30 results
Search Results
2. CALL FOR PAPERS.
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ECONOMICS , *SOCIAL sciences , *MEETINGS , *SOCIOLOGY , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. , *CIVILIZATION , *SOCIETIES , *HISTORY - Abstract
The article calls the attention of interested individuals to submit article that will be presented during conferences of Associations concerning economics. The organizers of the Seventh Annual Heilbronn Symposium in Economics and the Social Sciences Christian Freiherr von Wolff that will be held on June 22-25,1995 is inviting everyone to submit abstract and correspondence relevant to the theme. Likewise, the organizers of the 22nd Annual Meeting of the History of Economics Society that will be held on June 2-5, 1995 in South Bend, Indiana is calling the same.
- Published
- 1994
3. Altruism, sociology and the history of economic thought.
- Author
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Steiner, Philippe
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ECONOMICS , *ALTRUISM , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
This paper is organized in three stages. In the first part, I outline the evolution of the notion of altruism with its critical dimension of political economy by following the intellectual sequence from Auguste Comte to Pierre Bourdieu, through Emile Durkheim and Marcel Mauss. In the second, I consider the forms of transaction to which these sociologists report altruism and its derivatives. In the last section, I examine recent developments on altruism as a result of developments on performativity on the one hand and market design on the other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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4. The privacy paradox: how market privacy facilitates government surveillance.
- Author
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Rider, Karina
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DATA encryption , *BUSINESSPEOPLE , *LAW enforcement , *ELECTRONIC surveillance , *PRIVACY - Abstract
Although most surveillance studies scholars assume privacy is antithetical to surveillance, critics have recently warned that privacy-based criticisms may facilitate surveillance. That being said, we do not yet have data that show whether privacy claims were used in the past to legitimate government surveillance. This paper addresses that gap by analyzing claims made over one of the U.S.’s most controversial surveillance issues: government control over encryption technologies. A review of Congressional hearings and statements on the Congressional Record (n = 112) reveals that from 1993 to 1999, public debates were dominated by a market liberalization discourse in which participants supported loosening encryption controls as a way to protect privacy from criminal intrusions in market transactions. Also playing a role was a strong skepticism toward government power and a preference for markets as managers of crime prevention. Challenged by these critiques, lawmakers withdrew regulatory proposals and spent the following decade working quietly with private firms to ensure law enforcement surveillance capability. These findings show the expansion of privacy for consumers and entrepreneurs has in fact been used to achieve the contraction of privacy from law enforcement and intelligence agencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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5. Vision, commerce and society in Geoffrey Hill's early poetry.
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Pestell, Alex
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COMMERCE , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Since 1953, when Anthony Thwaite described Geoffrey Hill as a ‘runic visionary’ in the Oxford student magazineThe Isis, the visionary has been a site of contestation for Hill and his critics. Tom Paulin's 1992 essay on Hill, ‘A Visionary Nationalist’, identified vision with an entrenched belief in ‘the magical transcendence of art’. While Paulin seems to have overlooked the fact that Hill's early poems subject this very belief to intense scrutiny, it can sometimes appear that their dense, hermetic forms are merely the despairing flip side of the transcendence they rebuke. In this paper, I suggest some ways to read the prosodic and thematic disposition of the mythical elements in Hill's early poetry, arguing that they constitute a complex, differential attitude towards the temporality of visionary thought. My argument draws on the notion of the speculative proposition as expounded by Gillian Rose, to explore how Hill inhabits the gulf between art's vision and the world of commerce and society. Through close readings of ‘Doctor Faustus’ and ‘Of Commerce and Society’, as well as Hill's early essay ‘The Poetry of Allen Tate’, the paper suggests that Hill's early poetry works towards an apprehension of society as productive content rather than repressed other. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2015
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6. ‘Think twice’: using economics and sociology to understand monetary issues–The case of Switzerland.
