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Contact: Sigmund Gr?nmo
sigmund.gronmo@rektor.uib.no
47-555-82002
The University of Bergen
Chairman of the Ludvig Holberg Memorial Fund, Sigmund Gronmo, announced the winners in Norway today, Mar. 13.
The Board of the Ludvig Holberg Memorial Fund has decided to award the 2013 Holberg International Memorial Prize to anthropologist and sociologist Bruno Latour. The Prize amount is NOK 4.5 million (EUR 610,000/USD 790,000). The 2013 Nils Klim Prize is awarded to Norwegian economist Ingvild Alms. The Prize amount is NOK 250,000 (EUR 34,000/USD 43,000).
Chairman of the Ludvig Holberg Memorial Fund, Sigmund Grnmo, announced the winners in Bergen, Norway, today, 13 March. The Prize winners will receive the prizes at an award ceremony in Hkonshallen in Bergen, Norway on 5 June 2013.
Questions the natural sciences' production of knowledge
French anthropologist and sociologist Bruno Latour has been described by the Holberg Prize Academic Committee as a creative, humorous and unpredictable researcher. The Academic Committee justifies the award for this year's Holberg Prize by stating that "Bruno Latour has undertaken an ambitious analysis and reinterpretation of modernity, and has challenged fundamental concepts such as the distinction between modern and pre-modern, nature and society, human and non-human. ()The impact of Latour's work is evident internationally and far beyond studies of the history of science, art history, history, philosophy, anthropology, geography, theology, literature and law." Latour is currently Professor at Sciences Po in Paris.
Laboratory life (1979), authored with Steven Woolgar, was the first of a number of pioneering publications that have set the standard for ethnographic analyses of the making of scientific facts. In We have never been modern (1991) Latour questions the absolute division between nature and society, a division that several phenomena in our age, such as e.g. biotechnology, climate change and the HIV/AIDS epidemic, make it difficult to maintain. He claims that this is a division that has never existed in an absolute form and proposes radical new ways of facing this reality.
A strong, public voice
In the 1980s Latour, together with colleagues Michel Callon and John Law, developed the "Actor Network Theory" (ANT) as a method. The basic premise is that society consists of a network of actors, where all actors influence and are influenced by the network and each other. His involvement in museum science, aesthetics and the use of digital techniques in the humanities led to spectacular museum exhibitions Iconoclash (2002) and Making Things Public (2005) which sparked debate and involvement around subjects related to knowledge and freedom of information.
Since the late 1990s Latour has been involved in the discourse on environmental challenges and climate change, which led to the book Politics of Nature (1999). Here he argues that when modernization has progressed so far that nature rebels, it is time to "ecologize" rather than "modernize". In his latest book Inquiry into Modes of Existence An Anthropology of the Modern (2012) he pursues this debate further and also launches a digital online counterpart, http://www.modesofexistence.org, where others may contribute to research.
Ingvild Alms - new methods for measuring inequality
Ingvild Alms is a Norwegian economist who in just a few years has become established as a leading international researcher. She is currently employed as associate professor at the Norwegian School of Economics in Bergen, where she researches the measuring of inequalities in income and what is perceived as justifiable differences in terms of inequalities in income. In addition to covering a wide field of research and publishing articles in leading scientific journals, she actively participates in social debate.
Alms' doctoral thesis "Essays in Economic Inequality" (2008) aroused much attention both in Norway and internationally. One of the essays was published in world-leading journal American Economics Review, which made her the first Nordic woman to publish a single-authored paper in that journal. The article demonstrated a new method for measuring international inequalities and criticised existing methods for major weaknesses that have led income levels in certain countries, for example China, to being overrated.
###
Our website presents the academic committee's statement, interviews, texts, pictures, etc., on the prize winners: http://www.holbergprisen.no/en
Press contacts:
Information about the prizes and the announcement:
Professor Sigmund Grnmo
Chair of the Ludvig Holberg Memorial Fund
Press contact in US:
Professor Michael Lynch
Cornell University
M: 1-607-266-7063
mel27@cornell.edu
[ | E-mail | Share ]
?
AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.
