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2. THE PRAGMATIC CONFUCIAN APPROACH TO TRADITION IN MODERNIZING CHINA.
- Author
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TAN, SOR-HOON
- Subjects
- *
CONFUCIANISM , *TRADITION (Philosophy) , *MODERNIZATION (Social science) , *ICONOCLASM , *CAPITALISM , *PRAGMATISM , *SCIENTISM , *PROGRESS , *HISTORY of capitalism ,MAY Fourth movement, China, 1919 - Abstract
This paper explores the Confucian veneration of the past and its commitment to transmitting the tradition of the sages. It does so by placing it in the context of the historical trajectory from the May Fourth attacks on Confucianism and its scientistic, iconoclastic approach to 'saving China,' to similar approaches to China's modernization in later decades, through the market reforms that launched China into global capitalism, to the revival of Confucianism in recent years. It reexamines the association of the Pragmatism of John Dewey and Hu Shih with the scientistic iconoclasm of the May Fourth Movement and argues that a broader scrutiny of Dewey's and Hu's works, beyond the period when Dewey visited China, reveals a more balanced treatment of tradition, science, and modernization. Pragmatists believe in reconstructing, not destroying, traditions in their pursuit of growth for individuals and communities. Despite a tension between the progress-oriented historical consciousness that Dewey inherited from the Enlightenment (a consciousness that some consider as characteristic of modern Western historiography) and the historical consciousness underlying Chinese historiographical tradition (one that views the past as a didactic 'mirror'), it is possible to reconcile the Pragmatic reconstruction of tradition with the Confucian veneration of the past. This paper argues for a Pragmatic Confucian approach to Chinese traditions that is selective in its transmission of the past and flexible enough in its 'preservation' to allow for progressive change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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3. Placing brands and branding: a socio-spatial biography of Newcastle Brown Ale.
- Author
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Pike, Andy
- Subjects
- *
PRODUCT placement , *BRANDING (Marketing) , *ECONOMIC geography , *CAPITALISM - Abstract
Despite their apparently pervasive reach and relevance, the geographies of branded commodities and their branding have been unevenly recognised and under-researched. This paper presents a way of conceptualising and analysing brand and branding geographies. Focusing upon goods and services, the notion of geographical entanglements is developed to understand the spatial associations and connotations that unavoidably ensnare brands and branding. Second, it examines how such attachments shape and are shaped by brand and branding agents, including producers, circulators, consumers and regulators. Last, the placing of the geographical entanglements of brands and branding is developed as a means of lifting their 'mystical veils' and prompting reflections upon their politics and relationships to uneven development. Situating branding genealogies in geographical context, the empirical analysis comprises a socio-spatial biography of Newcastle Brown Ale (NBA). It explains how NBA's geographical entanglements have been (re)constructed in its contrasting survival in the UK and growth in the US. As a way of thinking about brand and branding geographies, the paper seeks to broaden the reach of economic geographies at their intersections with cultural economy approaches and to stimulate debate about their politics and alternatives to uneven development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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4. The biopolitics of food provisioning.
- Author
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Nally, David
- Subjects
- *
BIOPOLITICS (Sociobiology) , *FOOD security , *SCARCITY , *LIBERALISM , *FREE enterprise , *CAPITALISM , *AGRICULTURAL industries , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
Beginning with Foucault's writing on food provisioning in the mercantile period, this paper explores how a moral economy of hunger is gradually replaced by a political economy of food security that promotes market mechanisms as a better protection against scarcity. In Western Europe the emergence of political liberalism and laissez-faire economics substantially shaped how hunger and scarcity were conceptualised and socially managed. Beyond Europe these social forces were manifest in the development of colonial plantations. Here the transformation of non-capitalist social formations into market economies - what Harvey (2003) terms 'accumulation by dispossession'- was a foundational moment in the development of a global provisioning system that undermined the anti-scarcity strategies of some populations, while ensuring food security for others. The subsequent discovery of the 'Global South' hunger, together with the desire to encourage better habits and purer morals among 'backward' peoples, created the context in which further curative interventions, designed to consolidate a capitalist food economy, were valorised and maintained. These reflections set up the final part of the paper, where I contextualise recent efforts to present agro-biotechnologies as a pro-welfare and anti-scarcity response. Moving beyond the causes of hunger to explore its strategic function, this analysis highlights how corporate agribusiness - in partnership with the life sciences - is attempting to recondition human, animal and bacterial life in order to quicken the reproduction of capital. I term this new moment in the commercialisation of food systems accumulation by molecularisation. The paper concludes by examining how the corporate management of food folds into biopolitical strategies for managing life, including the lives of the hungry poor who are 'let die' as commercial interests supplant human needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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5. Singing about the Land among the Biangai.