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Vallet, Guillaume
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ECONOMIC sociology , *SWISS franc , *HETERODOX economics , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *SOCIAL factors - Abstract
This paper seeks to demonstrate to what extent an academic approach that borrows from economics and sociology is heuristic in terms of fully understanding monetary issues. Contrary to authors that consider money to be neutral, this article emphasizes that money is a ‘total social fact’. Hence, it focuses on three meanings of money through the theoretical framework of Schumpeter and various French institutionalists. It also focuses on the Swiss case, which is particularly relevant because money plays a significant role in order for such a country to foster prosperity and create social links. Finally, there is clearly a high usefulness of a pluralistic approach on the monetary issue for heterodox economists. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
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7. Towards a holistic understanding of poverty: A new multidimensional measure of poverty for Australia.
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Callander, Emily J., Schofield, Deborah J., and Shrestha, Rupendra N.
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CONCEPTUAL structures , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychobiology , *ECONOMICS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *FOOD , *HEALTH status indicators , *HOUSING , *HUMAN rights , *INCOME , *LIBERTY , *RESEARCH methodology , *POVERTY , *QUALITY of life , *SOCIAL participation , *EDUCATIONAL attainment ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
This paper draws upon literature from economics, and the human capital and equity fields in order to present a theoretical framework for a new multidimensional measure of poverty for Australia. Poverty is about having low living standards; but its measurement has traditionally focused only on an individual's income or on other dimensions of living standards that are not appropriate for contemporary Australian society, such as calorie intake. There are two additional capabilities individuals require for adequate living standards: health and education. Each of these is required for basic functioning within modern society, but have traditionally been ignored by measures of poverty. This paper argues that health is a basic capability people need for a fulfilling life, allowing individuals to participate in activities essential in modern society, and that education can also be seen in this light. As such it is vital that health and education be included in measures of poverty. In order to move Australian poverty measurement forward and build upon the work of the past, poverty measurement must move its focus away from only looking at low income, and take a holistic focus on the living standards of individuals by incorporating assessments of health and education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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8. Exit the State: Decentralization and the Need for Local Social, Political, and Economic Considerations in Water Resource Allocation in Madagascar and Kenya.
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Marcus, Richard R. and Onjala, Joseph
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WATER supply , *DECENTRALIZATION in management , *LEADERSHIP , *RESOURCE management , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *RESOURCE allocation - Abstract
This paper focuses on the iconoclasticism of water as a plentiful resource and the near universalization of decentralizing institutions to manage it. The authors explore two agro-pastoral regions - Ambovombe District (Madagascar) and Tana River District (Kenya) - and consider institutional change, particularly the disengaging state, the lack of fiscal and administrative support throughout decentralization, community responses, and informal private markets. This paper concludes that decentralization holds the potential to increase accountability of the resource management process, improve governance and leadership accountability, and maximize the resource in a sustainable fashion. However, what we are seeing instead through the process of decentralization are the states exiting from the water governance process too rapidly and without concern for the culturally embedded social and economic norms, and the growing gap between new institutions and the needs, desires, and capacity of participants in the new systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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9. Estimating the Economic Impact of Natural and Social Disasters, with an Application to Hurricane Katrina.
- Author
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Baade, Robert A., Baumann, Robert, and Matheson, Victor
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SOCIOLOGY , *HURRICANE Andrew, 1992 , *HURRICANE Katrina, 2005 , *METROPOLITAN areas , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines taxable sales in the Los Angeles and Miami metropolitan areas to find evidence of the short- and long-run effects of the Rodney King riots and Hurricane Andrew on their respective economies. The comparison of these two events shows that the King riots had a long-term negative effect on Los Angeles' economy while Hurricane Andrew had a short-term positive effect on the Miami economy. The paper also applies the contrasting experiences of Los Angeles and Miami to New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina. In some ways, Katrina is a hybrid of these two events since it combines elements of both a natural disaster and a social disaster. The paper examines how Katrina is similar to each of the previous incidents and how these similarities might affect the recovery of New Orleans following the storm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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10. Paradigms for analysis of social institutions: A case for sociological institutionalism.
