Frases de Manuel Castells
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Manuel Castells Oliván es un sociólogo, economista y profesor universitario de Sociología y de Urbanismo en la Universidad de California en Berkeley, así como director del Internet Interdisciplinary Institute en la Universidad Abierta de Cataluña y presidente del consejo académico de Next International Business School.

En los últimos veinte años ha llevado a cabo una vasta investigación en la que relaciona la evolución económica y las transformaciones políticas, sociales y culturales en el marco de una teoría integral de la información, cuyo ejemplo más claro puede ser el Proyecto Internet Catalunya que coordina. Los resultados de su trabajo se recogen en la trilogía La Era de la Información, traducida a varios idiomas.

Castells es actualmente uno de los autores de referencia en el campo del estudio de la Sociedad de la Información. Desde el 16 de febrero de 2006 es académico de la Real Academia de Ciencias Económicas y Financieras, con la medalla número 38.[1]​ Según el Social Sciences Citation Index 2000-2014, Manuel Castells es el quinto académico de las Ciencias Sociales más citado del mundo y el académico de las Tecnologías de la Información y la Comunicación más citado del mundo.[2]​

✵ 9. febrero 1942
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Frases célebres de Manuel Castells

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“Lo más im­portante de Estados Unidos es que no hay un Ministerio de Universidades. Sólo desde la libertad se puede inno­var. Y no hay innovación más impor­tante hoy día que la refundación de la institución universitaria.”

Fuente: http://hemeroteca.lavanguardia.com/preview/2015/04/18/pagina-25/95299946/pdf.html
Fuente: La Vanguardia, 18-04-2015, pág. 25.

Manuel Castells: Frases en inglés

“As for the employees, the payment in stock options revives, somewhat ironically, the old anarchist ideology of self-management of the company, as they are co-owners, co-producers, and co-managers of the firm.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 3, e-Business and the New Economy, p. 92

“At its core, the new economy is based on culture: on the culture of innovation, on the culture of risk, and the culture of expectations, and, ultimately on the culture of hope in the future.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 3, e-Business and the New Economy, p. 112

“The fundamental digital divide is no measured by the number of connections to the Internet, but by the consequences of both connection and lack of connection.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 9, The Digital Divide in a Global Perspective, p. 269

“Cultures are not made from free-floating values. They are rooted in institutions and organizations.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 2, The Culture of the Internet, p. 48

“The Internet is, above all else, a cultural creation.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 1, Lessons from the History of the Internet, p. 33

“But we are not just witnessing a relativisation of time according to social contexts or alternatively the return to time reversibility as if reality could become entirely captured in cyclical myths. The transformation is more profound: it is the mixing of tenses to create a forever universe, not self-expanding but self-maintaining, not cyclical but random, not recursive but incursive: timeless time, using technology to escape the contexts of its existence, and to appropriate selectively any value each context could offer to the ever-present. I argue that this is happening now not only because capitalism strives to free itself from all constraints, since this has been the capitalist system’s tendency all along, without being able fully to materialize it. Neither is it sufficient to refer to the cultural and social revolts against clock time, since they have characterized the history of the last century without actually reversing its domination, indeed furthering its logic by including clock time distribution of life in the social contract. Capital’s freedom from time and culture’s escape from the clock are decisively facilitated by new information technologies, and embedded in the structure of the network society.
The transformation of time as surveyed in this chapter does not concern all processes, social groupings, and territories in our societies, although it does affect the entire planet. What I call timeless time is only the emerging, dominant form of social time in the network society, as the space of flows does not negate the existence of places. It is precisely my argument that social domination is exercised through the selective inclusion and exclusion of functions and people in different temporal and spatial frames.”

Fuente: The Rise of the Network Society, 1996, p. 433–434 as quoted in: Wayne Hope (2006) Global Capitalism and the Critique of Real Time http://www.sagepub.com/dicken6/Sociology%20Online%20readings/CH%202%20-%20HOPE.pdf. Sage publications. p. 289

“The Internet Culture is the culture of the creators of the Internet.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 2, The Culture of the Internet, p. 36

“Literally everything is based on the capacity to attract, retain, and efficiently use talented workers.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 3, e-Business and the New Economy, p. 91

“Societies change through conflict and are managed by politics.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 5, Computer Networks and Civil Society, p. 137

“If valuation in the financial markets provides the bottom line for the performance of the company, it is labor that remains the source of productivity, innovation, and competitiveness.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 3, e-Business and the New Economy, p. 90

“Technological systems are socially produced. Social production is culturally informed. The Internet is no exception.”

Fuente: The Internet Galaxy - Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society (2001), Chapter 2, The Culture of the Internet, p. 36

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