Results for 'Prisons Information Group'

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  1.  45
    Active Intolerance: Michel Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the Future of Abolition.Perry Zurn & Andrew Dilts (eds.) - 2016 - New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
    Formed in the wake of May 1968, the Prisons Information Group (GIP) was a radical resistance movement active in France in the early 1970's. Theorist Michel Foucault was heavily involved. This book collects interdisciplinary essays that explore the GIP's resources both for Foucault studies and for prison activism today.
  2.  27
    Publicity and Politics: Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the Press.Perry Zurn - 2014 - Radical Philosophy Review 17 (2):403-420.
    This essay argues that publicity is a necessary precondition for both politics and philosophy. Against the backdrop of the traditional dismissal of publicity as a leveling of difference, the author develops Foucault’s positive use of publicity in the Prisons Information Group as a technique of differentiation. The essay therefore proceeds in four parts: 1) it contextualizes the Prisons Information Group within Foucault’s life and work, 2) it identifies four specific modes of publicity utilized by (...)
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  3.  15
    Work and Failure: Assessing the Prisons Information Group.Perry Zurn - 2016 - In Perry Zurn & Andrew Dilts (eds.), Active Intolerance: Michel Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the Future of Abolition. pp. 75-91.
    This chapter develops criteria of work and failure implicit within the Prisons Information Group (GIP). Reading the group’s documents in conjunction with the thought of Michel Foucault, the chapter asks: How did the GIP characterize work or attribute failure and how did Foucault understand both in this period? By analyzing these discursive practices together, the essay first identifies five criteria of failure: discursive, structural, systemic, deconstructive, and productive failure. Second, it tests the GIP against each criterion, (...)
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  4.  25
    Intolerable: Writings from Michel Foucault and the Prisons Information Group, 1970-1980.Perry Zurn & Kevin Thompson (eds.) - 2021 - Minneapolis, MN, USA: University of Minnesota Press.
    A groundbreaking collection of writings by Michel Foucault and the Prisons Information Group documenting their efforts to expose France’s inhumane treatment of prisoners. Founded by Michel Foucault and others in 1970–71, the Prisons Information Group (GIP) circulated information about the inhumane conditions within the French prison system. Intolerable makes available for the first time in English a fully annotated compilation of materials produced by the GIP during its brief but influential existence, including an (...)
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  5.  7
    Michel Foucault and the Prisons Information Group, "Intolerable: Writings from Michel Foucault and the Prisons Information Group (1970-1980).". [REVIEW]Marta Bashovski - 2023 - Philosophy in Review 43 (4):7-9.
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  6.  4
    “Let those who have an experience of prison speak”: The Critique & Praxis of the Prisons Information Group (1970-1980).Bernard E. Harcourt - 2021 - Foucault Studies 31.
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  7.  14
    Active Intolerance, Michel Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the Future of Abolition.Simone Webb - 2019 - Foucault Studies 26:124-127.
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  8.  7
    Kevin Thompson and Perry Zurn (eds.): Intolerable: Writings from Michel Foucault and the Prisons Information Group [1970–1980]. [REVIEW]Martin Bernales-Odino - 2022 - Continental Philosophy Review 56 (1):171-175.
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  9.  16
    Active Intolerance: Michel Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the Future of Abolition ed. by Andrew Dilts, Perry Zurn. [REVIEW]Paul D. G. Showler - 2016 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 6 (1):129-132.
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  10.  63
    The Groupe d’information sur les prisons: The voice of prisoners? Or Foucault’s?Cecile Brich - 2008 - Foucault Studies 5:26-47.
  11.  47
    Correction: ‘Is this knowledge mine and nobody else’s? I don’t feel that.’ Patient views about consent, confidentiality and information-sharing in genetic medicine.Bmj Publishing Group Ltd And Institute Of Medical Ethics - 2018 - Journal of Medical Ethics 44 (2):137-137.
    Dheensa S, Fenwick A, Lucassen A.‘Is this knowledge mine ….