[ | E-mail | Share ]
Contact: Sigmund Gr?nmo
sigmund.gronmo@rektor.uib.no
47-555-82002
The University of Bergen
Chairman of the Ludvig Holberg Memorial Fund, Sigmund Gronmo, announced the winners in Norway today, Mar. 13.
The Board of the Ludvig Holberg Memorial Fund has decided to award the 2013 Holberg International Memorial Prize to anthropologist and sociologist Bruno Latour. The Prize amount is NOK 4.5 million (EUR 610,000/USD 790,000). The 2013 Nils Klim Prize is awarded to Norwegian economist Ingvild Alms. The Prize amount is NOK 250,000 (EUR 34,000/USD 43,000).
Chairman of the Ludvig Holberg Memorial Fund, Sigmund Grnmo, announced the winners in Bergen, Norway, today, 13 March. The Prize winners will receive the prizes at an award ceremony in Hkonshallen in Bergen, Norway on 5 June 2013.
Questions the natural sciences' production of knowledge
French anthropologist and sociologist Bruno Latour has been described by the Holberg Prize Academic Committee as a creative, humorous and unpredictable researcher. The Academic Committee justifies the award for this year's Holberg Prize by stating that "Bruno Latour has undertaken an ambitious analysis and reinterpretation of modernity, and has challenged fundamental concepts such as the distinction between modern and pre-modern, nature and society, human and non-human. ()The impact of Latour's work is evident internationally and far beyond studies of the history of science, art history, history, philosophy, anthropology, geography, theology, literature and law." Latour is currently Professor at Sciences Po in Paris.
Laboratory life (1979), authored with Steven Woolgar, was the first of a number of pioneering publications that have set the standard for ethnographic analyses of the making of scientific facts. In We have never been modern (1991) Latour questions the absolute division between nature and society, a division that several phenomena in our age, such as e.g. biotechnology, climate change and the HIV/AIDS epidemic, make it difficult to maintain. He claims that this is a division that has never existed in an absolute form and proposes radical new ways of facing this reality.
A strong, public voice
In the 1980s Latour, together with colleagues Michel Callon and John Law, developed the "Actor Network Theory" (ANT) as a method. The basic premise is that society consists of a network of actors, where all actors influence and are influenced by the network and each other. His involvement in museum science, aesthetics and the use of digital techniques in the humanities led to spectacular museum exhibitions Iconoclash (2002) and Making Things Public (2005) which sparked debate and involvement around subjects related to knowledge and freedom of information.
Since the late 1990s Latour has been involved in the discourse on environmental challenges and climate change, which led to the book Politics of Nature (1999). Here he argues that when modernization has progressed so far that nature rebels, it is time to "ecologize" rather than "modernize". In his latest book Inquiry into Modes of Existence An Anthropology of the Modern (2012) he pursues this debate further and also launches a digital online counterpart, http://www.modesofexistence.org, where others may contribute to research.
Ingvild Alms - new methods for measuring inequality
Ingvild Alms is a Norwegian economist who in just a few years has become established as a leading international researcher. She is currently employed as associate professor at the Norwegian School of Economics in Bergen, where she researches the measuring of inequalities in income and what is perceived as justifiable differences in terms of inequalities in income. In addition to covering a wide field of research and publishing articles in leading scientific journals, she actively participates in social debate.
Alms' doctoral thesis "Essays in Economic Inequality" (2008) aroused much attention both in Norway and internationally. One of the essays was published in world-leading journal American Economics Review, which made her the first Nordic woman to publish a single-authored paper in that journal. The article demonstrated a new method for measuring international inequalities and criticised existing methods for major weaknesses that have led income levels in certain countries, for example China, to being overrated.
###
Our website presents the academic committee's statement, interviews, texts, pictures, etc., on the prize winners: http://www.holbergprisen.no/en
Press contacts:
Information about the prizes and the announcement:
Professor Sigmund Grnmo
Chair of the Ludvig Holberg Memorial Fund
Press contact in US:
Professor Michael Lynch
Cornell University
M: 1-607-266-7063
mel27@cornell.edu
[ | E-mail | Share ]
?
AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.
Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/tuob-blw031313.php
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