Your search
Results 295 resources
-
This article looks at corporate social responsibility (CSR) as a discur-sive social practice that attempts to interrogate the global market econ-omy and its neoliberal underpinnings and that reflects as well as frames and shapes domestic and global politics and institutions. Drawing upon Karl Polanyi's notions of reciprocity and redistribution while also emphasizing the normative content of the concept, the article inquires into the position that the CSR discourse occupies in addressing the...
-
This paper aims to clarify the logical structure of Karl Polanyi's concept of institution, especially with regard to his most important contribution to political economy—the conception of self-regulating markets as institutions. Although Polanyi did not provide a well-developed concept of institution, this article argues that such a concept exists in his work. Moreover, there is in Polanyi's work a sophisticated institutionalist account of the self-regulating market that has been largely...
-
Faced with the twin challenges of anthropogenic climate change and ‘peak oil’, the need for an urgent and radical transformation of transport energy has been widely recognised. Adopting a neo-Polanyian economic sociology approach, this article asks what conditions European governance capacity to respond to these challenges, at either national or regional levels, using biofuels as a case study. It asks if the complexity of its political institutions, and the heterogeneity of interests and...
-
Reflecting a developing trend towards interdisciplinary research in economics and law, this agenda–setting volume makes the case for economic sociology of law an emerging field that draws on empirical, analytical and normative insights from sociology to investigate relationships between legal and economic phenomena. It locates this novel subject in a wider socio–legal tradition and identifies common ground between Polanyian and Weberian approaches to the law, economy, and society,...
-
Ideas (of Karl Polanyi and others) that economies and markets are ‘socially embedded’ are central to recent research in economic sociology, closely paralleling socio-legal claims for studying law in ‘social context’. But the concept of embeddedness is imprecise and inadequate: a sociology of law and economy cannot rely on it but must address intellectual and moral-political concerns that its use reflects. Max Weber's writings on law and economy have inspired advocates of a new economic...
-
This article explores the relationship between law, society, and economy in the context of the contemporary British welfare state. Drawing on themes in Polanyi's The Great Transformation, it identifies the constitutive role of contemporary social policy and law in the creation and maintenance of markets and opportunities for the private sector in the field of welfare, focusing on the institutional mechanisms being put in place to encourage this. What emerges is a reformulation of the...
-
Bottled water sits at the intersection of debates regarding the social and environmental effects of the commodification of nature and the ways neoliberal globalization alters the provision of public services. Utilizing Polanyi's concept of fictitious commodities and Harvey's work on accumulation by dispossession, this article traces bottled water's transformation from elite niche item to a product consumed by three fourths of U. S. households. Drawing on ethnographic research with...
-
To what extent does the social treatment of workplace injury in Switzerland enable victims to be decommodified in the sense given by Gøsta Esping-Andersen (1990) to this concept, i.e. enable them to leave the labor market in a way that allows them to uphold a socially acceptable standard of living? After a sociological discussion about the concept of decommodification, we present the results of a qualitative study conducted in Switzerland about workplace accident victims and show that the...
-
This paper argues that the contemporary efficacy of nationalist politics is a strategic response to neoliberal conditions of state legitimation. Using the double movement as a theoretical framework, I argue that neoliberalism alters the policy alternatives available to state actors by reducing the viability of economic protectionist initiatives once dominant in the embedded liberal era. This policy capacity reduction inhibits some of the key means for state legitimation (e.g., public...
-
The Polanyian discussion about the embeddedness of the economy in social relations, finds a new stream through the social network analysis, from which is possible to map the cooperation relations that underlie economic ones. From the latter, this article shows the analysis of nine family-based economic entrepreneurships linked to a cooperative of services and agrofood products. Through personal networks analysis we mapped and highlighted the diversity of collaborations, monetary and...