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  12. Toward an Account of Intolerance: Between Prison Resistance and Engaged Scholarship.Perry Zurn - 2017 - The Carceral Notebooks 12:97-128.
    The word “intolerance” bears almost exclusively negative connotations. It is treated invariably, almost ideologically as a vice. What would it mean to reconceive of intolerance as a virtue—or, at the very least, a positive affect? In this essay, I analyze two complementary archives of positive intolerance: the records of the Prisons Information Group (the GIP) and the writings of one of its members: Michel Foucault. For the GIP, intolerance—as a militant refusal of intolerable material and political conditions—is (...)
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  13.  11
    Civil Rights: Prisoners' Right to Treatment Information under Pabon v. Wright.Daniel P. Wilansky - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (4):831-832.
    In Pabon v. Wright, the Second Circuit held that the Fourteenth Amendment right to refuse medical treatment contained a corollary right to the information necessary to make an informed decision. Plaintiff, William Pabon, was an inmate at Green Haven Correctional Facility in New York. He named two groups of defendants: his doctors and nurses at Green Haven and his doctors at Dutchess Gastroenterologists, P.C..In October 1996, a laboratory test indicated that Plaintiff may have contracted Hepatitis C. The Green Haven (...)
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  14.  74
    Genome Editing Technologies and Human Germline Genetic Modification: The Hinxton Group Consensus Statement.Sarah Chan, Peter J. Donovan, Thomas Douglas, Christopher Gyngell, John Harris, Robin Lovell-Badge, Debra J. H. Mathews, Alan Regenberg & On Behalf of the Hinxton Group - 2015 - American Journal of Bioethics 15 (12):42-47.
    The prospect of using genome technologies to modify the human germline has raised profound moral disagreement but also emphasizes the need for wide-ranging discussion and a well-informed policy response. The Hinxton Group brought together scientists, ethicists, policymakers, and journal editors for an international, interdisciplinary meeting on this subject. This consensus statement formulated by the group calls for support of genome editing research and the development of a scientific roadmap for safety and efficacy; recognizes the ethical challenges involved in (...)
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  15.  37
    Translucency, assortation, and information pooling: How groups solve social dilemmas.Kai Spiekermann - 2007 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 6 (3):285-306.
    In one-shot public goods dilemmas, defection is the strictly dominant strategy. However, agents with cooperative strategies can do well if (1) agents are `translucent' (that is, if agents can fallibly recognize the strategy other agents play ex ante ) and (2) an institutional structure allows `assortation' such that cooperative agents can increase the likelihood of playing with their own kind. The model developed in this article shows that even weak levels of translucency suffice if cooperators are able to pool their (...)
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  16.  27
    Artières, P., Laurent Q., Michelle Z. , eds. Le Groupe d'information sur les prisons: Archives d'une lutte, 1970-1972 . Paris: 2004. Kagan, E. & Jaubert A. . Michel Foucault, une journée particulière . Lyon: 2004. [REVIEW]Cecile Brich - 2005 - Foucault Studies 2:165-168.
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  17.  19
    Curiosities at War: The Police and Prison Resistance after May '68.Perry Zurn - 2018 - Modern and Contemporary France 2 (26):179-191.
    It's too easy to say of Mai '68 that the police are incurious while protesters are curious, that administrators are incurious and students are curious. A more honest assessment of these moments, striated as they are with social tensions, would identify at least two modes of inquiry and two sets of questions vying for dominance: the one located on the side of the status quo, the other on the side of change. In what follows, I provide historico-theoretical resources to justify (...)
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  18.  60
    The Politics of Anonymity: Foucault, Feminism, and Gender Non-conforming Prisoners.Perry Zurn - 2016 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 6 (1):27-42.
    Against the backdrop of a longstanding feminist critique that Michel Foucault’s call to anonymity is insensitive to the erasure of marginalized persons, I aim to contribute to a critical account of anonymity as a feminist Foucauldian ideal. I do this in two ways. First, I analyze the tactical role of anonymity in the Prisons Information Group, an organization in which Foucault was involved. Second, I analyze the unique paradoxes of anonymity faced by gender non-conforming prisoners then and (...)
