13 results
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2. Call for papers - Annual allied social sciences association meetings New Orleans, LA, January 4-6, 2008.
- Author
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Davis, John
- Subjects
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SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY , *ECONOMICS , *DEMOCRACY , *SOCIAL attitudes , *EQUALITY , *ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. , *MEETINGS - Abstract
The article presents a call for papers for the meeting titled "Annual Allied Social Sciences Association Meetings" to be held on January 4-6, 2008 at New Orleans, Louisiana with a theme about inequality, democracy, and the economy. The Association for Social Economics members and nonmembers are encouraged to submit proposals for the New Orleans ASE program. The papers can be send by email of 300 words or less by May 1, 2007 to John Davis of University of Amsterdam and Marquette University. Guide questions are also included.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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3. CALL FOR PAPERS.
- Subjects
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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
4. Reflections on the use of social capital.
- Author
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Schuller, Tom
- Subjects
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HUMAN capital , *SOCIAL capital , *EDUCATION & economics , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY , *CAPITAL - Abstract
The paper provides a framework for reviewing developments in thinking about social capital over the last decade and for assessing future prospects. It argues for giving particular value to social capital as a phenomenon (conceptual and empirical) which is most effective when viewed in interaction with other elements of analysis or policy. Two forms of interaction are addressed: between bonding and bridging social capital; and between human and social capital. The paper then tracks some of the developments in the policy research debate in order to illustrate the dilemmas involved in the deployment of the concept. The fourth section poses some methodological questions and possible future directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Developments in Economics as Realist Social Theory.
- Author
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Lawson, Tony
- Subjects
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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.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
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6. 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]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Critical realism in economics and open-systems ontology: A critique.
- Author
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Mearman, Andrew
- Subjects
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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]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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8. Capabilities, Culture and Social Structure.
- Author
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Jackson, William A
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SOCIAL structure , *SOCIOLOGY , *CULTURE , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *SOCIAL systems , *THEORY - Abstract
Sen's capability approach has a culturally specific side, with capabilities influenced by social structures and institutions. Although Sen acknowledges this, he expresses his theory in individualistic terms and makes little allowance for culture or social structure. The present paper draws from recent social theory to discuss how the capability approach could be developed to give an explicit treatment of cultural and structural matters. Capabilities depend not only on entitlements but on institutional roles and personal relations: these can be represented openly if capabilities are disaggregated into individual, social and structural capacities. The three layers interact, and a full analysis of capabilities should consider them all. A stratified method implies that raising entitlements will not on its own be enough to enhance capabilities and that cultural and structural changes will be needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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9. The Gift Paradox: Complex Selves and Symbolic Good.
- Author
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Khalil, Elias L
- Subjects
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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]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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10. Social economy and employment -- the case of Sweden.
- Author
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Westlund, Hans
- Subjects
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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
- Full Text
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11. Human Well-Being: A New Approach Based on Overall and Ordinary Functionings.
- Author
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Tomer, John F.
- Subjects
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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
- Full Text
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12. The Mind of the Social Individual: A Comment on Sherman and Hodgson.
- Author
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Fuller, Chris
- Subjects
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SOCIOECONOMICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
In the Spring 1998 (56(1): 47-57) and Fall 1998 (56(3): 295-306, 307-310) issues of this review, Howard Sherman and Geoffrey Hodgson debated, inter alia, the extent to which Veblen-Ayres institutionalism is compatible with Marx and recent Marxist work. This paper argues that the differences between Hodgson and Sherman"s positions do not rely on assumptions of "illogical" behavior, individualist arguments or structural conceptions of the individual. Instead, the debate turns on the authors' respective conceptions of the formation and role of the human mind in what it is to be a social individual. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. 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
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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