Workshop program, 1st Interdisciplinary Market Studies Workshop (See the following pages for detailed session programs.) Thursday, June 3, 2010 Time Event 8.30-9.00 Workshop registration 9.00-9.15 Workshop introduction 9.15-10.00 Group discussions – what do we want to know about markets? (Getting to know some of the participants.) 10.00-10.30 Coffee 10.30-11.00 Feedback from group discussions 11.00-12.30 Session 1a. Representations. Papers 1-3 (30 minutes/paper). Chair: Douglas Brownlie. 12.30-13.45 Lunch 13.45-14.30 Plenary session: Bernard Cova 14.40-15.40 Session 2a. Architectures. Papers 7-8. Chair: Hans Kjellberg. 15.40-16.05 Coffee 16.05-16.50 Plenary session: Steve Woolgar 17.00-18.30 Session 3a. Contestations. Papers 1113. Chair: Steve Vargo. 19.30- Workshop dinner Session 1b. Temporalities & communities. Papers 4-6 (30 minutes/paper). Chair: C-F Helgesson. Session 2b. Devices. Papers 9-10. Chair: Robert Spencer. Session 3b. Consumption & use. Papers 14-16. Chair: Lisa Penaloza. Friday, June 4, 2010 Time Event 8.30-10.00 Session 4a. Possibilities & realities. Papers 17-19. Chair: Susi Geiger. Session 4b. Monitoring & auditing. Papers 20-22. Chair: Ebba Sjögren. 10.00-10.30 Coffee 10.30-12.30 Session 5a. Ideas & ideals. Papers 2326. Chair: John Finch. 12.30-13.45 Lunch 13.45-14.30 Plenary session: Barbara Czarniawska 14.30-15.45 Coffee & Group discussions – Future directions in the study of markets? 15.45-16.30 Concluding roundtable Session 5b. Valuation. Papers 27-30. Chair: Debbie Harrison. Session program Thursday, June 3, 2010 11.00-12.30 1a. Representations. Chair: Douglas Brownlie 1. Laure Seguy. How public policies feed the market: a case study of the translation of the PNNS’ ”nutritional balance” concept in the French market. Discussant: Johan Hagberg. 2. Lisa Penaloza & Alladi Venkatesh. The Market as a Sign System and the Creation of Sign Value. Discussant: Katy Mason. 3. Johan Hagberg. Cheapest, largest, best. Representation disputes in the Swedish Market Court. Discussant: Lisa Penaloza. 1b. Temporalities & communities. Chair: C-F Helgesson 4. Pascale Trompette. Political devices behind the formation of the market: The case of the funeral market in France. Discussant: Carole Botton. 5. Aliakbar Jafari. A Historical View of the (Re)Formation of Markets in the Context of Islamic Captialism (7th-13th Centuries). Discussant: Pascale Trompette. 6. Carole Botton. Auction sales for racehorses: market, community and practices. Discussant: Aliakbar Jafari. 14.40-15.40 2a. Architectures. Chair: Hans Kjellberg 7. Jesper Meijling. The market – A configurational problem? Discussion around a porto franco constitution and its plan. Discussant: Dan Neyland. 8. Dan Neyland. Market inversions: selling security, securing sales. Discussant: Douglas Brownlie. 2b. Devices. Chair: Robert Spencer 9. Per Andersson, Jan Markendahl, Lars-Gunnar Mattsson. The Mobile Phone as a Market Shaping Device. Discussant: John Finch. 10. Susi Geiger and John Finch. Why Market(er)s Can’t Handle Hot Objects. Discussant: Per Andersson. 17.00-18.30 3a. Contestations. Chair: Steve Vargo 11. Satu Reijonen and Kjell Tryggestad. Contested and compatible environments: on the possibility of a green market. Discussant: Erik Stam. 12. Erik Stam and Gerard de Vries. Carbon Markets: Serving the public interest by disciplining organizations? Discussant: Ebba Sjögren. 13. Liv Fries, C-F Helgesson and Ebba Sjögren. Non-coherencies in the ordering of markets. Discussant: Satu Reijonen. 3b. Consumption & use. Chair: Lisa Penaloza 14. Alexandre Mallard. Developing uses, qualifying goods: on the construction of market exchange for internet access services. Discussant: Gerard de Vries. 15. Lionel Sitz. Kitchen stories: Practices, contexts and consumptionwork. Discussant: Alexandre Mallard. 16. Debbie Harrison and Hans Kjellberg. How users shape and use markets. Discussant: Lionel Sitz. Friday, June 4, 2010 8.30-10.00 4a. Possibilities & realities. Chair: Susi Geiger 17. Sara Lindeman. Market Shaping in Urban Slums: Introducing the Concept of Aspiring Markets. Discussant: Céline Cholez. 18. Steve Vargo & Robert Lusch. Toward a Science of the Market: Orientations and Directions. Discussant: Lars-Gunnar Mattsson. 19. Céline Cholez, Pascale Trompette, Dominique Vinck and Thomas Reverdy. BOP markets: a change of paradigm. Discussant: Steve Vargo. 4b. Monitoring & auditing. Chair: Ebba Sjögren 20. Kimberly Chong. ’The Market’, Time and Billable Hours: An Ethnographic perspective on Audit Culture in Post-Mao China. Discussant: Kevin Mellet. 21. Jean-Samuel Beuscart and Kevin Mellet. Competing Quality Conventions in the French Online Display Advertising Market. Discussant: Stefan Schwarzkopf. 22. Stefan Schwarzkopf: Of ’Christall Mirrors’ and ’Barometers’: Audience Measurement Systems and the Historical-Ontological Trajectories of the Market for Attention. Discussant: Suvi Nenonen. 10.30-12.30 5a. Ideas and ideals. Chair: John Finch 23. Glenn Morgan. Constructing Financial Markets: reforming Over-theCounter derivatives markets in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Discussant: Mats Bladh. 24. Mats Bladh. Implementing marginal cost pricing. Discussant: Philip Roscoe. 25. Damien Cahill. Did the new right make neoliberal markets? Discussant: Glenn Morgan. 26. Philip Roscoe. On the possibility of organ markets and the performativity of economics. Discussant: Damien Cahill. 5b. Valuation. Chair: Debbie Harrison 27. Véra Ehrenstein. Making Climate change mitigation operational: Valuation in a project-based carbon market. Discussant: Luis Araujo. 28. Lotta Björklund Larsen. Helping hands in modern markets. Constructing the ’good deal’ when purchasing informal work in Sweden. Discussant: Annmarie Ryan. 29. Winfred Ikiring Onyas, Annmarie Ryan, Morven McEachern. Market shaping and valuation in the Ugandan Coffee Value Chain. Discussant: Kaj Storbacka. 30. Frank Azimont and Luis Araujo. Re-classifying and Re-valuing Goods: a case-study. Discussant: Kajsa Lindberg.