-
KM - What should we do with Marxism ? For most the answer is simple. Bury it ! Mainstream social science has long since bid farewell to Marxism. The approach adopted here is that Marxism is a living tradition that enjoys renewal and reconstruction as the world it describes and seeks to transform undergoes change ... However, Marxsm cannot simply mirror the world. It seeks to change the world, but changing such a variegated world requires a variegated theory that keeps up with the times and...
-
The author uses the theory of the 'Great Transformation' of the industrialisation of England developed by Karl Polanyi to describe the current situation in Europe. There is a strong marketisation of the economy and also of social life, but what is missing is the social policy that needs to accompany this process, if there are not to be major problems. From this perspective marketization and social policy do not exist in a zero-sum game, but are mutually dependent. The emphasis on negative...
-
Why is it that in the nearly 10 years since the Chinese central government began making symbolic and material moves towards class compromise that labor unrest has expanded greatly? In this article I reconfigure Karl Polanyi's theory of the coutermovement to account for recent developments in Chinese labor politics. Specifically, I argue that countermovements must be broken down into two constituent but intertwined "moments": the insurgent moment that consists of spontaneous resistance to the...
-
The problem of the governance of economic transactions arises from the fact that they are sequential. This creates uncertainty regarding the fulfilment of implicit or explicit contracts. Institutional economics understands this uncertainty as arising from opportunism and seeks a solution in specialised contract enforcement institutions. Economic sociology understands the uncertainty as a result of misunderstanding and finds a solution in mechanisms of governance that, in addition to...
-
A literary criticism of the book "Michael Polanyi and His Generation: Origins of the Social Construction of Science," by Mary Jo Nye is presented. The author discusses the significance of Michael Polanyi in the history of science studies and provides insight on his life and his relationship with his brother Karl. He analyzes how the book presents the origins of science studies, Polanyi’s activities as an economist, and his fight against Communism.
-
Karl Polanyi’s theory of the ‘double movement’ has gained great currency in recent years to explain the global growth of contemporary social movements resisting neoliberalism. However, there has been no statistical research demonstrating whether these protest movements represent a more general trend of growing discontent with ‘disembedding’ markets from public control. This article uses questions from the World Values Survey to construct an ‘embeddedness’ index measuring public opinion on...
-
Sociologists have paid scant attention to the possibility that the structure of the macro-economy is an important determinant of income inequality. Although prior research finds negative links between the size of the public sector and income inequality, no study to date considers whether the size of consumer markets has distributional consequences as well. To investigate this possibility, the present study measures the size of national consumer markets with the System of National Accounts...
-
The three books under review in this article all demonstrate the beginnings of a shift in the tone of literature on or derived from the work of Karl Polanyi. On one hand, the authors all show a willingness to admit a variety of problems and weaknesses in his work. But on the other hand, it is precisely this degree of critical introspection that enables the authors under review to identify some of the most important and contemporarily relevant aspects of Polanyi's thought. In the two main...
-
Abstract This paper argues that development studies could benefit from a closer engagement with the arguments of Karl Polanyi. Firstly, a Polanyian perspective gives greater weight to non-economic and non-material factors in making, maintaining and modifying markets. Secondly, it focuses research on the problematic, state- sponsored and contested process of bringing the market actor into being. Finally, a Polanyian approach might better link a, broadly speaking, leftist analysis to 'real...
Explore
Discipline
- Sociology
- Political Science & Int'l Relations (38)
- Economics (22)
- Law / Legal Studies (16)
- Anthropology (6)
- Geography / Urban Studies (5)
- Development Studies (4)
- History & Classical Studies (4)
- Business/Industrial Relations/Management Studies (2)
- Environmental & Sustainability Studies (2)
- Science & Technology Studies (2)
- Area Studies (1)
- Communication & Media Studies (1)
- Criminology (1)
- Cultural Studies (1)
- Interdisciplanary Studies (1)
- Philosophy (1)
- Rural Studies (1)
- Systems Studies (1)
Resource type
- Blog Post (1)
- Book (25)
- Book Section (22)
- Conference Paper (13)
- Journal Article (229)
- Magazine Article (1)
- Report (3)
- Thesis (1)