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Commensuration and styles of reasoning: Venice, cost–benefit, and the defence of place

Rita Samiolo

London School of Economics and Political Science

Accounting, Organizations and Society 2012 open access

This paper discusses some preconditions for “making things the same” by means of quantification and economic calculation. It examines a controversial cost–benefit analysis, conducted as part of the environmental appraisal of a large public sector project in Italy: the long-debated scheme for flood protection in Venice. By tracing the different “styles of calculation” that characterised the economic and environmental appraisal of the project, the paper analyses the inter-relationship between economic representations of the urban and natural environment, its political symbolism, and various attempts to intervene upon it. It follows how the objectivity of numbers is debated, stabilised or disrupted, as differing appeals to realism and accuracy are advanced in the context of different modes of intervention and practical aims. The paper shows that the “commensuration” and “standardisation” that numbers can bring about rest on how the object of calculation as well as, crucially, its subject are represented and conceived.

DOI
10.1016/j.aos.2012.04.001
Volume
37 (6)
Pages
382-402
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
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