- Author
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Halvaksz, Jamon
- Subjects
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POLITICAL ecology , *SONGS , *BEREAVEMENT , *BIANGAI language , *PAPUAN languages , *MINERAL industries , *CAPITALISM - Abstract
This paper examines Biangai (Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea) expressions and transformations of environmental imaginaries through women's mourning songs (yongo ingi) and the songs of string bands. Biangai personhood, once intimately connected to garden lands and trees, hunting and forest paths, is increasingly influenced by global capitalism. Through their songs, they betray an increased tension between acting as an individual person and acting in terms of kin based relationality. While yongo ingi still memorialize the social spaces and land rights of the deceased, they also express conflicts in Biangai engagement with gold mining. Biangai string bands emerged just prior to Papua New Guinea's Independence in 1975, with the first band recording and releasing a national cassette in 1982. Dominated by young men, they depict the intersection of local music with a Melanesian modernity composed of compensation payments, gold mining, love, travel, and marketing. Both yongo ingi and string bands inform each other and provide insight into how local music engages images of both global economy and global ecology. By examining the uses, meanings, and performative contexts of these songs, this paper contributes to our understanding of the role of such expressive forms in connecting persons and their environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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6. East Germany: Rising incomes, unchanged inequality and the impact of redistributive government 1990-92.
- Author
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Heady, Bruce, Krause, Peter, and Habich, Roland
- Subjects
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INCOME , *EQUALITY , *SATISFACTION , *COST of living , *COMMUNISM , *CAPITALISM - Abstract
What has happened to incomes, inequality and satisfaction with living standards in the first stage of transition from a communist command economy to a market economy in East Germany? This paper tests six hypotheses about the transition to capitalism. Contrary to expectations, real incomes went up not down, net income inequality scarcely increased, and those who were previously advantaged did not become better off at the expense of the previously disadvantaged. A major reason for the last two results was that the Federal Republic's taxes and benefits, which were more progressive than the Communist regime's, had the effect of counteracting the increasing inequality of household gross incomes. It is also reported that, although real net incomes increased, satisfaction with living standards declined, probably because East Germans increasingly compared themselves with western counterparts. Optimism about the future declined in 1991-92 after reaching very high levels in 1990 immediately after the revolution. This paper is based on the first three waves of the East German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) conducted in June 1990 (N=4453 individuals in 2179 households), March-April 1991 and March-April 1992. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
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7. Economies, Institutions and Territories: Dissecting Nexuses in a Changing World.
- Author
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Shaban, Abdul
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ECONOMIC geography , *ECONOMIC sociology , *CAPITALISM - Abstract
The book "Economies, Institutions and Territories: Dissecting Nexuses in a Changing World" explores the complex relationship between economies, institutions, and territories. It argues that these components are constantly changing and influencing each other, with post-industrial economies and environmental factors adding to the complexity. The book addresses various issues such as the embedding of economic processes at the local level, the stress on boundaries between state and market, and the emergence of new elites. It is divided into four sections and contains case studies from around the world. While the book does not address the impacts of digital capitalism, it offers valuable insights for future studies in economics, economic geography, and economic sociology. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Everyday activism and transitions towards post-capitalist worlds.