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Zafirovski, Milan
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SOCIAL institutions , *SOCIAL systems , *SOCIOLOGY , *INSTITUTIONAL economics , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper makes a case for sociological institutionalism, particularly its Veblenian variant or connection. This is attempted against a background of the surge of renewed interest in analyzing institutions within modern social science, especially economics and sociology. This is indicated by the emergence of the new institutional economics as the (modified) neoclassical approach to institutions and the revival of economic sociology with its conception of the institutional embeddedness of the economy, respectively. Still, many pertinent differences between economic and sociological institutionalism are overlooked or minimized in the current literature. By exploring such differences, the paper helps span a gap in the literature in which comparative analyses of economic and sociological approaches to institutions are rare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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11. Developments in Economics as Realist Social Theory.
- Author
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Lawson, Tony
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SOCIAL theory , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIAL sciences , *COMMERCE , *FUNCTIONALISM (Social sciences) , *SOCIAL reality , *SOCIOLOGY , *SYSTEMS theory , *SOCIAL constructionism , *SOCIAL facts , *SOCIAL realism - Abstract
The article presents several papers related developments in economics as realist social theory. According to the author, social theory expressly committed to work out the nature of social being, and, or how people access social reality is going through something of a revival in economics. The papers presented, provide numerous results, arguments, conjectures, and critiques have been produced in recent years, and aim to take some of these specific developments further. Context of the papers and basic ideas and results are presented.
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- 1996
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12. Designing Issues in Confirmatory Adaptive Population Enrichment Trials.
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Wassmer, Gernot and Dragalin, Vlad
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SOCIAL status , *GENDER , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *FOSTER home care - Abstract
Adaptive population enrichment designs enable the data-driven selection of one or more pre-specified subpopulations in an interim analysis, and the confirmatory proof of efficacy in the selected subset at the end of the trial. Sample size reassessment and other adaptive design changes can be performed as well. Strong control of the experimentwise Type I error rate is guaranteed by use of the combination testing principle together with the closed testing argument. In this paper the general methodology and designing issues when planning such a design are reviewed. It is shown how to derive overall confidence intervals andp-values. Criteria for assessing the operating characteristics of these designs are given, and the application is illustrated by examples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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13. Towards a new political economy of youth.
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Côté, James E.
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ECONOMICS , *YOUTH movements , *SOCIOLOGY , *CULTURAL studies , *PROLETARIANIZATION , *MARXIST analysis , *YOUTH ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
The roots of the political-economy-of-youth perspective can be traced to the neo-Marxist attempts to account for the youth movements and countercultures of the 1960s and to argue that youth constitute a potentially revolutionary ‘class’. Although this perspective influenced subcultural views of youth, since the 1980s sociological and cultural studies approaches to youth studies have tended to focus on the disadvantaged and working class rather than the entire youth segment of the population, while becoming increasingly preoccupied with subjectivities rather than the material conditions. Although these approaches to class divisions within the youth segment are useful, there is recent evidence of a systemic proletarianisation of the entire youth population in many countries, raising again materialist concerns and the issue of youth-as-class. Evidence for class-relations between youth and adults with respect to reduced earning power and education-to-work prospects is presented, followed by a critique of current youth-studies approaches that do not provide explanations of the root causes of youth proletarianisation. The paper ends with a call for a revival of the political-economy-of-youth perspective that is capable of generating ideas about solutions to this proletarianisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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14. The final frontier: The UK's new coalition government turns the English National Health Service over to the global health care market.
