,Florian Schramm,Wolfgang Mayrhofer +6 more
TL;DR: Results indicate a slight negative trend in the frequency of job transitions during the analyzed time span, owing to a pronounced decrease in intra-organizational transitions, which is only partly offset by a comparatively weaker positive trend towards increased inter-organ organizational transitions.
58
Becoming ‘culturpreneur’: How the ‘neoliberal regime of truth’ affects and redefines artistic subject positions
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore how the art field and its actors are discursively repositioned within "flexible cultural capitalism" and show that the artists' modes of conduct are, at least to some extent, precarious.
53
Consumption of work and the work of consumption
Ekaterina Chertkovskaya,rashné limki,Bernadette Loacker +2 more
- 01 Aug 2016
TL;DR: In this paper, a special issue of ephemera gets to the heart of this phenomenon, focusing on the ethico-politics of productive and consumptive aspects of contemporary life.
26
Conceptions of process in organization and management : the case of identity studies
Jörgen Sandberg,Bernadette Loacker,Mats Alvesson +2 more
- 01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: In this paper, the issues of how novelty comes about and what dynamic processes are involved in its emergence are brought to bear on novelty and innovation, by examining new organizational and product development processes, whether planned or unplanned.
21