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  19.  13
    Active Intolerance--An Introduction.Perry Zurn & Andrew Dilts - 2016 - In Perry Zurn & Andrew Dilts (eds.), Active Intolerance: Michel Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the Future of Abolition. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1-19.
    Quite shortly after the Prisons Information Group (GIP) was formed, Michel Foucault delivered a public announcement in which he called for a generalized practice of “active intolerance” against a wide range of disciplinary institutions. Due to three consistent scholarly reductions of the GIP’s legacy, the sense of “active intolerance” remains nebulous at best. Cast, by turns, as merely the offshoot of Foucauldian theory, a point of prison data collection, or a short-lived social movement (forgetting its lengthy successor: (...)
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  20.  12
    Recent Developments in Health Law: Civil Rights: Prisoners’ Right to Treatment Information under Pabon v. Wright.Daniel P. Wilansky - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (4):831-832.
    In Pabon v. Wright, the Second Circuit held that the Fourteenth Amendment right to refuse medical treatment contained a corollary right to the information necessary to make an informed decision. Plaintiff, William Pabon, was an inmate at Green Haven Correctional Facility in New York. He named two groups of defendants: his doctors and nurses at Green Haven and his doctors at Dutchess Gastroenterologists, P.C..In October 1996, a laboratory test indicated that Plaintiff may have contracted Hepatitis C. The Green Haven (...)
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  21.  10
    Recent Developments in Health Law: Civil Rights: Prisoners’ Right to Treatment Information under Pabon v. Wright.Daniel P. Wilansky - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (4):831-832.
    In Pabon v. Wright, the Second Circuit held that the Fourteenth Amendment right to refuse medical treatment contained a corollary right to the information necessary to make an informed decision. Plaintiff, William Pabon, was an inmate at Green Haven Correctional Facility in New York. He named two groups of defendants: his doctors and nurses at Green Haven and his doctors at Dutchess Gastroenterologists, P.C..In October 1996, a laboratory test indicated that Plaintiff may have contracted Hepatitis C. The Green Haven (...)
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  22.  12
    Hope Is the Blood of It: On the GIP, Paris 8, and the Urgency of Writing.Perry Zurn - 2021 - In Perry Zurn & Kevin Thompson (eds.), Intolerable: Writings from Michel Foucault and the Prisons Information Group, 1970-1980. Minneapolis, MN, USA: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 391-406.
    This interview with Hélène Cixous took place in her apartment in Paris on March 14, 2019. The interview was conducted in English and subsequently revised for publication. The discussion focuses on Cixous' involvement in the Prisons Information Group in the early 1970's, but it extends to her writing life and activism both before and since.
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  23.  35
    Research involving prisoners: Consensus and controversies in international and european regulations.Bernice S. Elger - 2008 - Bioethics 22 (4):224–238.
    This article examines international and European regulations on research involving prisoners for consensus, differences, and their consequences, and offers a critical evaluation of the various approaches. Agreement exists that prisoners are at risk of coercion, which might interfere with their ability to provide voluntary informed consent to research. Controversy exists about the magnitude of this risk and the consequences that should follow from this risk. Two strategies are proposed for a method of protecting prisoners that does not lead to discrimination: (...)
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  24. Escaping the propositional prison.Peter Dlugos & James H. Fetzer pwh2a - 1997 - The Monist 80 (3):368-388.
    Welcome to the Monist Interactive Issue group on “Representation in Electronic Philosophy.” As moderator of this group, I want to say a few things about what we were up to, and to give you the guidelines for participants. First, this was an experiment in doing philosophy. Some of the old rules applied, lots of them did not. The discussion was begun with a “starter paper” written by me. I deliberately kept this paper short, and did not write a (...)
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  25.  9
    Introduction: Legacies of Militancy and Theory.Perry Zurn & Kevin Thompson - 2021 - In Perry Zurn & Kevin Thompson (eds.), Intolerable: Writings from Michel Foucault and the Prisons Information Group, 1970-1980. Minneapolis, MN, USA: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 1-34.