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Chatterton, Paul and Pickerill, Jenny
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ACTIVISM , *CAPITALIST societies , *POLITICAL autonomy , *ACTIVISTS - Abstract
This article aims to broaden and deepen debates on the everyday practices of autonomous activists. To do this we present three main research findings from a recent research project that looked in detail at what we called ‘autonomous geographies’. First, in terms of political identity, we highlight how participants in political projects problematise and go beyond the simple idea of the militant subject, set apart from the everyday who opposes the present condition. Second, we highlight how everyday practices are used to build hoped-for futures in the present, but that this process is experimental, messy and contingent, and necessarily so. Finally, we illuminate the contested spatialities embedded within political activism that are neither locally bounded nor easily transferable to the transnational. This exploration of everyday activism has illuminated that the participants we engaged with express identities, practices and spatial forms that are simultaneously anti-, despite- and post- capitalist. We argue that it is through its everyday rhythms that meaning is given to post-capitalism and it is this reconceptualisation that makes post-capitalist practice mundane, but at the same time also accessible, exciting, feasible and powerful. This paper draws upon material collected during a 30-month empirical research project into the everyday lives of grassroots, non-party political activists in the UK between 2005 and 2008. Three case studies were explored in detail – autonomous social centres, Low Impact Developments, and tenants’ networks resisting gentrification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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9. Mainstreaming the Sex Industry: Economic Inclusion and Social Ambivalence.
- Author
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Brents, Barbara G. and Sanders, Teela
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SEX industry , *SOCIAL institutions , *SOCIAL change , *CAPITALISM , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
This paper seeks to analyse the expansion of commercial sex through processes of mainstreaming in economic and social institutions. We argue that cultural changes and neo-liberal policies and attitudes have enabled economic mainstreaming, whilst social ambivalence continues to provide the backdrop to a prolific and profitable global industry. We chart the advancement of sexual consumption and sexual service provision in late capitalism before defining the concept of ‘mainstreaming’ applied here. We use the case studies of Las Vegas and Leeds to identify various social and economic dimensions to the mainstreaming process and the ways these play out in law and regulation. While social and economic processes have integrated sexual services into night-time commerce, remaining social ambivalence fuels transgression and marginalization of the industry which in fact assists the mainstreaming process. Finally, we project some implications for gender relations, work, and inequalities as a result of the integration of sexual services into the economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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10. On voodoo economics: theorising relations of property, value and contemporary capitalism.
- Author
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Christophers, Brett
- Subjects
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PROPERTY , *CAPITALISM , *CAPITAL - Abstract
This paper reflects on how we can productively theorise the contemporary treatment of property, by a range of different economic agents, as a locus for the attempted creation of economic value. Its argument is that the theorisation offered by David Harvey (1982) in The limits to capital has a continued and arguably even heightened relevance in the present-day context, but that this theorisation can be embellished with insights from the sociology of finance, particularly in regard to the power of representation. This argument is developed with reference to two parallel empirical ‘stories’ from early twenty-first century capitalism: the economist Hernando de Soto’s influential thesis about the ‘mystery of capital’ and his related policy ideas; and the attempts of western-based financiers to extract profit from companies with significant real estate assets by separating those property assets from the operational side of the businesses in question. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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11. Placing political economy: organising opposition to free trade before the abolition of the Corn Laws.
- Author
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Griffin, Carl J.
- Subjects
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FREE trade , *CORN laws (Great Britain) , *CAPITALISM , *GLOBALIZATION - Abstract
The unfurling of global capitalism – and its attendant effects – has long been fertile intellectual terrain for geographers. But whilst studies of the processes and mechanisms of globalisation undoubtedly assume a talismanic importance in the discipline, geographers, with few exceptions, have left examinations of early economic liberalism to historians. One such critically important episode in the evolution of the liberal economic project was the repeal of the so-called ‘Corn Laws’ in 1846. Whilst the precise impact of the Manchester-based Anti-Corn Law League (ACLL) continues to be a matter of conjecture, Eric Sheppard has asserted that their particular take on political economy managed to assume a ‘truth-like status’ and worldwide universality. But the ACLL’s campaign represents only one, albeit decisive, stage in the long intellectual and practical struggle between ‘protectionists’ and the disciples of free trade. Studies of the non-’Manchester’ components have tended to focus squarely upon national politics. This paper examines a pivotal attempt in 1838 by Lord Melbourne’s Government to experiment with the effective elimination of import duties on fresh fruit. Unlike most agricultural commodities, table fruit was produced in a tightly defined area, thus allowing the Government’s experiment to play out, in theory, without national political fallout. Whilst the Government’s clandestine actions left little time for a concerted opposition to develop, Kentish fruit growers soon organised. A formidable lobby was forged that drew wide local support yet also evolved beyond the original ‘epistemic community’. Whilst the coalition failed in their efforts to reintroduce protective duties, their actions allow us to see how protectionist ideologies and policies were vivified through practices at many different spatial scales and to better understand the complex spatiality of protectionist takes on political economy. Their campaign also changed – at least in the short term – the course of British mercantile policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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12. Mukadas's struggle: veils and modernity in Kyrgyzstan.