- Author
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Pollock, Allyson M. and Price, David
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GOVERNMENT aid , *HEALTH care rationing , *FAMILY medicine , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *CONSORTIA , *CONTRACTING out , *CORPORATIONS , *DECENTRALIZATION in management , *FEDERAL government , *HEALTH services administration , *INVESTMENTS , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *NATIONAL health services , *PRACTICAL politics , *RESPONSIBILITY , *SOCIAL control , *USER charges , *PRIVATE sector , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *ECONOMIC competition , *ECONOMICS , *LAW - Abstract
The authors describe the incremental approach to the marketisation of the English National Health Service (NHS) since the introduction of an 'internal market' in 1990 until the 2010 White Paper, 'Equity and Excellence: Liberating the NHS', and the subsequent Health and Social Care Bill published in January 2011. The introduction of a competitive market for a universal, tax-financed health system requires fundamental changes in regulation in order that market bureaucracy can be substituted for direct management. The components of reform are insufficiently captured by the framework of hierarchies and networks in new public management theories of decentralisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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15. Multinational corporations, the state, and contemporary medicine.
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Jasso-Aguilar, Rebeca and Waitzkin, Howard
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MENTAL illness drug therapy , *MEDICAL screening , *BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *CONFLICT of interests , *ECONOMICS , *FEDERAL government , *HEALTH services administration , *INSURANCE companies , *INTERNATIONAL business enterprises , *PHARMACEUTICAL industry , *PRACTICAL politics , *POWER (Social sciences) , *PROFIT , *SOCIAL classes , *SOCIAL justice , *PRIVATE sector , *THEORY , *PUBLIC sector - Abstract
In this paper we explore the ways in which corporations have become powerful actors in the political and economic landscapes, and the role the state has played in this development. Focusing on the pharmaceutical industry, we find that revolving door practices have been a key instrument in furthering the growth of corporate power, leading us to a reconsideration of the concepts of class struggle and the role of the state in the maintenance of the dominant class' privileges. We conclude that our findings lend support to Harvey's theory of neoliberalism as a specific project to restore power to the dominant class, and also to Marx's conception of state power subordinated to capitalist economic power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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16. Unhealthy policy: The political economy of Canadian public--private partnership hospitals.
- Author
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Whiteside, Heather
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COST control , *ECONOMICS , *HEALTH facility administration , *INVESTMENTS , *ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness , *PRACTICAL politics , *PROFIT , *RESPONSIBILITY , *RISK management in business , *STATE governments , *GOVERNMENT aid , *PRIVATE sector , *PUBLIC sector ,CANADIAN politics & government - Abstract
Public--private partnerships (P3s) with the for-profit private sector are increasingly used in Canada to deliver public infrastructure and support services within the health care sector (e.g., hospitals, clinics, community health centres). This paper examines the emergence and legacy of P3s in the Canadian health care sector, classifying them as a form of neoliberal accumulation by dispossession and discussing their inability to live up to proponents' promises. Economic and social costs are examined, and examples are drawn from operational P3 hospitals in Canada. The article also briefly examines how P3s have been affected by the recent global financial crisis, arguing that despite serious problems with the private finance component of these projects, ultimately the policy is poised to weather the storm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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17. Schumpeter on money, banking and finance: an institutionalist perspective.
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Festré, Agnès and Nasica, Eric
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HISTORY of the banking industry , *SOCIOLOGY , *ORGANIZATIONAL behavior , *FINANCE , *DEVELOPMENT banks , *ECONOMIC policy , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
In this paper we provide an institutional interpretation of Schumpeter's analysis of money, banking and finance. We justify this interpretation by considering first Schumpeter's overall methodological perspective, in particular the role played by economic sociology in his approach, and second by showing that the way Schumpeter describes the successive steps of economic development - circular flow, steady state and development - provides a good illustration of how institutional change is progressively introduced into his analytical framework and of the leading role of the banking system in the overall evolution of the financial system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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18. Combining Economics and Sociology in Migration Theory.
