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Cabdrivers and Their Fares: Temporal Structures of a Linking Ecology

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Serafin,  Marcin
Assoziierte Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftler, MPI for the Study of Societies, Max Planck Society;
Institute of Philosophy and Sociology (IFiS PAN), Polish Academy of Sciences, Warschau, Poland;

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Citation

Serafin, M. (2019). Cabdrivers and Their Fares: Temporal Structures of a Linking Ecology. Sociological Theory, 37(2), 117-141. doi:10.1177/0735275119850868.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0004-0544-A
Abstract
The author argues that behind the apparent randomness of interactions between cabdrivers and their fares in Warsaw is a temporal structure. To capture this temporal structure, the author introduces the notion of a linking ecology. He argues that the Warsaw taxi market is a linking ecology, which is structured by religious time, state time, and family time. The author then focuses on waiting time, arguing that it too structures the interactions between cabdrivers and their fares. The author makes a processual argument that waiting time has been restructured by the postsocialist transformation, but only because this transformation has been continually encoded through the defensive and adaptive strategies of cabdrivers responding to the repetitive and unique events located across the social space. The author concludes with the claim that linking ecologies are a recurring structure of the social process and that they form the backbone of globalization, financialization, and mediatization.