- Author
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McBrien, Julie
- Subjects
- *
RELIGION , *SOCIALISTS , *CAPITALISM , *HIJAB (Islamic clothing) , *MODERNITY - Abstract
When Mukadas Kadirova changed her mode of dress as an act of religious devotion, she and her family – the self-proclaimed (former) epitome of modern, Soviet citizenry – were confronted with conflicting normative systems. Was Mukadas still a modern woman? Was the family? And what was modernity anyway, they asked: socialist ideals, capitalist consumption, or pious women fashionably tying their headscarves? This paper, based on fourteen months of fieldwork in Kyrgyzstan, examines Mukadas's religious transformation; her attempts to map this alteration onto the shifting discursive and material realities of the post-Soviet period; and her play with variant notions of modernity. Mukadas's struggle ultimately shows that while modernity is often characterized by a linear, forward-looking gaze, experiences of modernity are not always marked by this progressive ‘onward’ sense. Modernity can be simultaneously past, present, and future. Résumé Quand Mukadas Kadirova a changé de tenue vestimentaire pour manifester sa dévotion religieuse, elle-même et sa famille, incarnation autoproclamée (mais révolue) de la citoyenneté soviétique moderne, se sont trouvées face à un conflit de leurs systèmes normatifs. Mukadas était-elle encore une femme moderne ? Sa famille était-elle moderne ? Et pour commencer, qu’est-ce que la modernité : les idéaux socialistes, le consumérisme capitaliste ou des femmes pieuses qui nouent coquettement leur foulard ? Basé sur quatorze mois de travail de terrain au Kirghizstan, l’article examine la transformation religieuse de Mukadas, ses tentatives d’ajuster ce changement aux réalités discursives et matérielles mouvantes de l’ère postsoviétique, et son maniement de différentes notions de la modernité. Le dilemme de Mukadas montre, en fin de compte, que bien que la modernité soit souvent présentée comme un regard projeté vers l’avant, elle n’est pas toujours marquée, en réalité, par cette impression progressive de « marche en avant ». La modernité peut tout à la fois être le passé, le présent et l’avenir. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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13. New transnational geographies of Islamism, capitalism and subjectivity: the veiling-fashion industry in Turkey.
- Author
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Gökarıksel, Banu and Secor, Anna J.
- Subjects
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ISLAMIC fundamentalism , *ISLAM , *CAPITALISM , *SUBJECTIVITY , *POLITICAL doctrines , *ISLAMIC ethics , *ISLAMIC philosophy , *RELIGION & ethics , *RELIGIOUS ethics - Abstract
The rise of the transnational veiling-fashion industry in Turkey has taken place within the context of neoliberal economic restructuring, the subjection of the veil to new regulations, and the resurgence of Islamic identities worldwide. Even after almost two decades since its first catwalk appearance, the idea of ‘veiling-fashion’ continues to be controversial, drawing criticism from secular and devout Muslim segments of society alike. Analysing veiling-fashion as it plays out across economic, political and cultural fields is to enter into a new understanding of the role of Islam in the global arena today. Veiling-fashion crystallises a series of issues about Islamic identity, the transnational linkages of both producers and consumers, and the shifting boundaries between Islamic ethics and the imperatives of neoliberal capitalism. In this paper, our overarching argument is that controversies and practices surrounding veiling-fashion show how Islamic actors are adapting and transforming neoliberal capitalism at the same time as they navigate a complex geopolitical terrain in which Islam – and the iconic Muslim, headscarf-wearing woman – has been cast as a threatening ‘Other’. Thus the rise of veiling-fashion as a transnational phenomenon positions women and women's bodies at the centre of political debates and struggles surrounding what it means to be ‘modern’ and Muslim today. Based on interviews with producers, consumers and salesclerks, and our analysis of newspaper articles, catalogues and web sites, this article traces out how the transnational production, sale and consumption of veiling-fashion works to order spaces of geopolitics, geo-economics and subject formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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14. Fantastic topographies: neo-liberal responses to Aboriginal land claims in British Columbia.