- Author
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Boswell, Christina
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SOCIOECONOMICS , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY , *DECISION making , *INDIVIDUALISM - Abstract
This paper considers some of the impediments to interdisciplinary integration in migration theory, focusing on the problem of combining economics and sociology. It argues that neoclassical economics has a number of methodological advantages, deriving from its elegant theoretical structure and its aptitude for measuring and predicting individual behaviour. However, these features are contingent on a number of simplifying assumptions about social action: namely, a commitment to methodological individualism, a uniform conception of rationality, and a theory of individuals as utility-maximising. These assumptions become untenable in the case of migration decision-making, which partially accounts for the failure of economics theories adequately to explain and predict migration flows. Instead of rejecting such approaches, however, the article suggests how economics methodologies can be usefully applied within interdisciplinary research: either as a tool for modelling patterns of migration decision-making already observed through more qualitative methodologies; or as a means of testing and ruling out certain hypotheses about migration decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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19. Advantage and disadvantage across Australia's extended metropolitan regions: A typology of socioeconomic outcomes.
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Baum, Scott, Haynes, Michelle, Van Gellecum, Yolanda, and Hoon Han, Jung
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ECONOMICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SOCIAL factors , *GAUSSIAN measures , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *STATISTICAL sampling - Abstract
New national and international economic and social forces have reshaped national geographies in general and the characteristics of cities in particular, resulting in a range of diverse social and spatial outcomes. These outcomes, which include greater differentiation across, within and between cities has become a feature of the economic and social forces associated with post-Fordist social structures. Taking localities across Australia's metropolitan regions, this paper develops a typology of advantage and disadvantage using a model-based approach with clustering of data represented by a parameterised Gaussian mixture model and confidence intervals of the means providing a measure of differences between the clusters. The analysis finds seven clusters of localities that represent different aspects of the socio-spatial structure of the metropolitan regions studied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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20. What is the relationship of religion to economics?
- Author
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Beed, Clive
- Subjects
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ECONOMICS , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *RELIGION , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *LEGAL judgments , *INTERPRETATION (Philosophy) , *PHILOSOPHY , *INTELLECTUALS - Abstract
In this journal, Welch and Mueller (WM) (2001) demonstrated a classificatory method for conceptualizing relationships between religion and economics. No judgement can be drawn from WM as to which of their four classifications might be a, or the, correct one. They conclude that the relationships are “both complex and controversial”, and that before any assessment can be apprehended adequately of how the two fields interact, “the permutations and subcategories implied by the system” used need to be identified and explored more thoroughly. This paper pursues that path, but argues that a more determinate verdict than WM's is possible. Here, an alternative interpretation of the relationship between religion and economics is investigated, in which WM's categories are assessed. In the alternative, WM's four classes are not taken to possess equal intellectual merit, as they appear to be. Using more current and comprehensive definitions of religion than WM's, a case is constructed that three of their four categories possess greater intellectual value than the remaining one. These three are here collapsed into one new mega-category regarded as that most validly describing the relationship between religion and economics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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21. Critical realism in economics and open-systems ontology: A critique.
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Mearman, Andrew
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REALISM , *EMPIRICISM , *PHILOSOPHY , *CRITICAL realism , *ONTOLOGY , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper examines the treatment of ontology offered by critical realism. It addresses much of the material elaborated upon in two editions of this journal. Three main groups of criticisms are made here of the critical realist treatment of open systems. It is argued that critical realism, particularly in the project in economics emanating from Cambridge, UK, tends to define systems in terms of events. This definition is shown to be problematic. The exemplar of a closed system provided by critical realism of the solar system is shown to be flawed in that it is not closed according to the closure conditions identified by critical realism. Second, the negativity of the definitions adopted is problematic for heterodox traditions attempting to build positive programmes. Furthermore, the dualism of the definitions is also inconsistent with Dow's approach, which has ramifications for the coherence of post Keynesianism. Third, the definitions tend to polarize open and closed systems and ignore the degrees of openness evident in reality. The polarization of systems leads to polarized methodology and unsustainable arguments to reject so-called “closed-systems methods.” [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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22. How to fight the ' Methodenstreit '? Veblen and Weber on economics, psychology and action.
