6 found
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Scott Mainwaring [4]Scott D. Mainwaring [2]S. Mainwaring [1]
  1.  33
    Social Payments: Innovation, Trust, Bitcoin, and the Sharing Economy.Taylor C. Nelms, Bill Maurer, Lana Swartz & Scott Mainwaring - 2018 - Theory, Culture and Society 35 (3):13-33.
    The payments industry – the business of transferring value through public and corporate infrastructures – is undergoing rapid transformation. New business models and regulatory environments disrupt more traditional fee-based strategies, and new entrants seek to displace legacy players by leveraging new mobile platforms and new sources of data. In this increasingly diversified industry landscape, start-ups and established players are attempting to embed payment in ‘social’ experience through novel technologies of accounting for trust. This imagination of the social, however, is being (...)
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  2.  7
    Connectionism: There's something to it.Stephen M. Kosslyn, Scott D. Mainwaring & Thomas A. Corcoran - 1985 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8 (2):297-298.
  3. Class Voting: Latin America and Western Europe.Scott Mainwaring & Mariano Torcal - forthcoming - Manuscrito.[Links].
  4.  34
    Distinguishing the linguistic from the sublinguistic and the objective from the configurational.Scott D. Mainwaring - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (2):248-249.
  5.  50
    New Social Movements, Political Culture, and Democracy: Brazil and Argentina in the 1980s.Scott Mainwaring & Eduardo Viola - 1984 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1984 (61):17-52.
    One of the most important phenomena in contemporary South America has been the tendency towards more democratic systems. After protracted periods of authoritarian rule, Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, and Bolivia appear to be heading in a more democratic direction. This process has awakened political hopes and attracted intellectual reflection, especially regarding Brazil and Argentina, the largest and most influential nations of South America. Both countries are in different moments, with different timings, in transitions which could lead to the establishment of stable (...)
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  6.  25
    New Social Movements, Political Culture, and Democracy: Brazil and Argentina in the 1980s.S. Mainwaring & E. Viola - 1984 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1984 (61):17-52.