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Rossiter, David and Wood, Patricia K.
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INDIGENOUS peoples , *NEOLIBERALISM , *LAND use , *CAPITALISM - Abstract
This paper presents an analysis of the referendum on Native land claims that took place in British Columbia (BC) in the spring of 2002. The province's Liberal Government claimed that the referendum was needed in order to secure a public mandate for a set of negotiating principles that would breath new life into the supposedly stalled treaty process. Drawing evidence from government press releases, politicians' statements and media coverage, we argue that the BC Government and its supporters employed a discourse centred on neo-liberal economic logic in order to justify the exercise. Furthermore, we charge that this discourse relies on an erasure of the historical–geographical contexts of Native–newcomer relations in the province. By drawing on Cindi Katz's socio-spatial metaphor of ‘topographies’, we suggest that Native space in British Columbia needs to be understood as a series of situated and grounded experiences of colonialism and capitalist production. Then, extending the metaphor, we highlight the ways in which the referendum supporters' rhetoric contains a vision of future topographies of Native experience that adhere to the private property ethic of neo-liberal economics. We conclude that the politics surrounding the treaty process must be understood as a contest over the terms of Aboriginal citizenship and not merely as a conflict over the allotment of land and resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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15. Interlocking directorships and trans-national linkages within the British Empire, 1900–1930.
- Author
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Brayshay, Mark, Cleary, Mark, and Selwood, John
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOECONOMICS , *CAPITALISM , *INTERNATIONAL business enterprises , *INVESTORS , *CHILD welfare , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *ECONOMIC sectors - Abstract
Recent research has highlighted the value of employing the idea of networks to describe the interrelatedness of today's globalizing economy. Networks facilitate flows of knowledge, ideas, managerial techniques and capital between firms both within and across political borders. This paper argues that the reconstruction of social connections through which information is created, given value and exchanged is fundamental to an understanding of not only contemporary but also historical patterns of economic globalization. We focus on the networks of the capitalist elite running 12 major multinational enterprises, active across British imperial territories, between c .1900 and c .1930. An examination is made of the economic and spatial interlocks between firms created by board members who were multiple directors. Social underpinnings of multiple directorates are examined by exploring the common, overlapping social spheres within which individuals engaged. A clearer grasp of the ways in which corporate activity operated in the early 1900s can provide a better understanding of the social context of global economic operations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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16. Antinomies of community: some thoughts on geography, resources and empire.
- Author
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Watts, Michael J.
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COMMUNITIES , *PETROLEUM , *CAPITALISM , *ANTINOMY , *GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Community is a fundamental modality for the conduct of modern politics. This paper explores the antinomies of community in an oil nation: Nigeria. Oil states stand in relation to a particular sort of capitalism (what I call petro-capitalism) in which a key resource (petroleum) and a logic of extraction figure centrally in the making and breaking of community. I pose the following questions: how are communities imagined (or not), territorialized (or not), identified (or not) and ruled (or not) at a multiplicity of scales and in relation to a particular natural resource, namely oil? Each community is imagined, so to say, through and with oil – the communities are ‘naturalized’ in relation to the effects, social, environmental, political, of oil exploration and production – but produces forms of rule and identity that are often fragmented, unruly and violent. The communities I address are, in a sense, all oil-producing communities but of rather different qualities: namely, the chieftainship as a local form of customary community rule at the level of the village; the ethnic or indigenous community at the level of the region; and the nation, or more properly the nation-state known as Nigeria. And standing at the heart of each community is a fundamental contradiction. Nigerian petro-capitalism operates through a particular sort of ‘oil complex’ (a configuration of firm, state and community) that generates or refigures differing sorts of community, what I shall refer to as governable spaces, in which differing sorts of identities, forms of rule and territory come into play. These sorts of community emerge from oil extraction, but the dynamics of petro-capitalism and the oil complex contribute to, and are constitutive of, a deep crisis of secular nationalist development. Imperial oil and its concessionary political economy can be read as a sort of enclosure or dispossession and it is out of this development crisis in Nigeria that particular senses of community are being constituted – with and through oil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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17. Introduction.