    In this Introduction, we offer, in the first section, a brief sketch of events before turning to track the profound innovations in militancy and theory that Le Group d'information sur les prisons (The Prisons Information Group, the GIP) and its work represent. In the second section, we explore the GIP’s prisoner-centered and largely prisoner-led structure, predicated on the recognition that prisoners have the political knowledge and political agency most relevant to prison resistance movements. In (...)
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  26.  32
    Informed Consent: An Ethical Issue in Conducting Research with Male Partner Violent Offenders.Cory A. Crane, Samuel W. Hawes, Dolores Mandel & Caroline J. Easton - 2013 - Ethics and Behavior 23 (6):477-488.
    Ethical codes help guide the methods of research that involves samples gathered from ?at-risk? populations. The current article reviews general as well as specific ethical principles related to gathering informed consent from partner violent offenders mandated to outpatient treatment, a group that may be at increased risk of unintentional coercion in behavioral sciences research due to court mandates that require outpatient treatment without the ethical protections imbued upon prison populations. Recommendations are advanced to improve the process of informed consent (...)
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  27.  37
    Ethical Dilemmas in Psychological Research with Vulnerable Groups in Africa.Abeeb Olufemi Salaam & Jennifer Brown - 2013 - Ethics and Behavior 23 (3):167-178.
    The present article highlights ethical challenges and practical solutions to the problems that arise when designing and conducting the fieldwork data collection with the members of violent youth gangs, prison inmates, and arrestees held in police cells in Nigeria. Issues related to the process of seeking approval and then implementing the research, gaining access, achieving informed consent, confidentiality, the use of interpreters, and remuneration are presented through case studies. The conclusion stresses the need for researchers to be well prepared and (...)
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  28.  14
    Curiosity and Political Resistance.Perry Zurn - 2020 - In Perry Zurn & Arjun Shankar (eds.), Curiosity Studies: A New Ecology of Knowledge. Minneapolis, MN, USA: pp. 227-245.
    In this essay, the resistant potential of curiosity will be first framed by theories of political curiosity writ large (drawn from Friedrich Nietzsche, Michel Foucault, and Jacques Derrida) and then explicated through three case studies: the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960’s, prison resistance networks in the 1970’s, and a more recent initiative for accessible restrooms. From these archives, an anatomy of politically resistant curiosity will be drawn.
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  29.  90
    Toleration and informal groups: How does the formal dimension affect groups' capacity to tolerate?Federico Zuolo - 2013 - European Journal of Political Theory 12 (3):288-305.
    The ‘agents’ of toleration can be divided into three categories: public institutions, groups and individuals. If it is mostly accepted that both public institutions and individuals are capable of toleration, it is not clear that such a capacity can be attributed to groups, although in daily discourse we seem ready to say that a certain social group is (in)tolerant. This article aims to address this issue by investigating the relationship between collective agency and social groups. Formal groups (e.g. corporations) (...)
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  30.  3
    Conversation Pieces, a Survey of the Informal Group Portrait in Europe and America.June Kompass Nelson & Mario Praz - 1972 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 31 (1):138.
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  31. Group Testimony? The Making of A Collective Good Informant.Miranda Fricker - 2012 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 84 (2):249-276.
    We gain information from collective, often institutional bodies all the time—from the publications of committees, news teams, or research groups, from web sites such as Wikipedia, and so on—but do these bodies ever function as genuine group testifiers as opposed to mere group sources of information? In putting the question this way I invoke a distinction made, if briefly, by Edward Craig, which I believe to be of deep significance in thinking about the distinctiveness of the (...)
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  32.  28
    Information and Strategy in Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma.Kaushik Basu - 1977 - Theory and Decision 8 (3):293.
  33.  59
    Small Group Predictions on an Uncertain Outcome: The Effect of Nondiagnostic Information.George R. Young II, Kenneth H. Price & Cynthia Claybrook - 2001 - Theory and Decision 50 (2):149-167.
