Publications

Journal Articles

Nachtwey, O., & Seidl, T. (2024). The Solutionist Ethic and the Spirit of Digital Capitalism. Theory, Culture & Society, 41(2), 91–112. Article | Working Paper | Online Appendix & Replication Materials

Seidl, T., & Schmitz, L. (2023). Moving on to not fall behind? Technological sovereignty and the ‘geo-dirigiste’ turn in EU industrial policy. Journal of European Public Policy, 1-29. https://doi.org/10.1080/13501763.2023.2248204. Article | Online Appendix| Replication Materials

Seidl, T. (2023). Commodification and Disruption: Theorizing Digital Capitalism. Weizenbaum Journal of the Digital Society, 3(1), 1–35. https://doi.org/10.34669/wi.wjds/3.1.2. Article

Obendiek, A. S., & Seidl, T. (2023). The (False) promise of solutionism: Ideational business power and the construction of epistemic authority in digital security governance. Journal of European Public Policy, 1–25. https://doi.org/10.1080/13501763.2023.2172060. Article | Online Appendix

Schmitz, L., & Seidl, T. (2023). As Open as Possible, as Autonomous as Necessary: Understanding the Rise of Open Strategic Autonomy in EU Trade Policy. JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, 61(3), 834–852. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcms.13428. Article | Online Appendix

Seidl, T. (2023). Investing in the knowledge economy: The comparative political economy of public investments in knowledge‐based capital. European Journal of Political Research, 62(3), 924–944. https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12546. Article | Replication Materials

Seidl, T. (2022). The politics of platform capitalism: A case study on the regulation of Uber in New York. Regulation & Governance, 16(2), 357–374. https://doi.org/10.1111/rego.12353. Article | Working Paper | Replication Materials

Marenco, M., & Seidl, T. (2021). The discursive construction of digitalization: A comparative analysis of national discourses on the digital future of work. European Political Science Review, 13(3), 391–409. https://doi.org/10.1017/S175577392100014X. Article | Working Paper | Replication Materials

Laurer, M., & Seidl, T. (2020). Regulating the European Data-Driven Economy: A Case Study on the General Data Protection Regulation. Policy & Internet, 13(2), 257–277. https://doi.org/10.1002/poi3.246. Article | Working Paper | Replication Materials.

Roos, U., & Seidl, T. (2015). Im »Südwesten« nichts Neues? Eine Analyse der deutschen Namibiapolitik als Beitrag zur Rekonstruktion der außenpolitischen Identität des deutschen Nationalstaates. Zeitschrift Für Friedens- Und Konfliktforschung, 4(2), 182–225. https://doi.org/10.5771/2192-1741-2015-2-182. Article

Special Issues

Falkner, G., Heidebrecht, S., Obendiek, A., & Seidl, T. (2023). Digital Sovereignty—Rhetoric and Reality. Journal of European Public Policy. Forthcoming.

Work in Progress

Seidl, T. (2023). Review Essay: Charting the Contours of the Geo-Tech World. Revise and Resubmit at Geopolitics.

Seidl, T. (2023). Polanyi and List Meet in Brussels. Digital Sovereignty and EU Digital Policymaking. Unpublished Manuscript.

Bremer, B., Bürgisser, R., Bulfone, F., & Seidl, T. (2023). Are people willing to pay for the twin transitions? Media discourse and citizen attitudes towards green and digital industrial policies. Unpublished Manuscript.

Bulfone, F., Di Carlo, D., & Seidl, T. (2023). EU Industrial Policy and National Growth Models. Unpublished Manuscript.

Schmitz, L., & Seidl, T. (2023). The Politics of Constraints EU Industrial Policy under Limited State Capacity. Unpublished Manuscript.

Book Chapters

Nachtwey, O., Truffer, J., & Seidl, T. (2023). Der solutionistische Geist des digitalen Kapitalismus. In T. Carstensen, S. Schaupp, & S. Sevignani (Eds.), Theorien des digitalen Kapitalismus. Arbeit, Ökonomie, Politik und Subjekt (pp. 458–475). Suhrkamp.

Nachtwey, O., & Seidl, T. (2020). Ideologie und der Geist des digitalen Kapitalismus. In W. Nienhüser & W. Matiaske (Eds.), Ökonomie und Ideologie (pp. 235–265). Metropolis. Chapter

Seidl, T. (2017). Kompatibilität statt Reduktion: Zur Idee einer Interdisziplinären Anthropologie als soziologischem Selbst- und Fremdver(un)sicherungsraum. In G. Wagner (Ed.), Die Provokation der Reduktion: Beiträge zur Wissenschaftstheorie der Soziologie (pp. 201–232). Harrassowitz.

Laurer, M., & Seidl, T. (2017). Eine Stabilitäts- und Wettbewerbsunion der Regierungen: Zur Rekonstruktion grundlegender Handlungsregeln deutscher Eurokrisenpolitik. In U. Roos (Ed.), Deutsche Außenpolitik: Arenen, Diskurse und grundlegende Handlungsregeln (pp. 13–47). Springer VS. Chapter

Other Academic Publications

Schmitz, L., & Seidl, T. (2022). Protecting, Transforming, and Projecting the Single Market. Open Strategic Autonomy and Digital Sovereignty in the EU’s Trade and Digital Policies. SocArXiv. Working Paper

Seidl, T. (2021). Commodification and Disruption: Theorizing Digital Capitalism. EIF Working Paper. Working Paper

Seidl, T. (2021). Ideas, Politics, and Technological Change: Essays on the Comparative Political Economy of Digital Capitalism [Dissertation, European University Institute]. Thesis.

Nachtwey, O., & Seidl, T. (2017). Die Ethik der Solution und der Geist des digitalen Kapitalismus. Institute for Social Research Working Paper (#11). Working Paper

Laurer, M., & Seidl, T. (2014). Das doppelte Ziel der deutschen Eurokrisenpolitik. Welttrends, 22(99), 120–126. Article

Book Reviews

Seidl, T. (2022). Lehdonvirta, Vili (2022). Cloud Empires: How digital platforms are overtaking the state and how we can regain control. MA, USA: The MIT Press. Regulation & Governance, 16(4), 1424–1425. Review

Seidl, T. (2020). Appadurai, Arjun & Alexander, Neta (2020). Failure. Cambridge: Polity Press. Economic Sociology: European Electronic Newsletter. Review

Newspaper Articles & Blog Posts

Marenco, M., & Seidl, T. (2021). Opportunity or threat? How discourses on digitalisation vary across European countries. LSE EUROPP Blog. Blog Post

Seidl, T. (2020). The Techlash in Times of Corona. HIIG Blog. Blog Post

Seidl, T. (2018). Die Linke und der Geist des digitalen Kapitalismus. Oxi Magazin. Article

Roos, U., & Seidl, T. (2015). Time to Call Things as They Are. The Namibian. Article