- Author
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Antonaccio, Maria
- Subjects
- *
RELIGIOUS studies , *FORUMS , *RELIGION & ethics , *GLOBALIZATION , *CAPITALISM , *RELIGIOUS education - Abstract
This article presents an introduction to papers that were delivered at Bucknell University in the winter of 2000 as part of the Religious Studies Forum. The topic selected were religion, ethics and globalization. At the time, both academic discourse and the popular press were preoccupied with issues related to transition of the society to the third millennium. Globalization was widely thought to be a defining feature of the complex processes, shaping life in the new century and beyond, and thus, seemed to be a fitting topic for the forum. Much of the debate focused on whether globalization would lead to increased material prosperity for all countries, or simply exacerbate the ills already associated with global capitalism.
- Published
- 2004
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18. Cross over food: re-materializing postcolonial geographies.
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Cook, Ian and Michelle Harrisont
- Subjects
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POSTCOLONIALISM , *CAPITALISM , *MARKETING - Abstract
Recent geographical discussions of postcolonialism have highlighted its emphasis on texts and discourses, its neglect of more material aspects of (post)imperial/colonial domination and the need for detailed empirical research articulating postcolonialism and global capitalism. This paper addresses these issues by reporting on research based in a recent debate in the UK trade press over the 'failure' of Caribbean food to 'cross over' into the UK 'mainstream'. It outlines the contrasting manufacturing and marketing practices of two Jamaican food companies whose accounts of (not) attempting this 'cross-over' illustrate postcolonialism's hybrid, resistant, ambivalent, scale-jumping, boundary-crossing, material cultural politics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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19. An evaluation of financial globalization under fund-manager capitalism: the case of the UK unit trust industry.
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Williams, Colin C.
- Subjects
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MUTUAL funds , *CAPITALISM - Abstract
Drawing upon evidence from the UK unit trust industry, this paper evaluates the extent and nature of financial globalization. It finds that despite this rapidly growing and prominent form of fund-manager capitalism operating with increasingly mobile capital in a more inter-connected deregulated world, this does not signal the advent of homeless capital and the end of geography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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20. Rescuing Veblen from Valhalla: Deconstruction and reconstruction of a sociological legend.
- Author
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Edgell, Stephen
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *LEGENDS , *SOCIOLOGISTS , *CAPITALISM - Abstract
Dorfman is eulogized as the creator and curator of the definitive account of Veblen's life and work. He argued that Veblen was the archetypal marginal man and that this explains his dissenting contribution. Dissemination of Dorfman's pathography of Veblen led to its hegemony - until now. Andrew Veblen was the first to challenge Dorfman's portrait of his younger brother's life in the mid 1920s. He asserted that his family were not linguistically, socially or economically deprived. However, it was not until Dorfman's private papers became publicly available in the 1990s, that his flawed view of Veblen became more widely and comprehensively contested. An alternative appreciation of Veblen is advanced with reference to his experiences in general and the works of Bellamy, Morris and Ibsen in particular. Data sources include Dorfman's original tome, Andrew Veblen's extensive correspondence with Dorfman, and Veblen's own writings. It is concluded that Veblen's radical views are entirely congruent with his life experiences during an era of capitalist transformation. The moral of this saga is that a dose of Veblenian scepticism is essential to intellectual health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
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21. Monasticism and the `Protestant Ethic': Ascetism, rationality and wealth in the medieval West.
- Author
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Silber, Ilana Friedrich
- Subjects
- *
PROTESTANT work ethic , *MONASTICISM & religious orders , *ASCETICISM , *CAPITALISM , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
The economic achievements of medieval monasticism have evoked the paradoxical connection between religious asceticism and capitalism central to Weber's famous analysis of the 'Protestant ethic'. It will be argued, however, that focusing on the resemblances to the 'Protestant Ethic' and/or capitalism makes for a partial and distorted picture of the monastic economy and does not render the full impact of monasticism upon the economic sphere of activity in the medieval West. The first section of this paper examines Weber's own perception of the monastic economy: recognizing its achievements and relative rationality, yet also refusing to see in these any real similitude to the 'Protestant ethic' or the announcement of the capitalistic breakthrough. The second section partly confirms Weber's perception by expanding upon ideological and institutional foundations of the monastic economy which further invalidate the analogy to either capitalism and/or the 'Protestant Ethic', albeit for reasons very different from those advanced by Weber. Shifting away from the overriding concern with economic rationality characteristic of previous discussions -- and incidentally offering an altered perspective on the 'Protestant Ethic' itself -- the third section focuses on monasticism's unintended and indirect contribution to the nascent autonomization of the economic sphere of activity, through the analysis of two ideological processes essentially: depersonification on the one hand, symbolic intensification on the other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
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22. Capitalism and the history of worktime thought.