    Research has established that exposure to a combination of diagnostic (i.e., relevant) and nondiagnostic (i.e., irrelevant) information results in predictions that are more regressive than predictions based on diagnostic information (Hackenbrack, 1992; Hoffman and Patton, 1997). This phenomenon has been labeled the dilution effect (e.g., Tetlock and Boettger, 1989) and has been documented when individuals make predictions. This study tests for the dilution effect when small groups make predictions, and examines the effect of using a procedure designed to (...)
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  34.  92
    What niche did human cooperativeness evolve in?Hannes Rusch - 2013 - Ethics and Politics 15 (2):82-100.
    The Prisoner’s Dilemma (PD) is widely used to model social interaction between unrelated individuals in the study of the evolution of cooperative behaviour in humans and other species. Many effective mechanisms and promotive scenarios have been studied which allow for small founding groups of cooperative individuals to prevail even when all social interaction is characterised as a PD. Here, a brief critical discussion of the role of the PD as the most prominent tool in cooperation research is presented, followed by (...)
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  35.  35
    Sortir de la bibliothèque ? (Essai de cartographie d'un des territoires de Michel Foucault).Jean-Louis Fournel & Jean-Claude Zancarini - 2010 - Astérion 7.
    Dans maintes exégèses récentes des textes de Michel Foucault, sont sans doute négligés la place et les effets théoriques d’une étape particulière de sa pensée, celle qui croise ce que l’on peut appeler « les années 68 ». Le présent article tente d’aborder cette question en s’appuyant sur une attention à la chronologie précise et systématique des écrits et des différentes formes d’interventions de Foucault durant cette période (et durant les années qui suivent dès lors que les passages évoqués peuvent (...)
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  36.  31
    Informed consent, vulnerability and the risks of group-specific attribution.B. M. Schrems - 2014 - Nursing Ethics 21 (7):829-843.
  37. Group Dispositional Belief, Information Possession, and “Epistemic Explosion”: A Further Reply to Jesper Kallestrup.Avram Hiller & R. Wolfe Randall - 2023 - Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective 12 (5):8-16.
  38.  8
    Discipline and Punish.Alan D. Schrift - 2013 - In Christopher Falzon, Timothy O'Leary & Jana Sawicki (eds.), A Companion to Foucault. Chichester, UK: Wiley. pp. 137–153.
    Michel Foucault's Surveiller et punir: Naissance de la prison or Discipline and Punish was his first work since his election to the Chair in the History of Systems of Thought at the Collège de France. Soon after his inaugural address, he announced the formation of the organization Groupe d'Information sur les Prisons (GIP). Due to Foucault's visibility as a social activist for prison reform, Discipline and Punish was received not just as a socio‐historical or philosophical analysis but as (...)
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  39.  7
    Small Group Predictions on an Uncertain Outcome: The Effect of Nondiagnostic Information.George Young, Kenneth Price & Cynthia Claybrook - 2001 - Theory and Decision 50 (2):149-167.
    Research has established that exposure to a combination of diagnostic (i.e., relevant) and nondiagnostic (i.e., irrelevant) information results in predictions that are more regressive than predictions based on diagnostic information (Hackenbrack, 1992; Hoffman and Patton, 1997). This phenomenon has been labeled the dilution effect (e.g., Tetlock and Boettger, 1989) and has been documented when individuals make predictions. This study tests for the dilution effect when small groups make predictions, and examines the effect of using a procedure designed to (...)
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  40.  39
    Group decision and negotiation support in evolving, nonshared information contexts.Melvin F. Shakun - 1990 - Theory and Decision 28 (3):275-288.
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  41. Extensions of the prisoner's dilemma paradigm: The altruist's dilemma and group solidarity.Douglas D. Heckathorn - 1991 - Sociological Theory 9 (1):34-52.
    Many recent studies of norm emergence employ the "prisoner's dilemma" (PD) paradigm, which focuses on the free-rider problem that can block the cooperation required for the emergence of social norms. This paper proposes an expansion of the PD paradigm to include a closely related game termed the "altruist's dilemma" (AD). Whereas egoistic behavior in the PD leads to collectively irrational outcomes, the opposite is the case in the AD: altruistic behavior (e.g., following the Golden Rule) leads to collectively irrational outcomes, (...)
