What is it about?

Quantification and statistics have long served as instruments of governance and state power. However, in recent decades new systems of measurement and rankings have emerged that operate both beyond and below the nation-state. Using contemporary examples, we explore how international measurements, rankings, risk management and audit are creating new forms of global governmentality. We ask, who – or what – is driving the spread of audit technologies and why have indicators and rankings become a populist project? How should we theorise the rise of measuring, ranking and auditing and their political effects? What are the impacts of these ever-more pervasive systems on organisational behaviour and professional life? Key words audit culture, audit effects, global rankings, indicators, governance

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Why is it important?

The increasingly reliance on quantitative measures of performance and productivity has potentially very dangerous implications

Perspectives

This is the introduction to a 'special issue' of Social Anthropology on the theme of quantification and its effects

Cris Shore
University of Auckland

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This page is a summary of: Governing by numbers: audit culture, rankings and the new world order, Social Anthropology, February 2015, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/1469-8676.12098.
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