- Author
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Nyland, Chris
- Subjects
- *
CAPITALISM , *COMMUNISM , *WORK , *WORKING hours , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
The nations of the industrialized capitalist world are characterized by a tendency to reduce the length of time employees normally spend at work. Through capitalism's long history mercantilists, classicalists, Marxists and marginalists have devoted a great deal of effort to attempting to explain why it is that standard times should tend to change. This paper overviews the major contributions to the debate. Various theories are examined and their emergence and fates placed in an historical context. Marginalism's preference argument which presently dominates the debate is challenged by showing that within Marxism there exists an alternative explanation for this phenomenon which is not based on income but on the innate limitations of human beings. Until the 1950s, it is argued, the human limits approach dominated the whole issue of worktime and the essence of this contribution has never been refuted but has been simply deleted from the discussion. Consequently the whole contemporary debate is being conducted on the basis of unjustified assumptions and this is rendering discussion increasingly sterile. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
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23. Lorenz von Stein and the paradigmatic bifurcation of social theory in the nineteenth century.
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Singelmann, Joachim and Singelmann, Peter
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SOCIAL theory , *SOCIAL classes , *SOCIAL problems , *CAPITALISM , *SOCIAL scientists - Abstract
This paper examines the generally neglected place of Lorenz yon Stein in the paradigmatic bifurcation of social theory during the nineteenth century. As a student of Hegel who rejected the idealist approach of his teacher, von Stein anticipated the major arguments of historical materialism; but, unlike Marx, he did not postulate an inexorable proletarian revolution which would ultimately resolve societal contradictions. Instead, he proposed a fundamentally reformist political strategy in which the state guides the distribution of economic resources in a form that would prevent the class polarization envisioned by Marx. While yon Stein is little known by contemporary social scientists in the English literature, he has been recognized in Europe beyond his time as a theorist and as a governmental consultant whose ideas became materialized in social reforms, offering a ‘political realism’ that was designed to prevent the consequences seen by Marx in the development of capitalism, as well as to avoid the fallacies of the liberal belief in free and unregulated pursuit of individual self-interests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
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24. LONG-RUN EQUILIBRIUM IN THE EMPIRICAL STUDY OF MONOPOLY AND COMPETITION.
- Author
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Glick, Mark and Ehrbar, Hans
- Subjects
- *
PROFIT , *CAPITALISM ,COMPETITION - Abstract
A long-run tendency of industry profit rates to converge to a single competitive level has been a fundamental tenet of the industrial organization approach to the study of competitiveness in a market economy. This paper shows that for the post World War II period a weak equalization can be econometrically identified with different reaction speeds by industry. However, persistent profit rate differences endure. Finally, a portfolio theory of risk is considered as an explanation of these differentials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1990
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25. CO-MOVEMENTS IN RELATIVE COMMODITY PRICES AND INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL FLOWS: A SIMPLE MODEL.
- Author
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Jones, Ronald W.
- Subjects
- *
CAPITALISM , *COMMERCIAL products , *CAPITAL movements , *INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
Suppose a number of countries produce a commodity which employs local labor and a type of capital that is internationally mobile. Within the framework of a specific-factors model the paper argues that there is a presumption about the international movement of capital when the relative price of the industry using that capital rises on world markets. Capital flows towards countries less heavily involved in producing the commodity; internal labor flows contribute towards worldwide industry dispersion; and the volume of international trade in that commodity tends to fall. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Coming Revolution of Biotechnology: A Critique of Buttel.