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Kilpinen, Erkki
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SOCIOECONOMICS , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIAL sciences , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
There have been comparative discussions about Thorstein Veblen and Max Weber before, but not quite from the most appropriate viewpoint. The present paper treats them as theorists of action, in social and economic analysis, and this perspective yields some interesting new findings. Both theorists are to be taken as participants in the great Methodenstreit in economics, 100 years ago, and it is Veblen who suggests a more radical solution to this dispute, he suggests its final abolishment. The main difference between Veblen and Weber is in their respective appreciations of the role of psychology in social analysis. Weber does not think it important, but in so thinking he misses the viewpoint of evolutionary psychology that Veblen endorses. Accordingly, both of these classical thinkers are to be considered as theorists of action, but so that it is Veblen who proffers a more general theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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23. The Gift Paradox: Complex Selves and Symbolic Good.
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Khalil, Elias L
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WELFARE economics , *SOCIOLOGY , *ECONOMICS , *BUDGET , *NEOCLASSICAL school of economics - Abstract
Symbolic utility involves appreciation and esteem and expressed by symbolic products (gifts), while substantive utility entails ordinary welfare satisfied by substantive products. For neoclassical theory, both utilities are symmetrical or fungible and, hence, substitutable along the uni-dimensional utility function. If they are substitutable, though, why would agents be judged as "crass" if they intentionally remind the recipient of the cost of the substitution? For normative sociological theory, the judgment of "crassness" would arise if the agent mixes moral norms with non-moral substantive interests. The two are supposed to be non-fungible, stemming from multiple selves. If both utilities are non-fungible and stem from multiple selves, though, why do we call agents who spend on gifts beyond their means "fools," while those who spend very little "cheapskates"? It seems that there must be a supervising, single self that makes decisions on the proper division of the budget between substantive products and gifts. But this invites the single-self idea from the back window, reverting back to the neoclassical approach. We would be caught in a vicious cycle of anomalies. To get out of the cycle, this paper identifies the critical issues and suggests an alternative, complex-self view. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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24. Re-shaping the geography of opportunity: place effects in global perspective.
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Briggs, Xavier De Souza
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SOCIOLOGY , *GLOBALIZATION , *DYNAMICS , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIAL justice - Abstract
Studies of the effects of micro-level contexts on human development and socio-economic 'opportunity' run the risk of excluding important factors, including the dynamism of those contexts and the effects of globalisation on local places. Comparative analyses are particularly demanding, since varied elements of an 'opportunity structure' may operate, some directly and others indirectly, to affect behaviour and outcomes of interest. This paper connects concerns about local place effects on human life to the larger global conversation about increased social inequality and sharper economic competition among localities, in effect, addressing sorting at macro, inter-local, and intra-local levels. The European studies presented in this volume are discussed, and a typology of interventions (actions to re-shape local place effects) is proposed for further debate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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25. Issues for a Neo-Polanyian Research Agenda in Economic Sociology.
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Randles, Sally
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
Kari Polanyi Levitt has commented that her father's writing was met with a 'deafening silence' in England, a silence which she suggests is 'yet to be explained'. Given The Great Transformation was purposefully, situated in England Polanyi Levitt's point is an interesting one, and one which still deserves attention. But the last two decades have witnessed an intensification of interest in Karl Polanyi's methodological approach and theoretical insights, from England as well as elsewhere, and representing a range of disciplines. This raises a string of associated questions: interest from who? Why now? And how? Further we could ask: Does this new interest have the potential to redress the Polanyi Levitt charge without falling prey to an opposite one of misusing or abusing the Polanyi legacy? This paper contributes to the much larger agenda of examining in a serious way the usefulness and applicability of Polanyi's key ideas and methods, particularly as they apply to the burgeoning interest in markets and exchange within New Economic Sociology (NES). A sub-set of this agenda is to explore whether Polanyian insights provide a more nuanced and critical understanding of competitive processes and innovation than is currently available within Economics, Sociology or indeed Economic Sociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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26. Social economy and employment -- the case of Sweden.