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  42.  59
    Towards a Lacanian Group Psychology: The Prisoner's Dilemma and the Trans‐subjective.Derek Hook - 2013 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 43 (2):115-132.
    Revisiting Lacan's discussion of the puzzle of the prisoner's dilemma provides a means of elaborating a theory of the trans-subjective. An illustration of this dilemma provides the basis for two important arguments. Firstly, that we need to grasp a logical succession of modes of subjectivity: from subjectivity to inter-subjectivity, and from inter-subjectivity to a form of trans-subjective social logic. The trans-subjective, thus conceptualized, enables forms of social objectivity that transcend the level of (inter)subjectivity, and which play a crucial role in (...)
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  43. Risk, Rationality and (Information) Resistance: De-rationalizing Elite-group Ignorance.Xin Hui Yong - 2023 - Erkenntnis:1-17.
    There has been a movement aiming to teach agents about their privilege by making the information about their privilege as costless as possible. However, some argue that in risk-sensitive frameworks, such as Lara Buchak’s (2013), it can be rational for privileged agents to shield themselves from learning about their privilege, even if the information is costless and relevant. This threatens the efficacy of these information-access efforts in alleviating the problem of elite-group ignorance. In response, I show (...)
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  44.  15
    Can information be transferred faster than light? II. The relativistic Doppler effect on electromagnetic wave packets with suboptic and superoptic group velocities.William Band - 1988 - Foundations of Physics 18 (6):625-638.
    It is shown that (a) both the dispersion relations between the mean frequency θ0 and the mean wave number k 0 are invariant under the Lorentz transformation; and (b) the relativistic Doppler effects on θ 0 and k 0 differ. In the suboptic packet there is anomalous red shift in the mean wave number k' 0 received from a source receding with speed v: k′ 0 changes sign through zero as v goes through the value vg, the mean group (...)
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  45.  8
    An information sampling explanation for the in-group heterogeneity effect.Elizaveta Konovalova & Gaël Le Mens - 2020 - Psychological Review 127 (1):47-73.
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  46. Towards a new privacy : informed consent as an encumbrance to group interests?Mark Taylor & David Townend - 2022 - In G. T. Laurie, E. S. Dove & Niamh Nic Shuibhne (eds.), Law and legacy in medical jurisprudence: essays in honour of Graeme Laurie. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  47.  12
    Can information be transferred faster than light? I. Agedanken device for generating electromagnetic wave packets with superoptic group velocity.William Band - 1988 - Foundations of Physics 18 (5):549-562.
    Agedanken electromagnetic device is described which permits the transfer of information at speeds faster than light without violating the principle of causality.
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  48.  66
    Indifference, neutrality and informativeness: generalizing the three prisoners paradox.Sergio Wechsler, L. G. Esteves, A. Simonis & C. Peixoto - 2005 - Synthese 143 (3):255-272.
    . The uniform prior distribution is often seen as a mathematical description of noninformativeness. This paper uses the well-known Three Prisoners Paradox to examine the impossibility of maintaining noninformativeness throughout hierarchization. The Paradox has been solved by Bayesian conditioning over the choice made by the Warder when asked to name a prisoner who will be shot. We generalize the paradox to situations of N prisoners, k executions and m announcements made by the Warder. We then extend the consequences of hierarchically (...)
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  49.  10
    Sevgi Soysal and Prison Days: The Conflicts and Harmony which are Caused by Individual and group Physchology in the Book Named "Yıldırım Bölge Kadınlar Koğuşu".Canan Olpak Koç - 2012 - Journal of Turkish Studies 7:807-819.
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  50.  11
    Group decisions and the amount of transmitted information in absolute identification of pitch.Ante Fulgosi, Zvonimir KnezoviĆ & Predrag Zarevski - 1984 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 22 (3):203-204.
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