- Author
-
Otero, Gerardo
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURE , *BIOTECHNOLOGY , *INTERNATIONAL competition , *GENETIC engineering ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Frederick Buttel was one of the pioneers in studying the social impacts of biotechnology, claiming originally that it will involve profound changes in social structure. Recently Buttel turned around his argument proposing that, rather than revolutionary, biotechnology is more a "substitutionist" technological form to be applied to declining sectors of the economy than an "epoch-making" technology. This paper provides both external and internal critiques of Buttel's new position based on the concept of the "third technological revolution," looking at the impact of new technologies as a global and interrelated phenomenon, and not on an individual case-by-case basis. The concluding section suggests the necessity of bringing into the analysis those living in the Third World: 60% of this population lives from agriculture and will be affected by the deployment of agricultural biotechnologies, whether through "substitutionism" or through totally new products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Relative Autonomy of the State and the Origins of British Welfare Policy.
- Author
-
Valocchi, Steve
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC welfare , *PUBLIC spending , *SOCIAL services , *HUMAN services , *CAPITALISM , *POLITICAL doctrines , *SOCIAL problems - Abstract
This paper assesses the relative influence of organizational vs. class power in affecting the timing and the shape of the British welfare reforms of 1908-1911. Rather than viewing these reforms as either the outcome of the direct pressure of business or as an internal response from a newly bureaucratized state to solve social problems, this analysis finds more evidence for a perspective that emphasizes the more indirect, more mediated class biases inherent in the British slate as setting the context within which action on welfare reform occurred. Specifically, I argue that state managers used their newly developed organizational capacity to shape the Liberal reforms according to their own purposes but these purposes were limited by several class-based factors. The historical conclusions point to a synthesis of the relative autonomy approaches to the capitalist state advanced in the neo-Marxist work of Poulantzas, Offe, and Block. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Cities in Global Capitalism.
- Author
-
Barnes, Trevor J.
- Subjects
- *
CAPITALISM , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Culture and regional economic development: Evidence from China.
- Author
-
Shi, Shuxing, Huang, Kunming, Ye, Dezhu, and Yu, Linhui
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *REGIONAL economics , *ECONOMIC statistics , *GROSS domestic product , *CAPITALISM ,ECONOMIC conditions in China, 2000- - Abstract
Empirical research on the determinants of regional economic development typically neglects the influence of culture. This study fills that gap by attempting to establish a causal linkage between culture and economic development in the Chinese context. Our empirical analyses are based on a comprehensive economic statistics of China's provinces and prefectures during 1978 to 2008. We use Protestantism as a proxy for culture because Protestant ethic has been linked to the spirit of capitalism and commercial culture in Weber's famous work. To isolate the exogenous variation in culture measure, historical Protestant dissemination is employed as instruments. The estimation results suggest that Christian commercial culture has a significantly positive impact on economic performance - per capita GDP after other important influences (i.e., capital, population, human resources, institutional quality, trade, infrastructure, geography, etc.) are controlled for. We also find heterogeneous effects of culture on economic development in different regions of China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The economics of belonging: A radical plan to win back the left behind and achieve prosperity for all.
- Author
-
Camară, Gabriel
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT policy , *CAPITALISM , *POLITICAL competition , *EQUAL rights , *POWER (Social sciences) , *ECONOMICS education - Abstract
Princeton University Press has published recently, along with the book revised here, some authored books which focus on contemporary socio-economic issues, with the scope to build a fairer, wealthier, and better society: I What we owe each other: A new social contract for a better society i ([5]), by Minouche Shafik; I The inglorious years: The collapse of the industrial order and the rise of digital society i ([2]), by Daniel Cohen; and I The republic of beliefs: A new approach to law and economic i s ([1]), by Kaushik Basu. The titles of the chapters are also very suggestive, and reflect their content: for example, chapter 4, "Half a century of policy mistakes", chapter 5, "Scapegoating Globalisation", chapter 10, "A tax policy for the left behind", and also for the rest of the chapters. The book begins with an interesting preface that describes the impact of the pandemic on society, by intensifying many of the inequalities described in this book. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Order without design.
- Author
-
Saiz, Albert
- Subjects
- *
URBAN planning , *URBAN economics , *HOUSING policy , *CAPITALISM , *LANDOWNERS - Abstract
As an economist in an Urban Planning programme, I was excitedly eager to read Alain Bertaud's magnum opus about the importance of my own subject. Hanoi's plan proposes reserving large swaths of the area around the city as a bio-reserve for rice cultivation. The last two chapters address urban planning utopias, and the need for integration of urban economics into planning. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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