- Author
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Westlund, Hans
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EMPLOYMENT , *SOCIOLOGY , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
Recent research has shown growing shares of employment in the social economy (or non-profit sector) both in the European Union and in the United States. In the EU, there seems to be growing hopes that the social economy will be capable of contributing to local progress on the unemployment issue in crisis regions. This paper analyses employment in certain entrepreneurial forms, usually considered belonging to the social economy, in Sweden during the 1990s. The results show considerable regional differences of employment in the social economy, but also that its share of the labor market is very limited. The effect of social-economic organizations on employment, therefore, is probably mainly indirect in as much as they function as platforms for cooperation between firms or else as embryos for enterprises by strengthening local entrepreneurship and helping to nurture a deposit of social capital which has visible effects on private business and jobs. However, these effects need more detailed examinations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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27. Human Well-Being: A New Approach Based on Overall and Ordinary Functionings.
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Tomer, John F.
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HUMAN behavior , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL capital , *POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
This paper develops a concept of human well-being that integrates economic and noneconomic aspects of life. Philosophers, humanistic psychologists, and religious traditions have been very helpful in pointing out the true noneconomic potential of human life. Our new approach to well-being, the overall/ordinary approach includes these higher aspects of human life. In addition to the ordinary adult human functionings, basically the functionings Sen mentions, the new approach includes a group of higher human functionings which are called overall human functioning. To adequately assess a person's or a society's well-being, it is necessary to consider both people's ordinary (or lower) functionings and their overall (or higher) functionings. Raising societal well-being requires capital formation, particularly investment in personal and social capital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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28. The World System and World Trade: an Empirical Exploration of Conceptual Conflicts.
- Author
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Steiber, Steven R.
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INTERNATIONAL trade , *SOCIAL theory , *ECONOMICS , *WORLD system theory , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Within the growing number of analysts who employ the world system perspective on national development, theoretical disagreements have evolved which may only be settled by examination of available data. Using an adaptation of the network metaphor, this paper blockmodels the world trade system in order (1) to demonstrate a single mode of international exchange in the world system instead of the competing capitalist and communist modes proposed by some, and (2) to illustrate the unique position of the middle level of nations in a three tier world system—a position sometimes denied. Implications for the competing world system theories and world development itself are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1979
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29. Realism, theory, and individualism in the work of Carl Menger.
- Author
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Lawson, Clive
- Subjects
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INDIVIDUALISM , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIAL sciences , *COMMERCE , *SELF-interest , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL theory , *REALISM , *PHILOSOPHY - Abstract
Theorizing in economics is often associated with some form of individualism. This paper considers the nature of this association in the work of Carl Menger. I adopt this focus not only because of continuing interest in Menger's work, but because recent developments in social theory facilitate a fruitful reevaluation of his general position. I argue that a convincing link between theory and individualism is absent in Menger's work. Moreover, I argue that the various criticisms often made of his work actually relate to the ideas which underlie his individualism rather than, as is usually supposed, those arising from an adherence to a form of Aristotelianism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
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30. Market, State, and Society as Codes of Moral Obligation.
- Author
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Wolfe, Alan
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMICS , *POLITICAL science , *SOCIOLOGY , *NATION-state , *CIVIL society - Abstract
Economics, political science, and sociology are, in this paper, understood to be not only scientific but also moral languages. An economic approach to moral obligation emphasizes that obligations to the self automatically cover obligations to others. A political approach, by contrast, argues that some kind of centralized coercive authority is necessary so that people will carry out their obligations to each other satisfactorily. Sociology has always understood itself in opposition to both the market and the state, but it has never been clear about its alternative. Many of the classical thinkers in the sociological tradition wished to preserve both modernity (in the form of markets and states) and morality (in the form of strongly inscribed norms and community obligations). This balance is best resolved by emphasizing morality as a learning process requiring 'civil society' — not as an end in itself, but as a place in which the learning of moral obligation can be carried out. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
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