For its first issue of December
2020, the JHoK published a special issue on the history of bureaucracies.
Special Issue
Bureaucracy as Knowledge
Sebastian Felten, Christine von Oertzen
Chosŏn’s Office of Interpreters:
The Apt Response and the Knowledge Culture of Diplomacy
Sixiang Wang
Making Public Knowledge—Making
Knowledge Public: The Territorial, Reparative, Heretical, and Canonization
Inquiries of Gui Foucois (ca. 1200–1268)
John Sabapathy
In Pursuit of “Useful” Knowledge:
Documenting Technical Innovation in Sixteenth-Century Potosí
Renée Raphael
Caveat from the Archive: Pieter
van Dam’s Beschryvinge van de Oostindische Compagnie and Crisis Management
The Bureaucratic Sense of the
Forthcoming in Seventeenth-Century Istanbul
Harun Küçük
Sustainable Gains: Dutch
Investment and Bureaucratic Rationality in Eighteenth-Century Saxon Mines
Sebastian Felten
A Crisis of Competence:
Information, Corruption, and Knowledge about the Decline of the Qing State
Maura Dykstra
The Indaganda Survey of the
Prussian Frontier: The Built World, Logistical Power, and Bureaucratic
Knowledge in the Polish Partitions, 1772–1806
Kathryn M. Olesko
Shells and Order: Questionnaires
on Indigenous Law in German New Guinea
Anna Echterhölter
Revenge of the Humdrum:
Bureaucracy as Profession and as a Site of Science
Theodore Porter
More info here
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