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Examines the views of neoclassicist Friedrich A. Hayek, sociologist Emile Durkheim and Karl Polanyi on liberalism. Relationship between the individual, the market economy and society; Features of Hayekian neoclassical economics; Information on Polanyi's book 'The Great Transformation.'
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The author critiques the expedient application of market valuation principles by the transnational corporations and other large firms in the Indian pharmaceutical industry on a number of issues like patents, pricing, irrational drugs, clinical trials, etc. He contends that ethics in business is chiseled and etched within the confines of particular social structures of accumulation. An ascendant neo-liberal social structure of accumulation has basically shaped these firms' sharp opposition to...
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Explores the role of markets in achieving social well-being in Latin America, highlighting alternatives theories for this relationship based on the work of Karl Polanyi. Role of markets in reducing poverty; Relation between markets and social institutions; Ways in which market liberalization is damaging the livelihoods of the poor.
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Examines the relationship between democracy and development to set the scene for the pressing contemporary issue of how globalization might affect democracy and vice versa. Reference to the work of Karl Polanyi who posited a dual movement of market expansion matched by increasing social control over it; Impact of globalization.
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This article constructs a model of contemporary currency crises which incorporates the role played by institutional investors and the dynamics associated with Karl Polanyi's notion of the "double movement." Polanyi's double movement, and its recognition of the need to integrate politics with economics, is used to explain why so many governments are prone to pursue policies that lead to a speculative attack against fixed exchange rates and why virtually every modern fixed exchange rate regime...
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This article re-interprets and develops Polanyi’s substantive institutionalist analysis of capitalist market economies and the market society in the light of two more recent approaches to the same issues. These are the Parisian ‘regulation school’ on contemporary capitalism and systems-theoretica l accounts of the modern economy. All three regard the capitalist economy (or, for autopoietic systems theory, the market economy) as an operationally autonomous system that is nonetheless socially...
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Vouloir débattre de questions d’économie politique, comme la présente revue et toute l’oeuvre de Karl Polanyi (1) nous y invitent, semble relever, à l’aube du XXIe siècle, d’une absolue gageure. Sur le plan académique, l’économie politique s’est métamorphosée en une « science » économique fondée sous le double sceau de l’individualisme méthodologique et de l’affirmation d’une dichotomie totale entre faits et valeurs. A l’inverse, l’anthropologie de Polanyi se fonde sur un socialisme...
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Focuses on the social and political changes brought about by capitalism in Europe. Advocacy of socialist Karl Marx, Karl Popper and Karl Polanyi for social democracy; Discussion on the relationship between society and economy; Notion of futurism regarding the inevitability of change.
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Dominant strands of thinking in contemporary social science consider economic globalisation, the increasing role of cross-border flows and transactions in economic organisation, in terms of some combination of either limited or considerable economic impact and either positive or negative consequences for the general welfare. Little attention has been given thus far to its political consequences within those parts of the world, the developed countries of the Global North, where its impact...
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This article reconstructs Karl Polanyi’s account of fascism’s rise in his 1935 article, “The Essence of Fascism.” Following the elevation of Hitler to power in 1933, Polanyi embarked on a reassessment of Nietzsche, Othmar Spann, Spengler, Evola, and other figures of the interwar conservative revolution. He argues that the fascist quest for national unity emerges when 19th century liberalism fails to address the growing atomization and economic dislocation of modern society. On the one hand,...
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The Great Transformation, published in 1944 by Karl Polanyi, brought a new dimension to the relationship between market, state, and welfare. Polanyi considered the relation between markets and societies as a central feature of any social order; according to him, while the market destabilizes society, the commodification of labor, land, and money creates a reaction or “counter-movement.” For this reason, he describes market society as being a dominant principle for social organization. Social...
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This article advances Rodrik's political trilemma of the world economy by using insights from Polanyi’s The Great Transformation, which helps to grasp the interwoven dynamics of long-term transformations due to climate change and geopolitical reordering on one hand, and on the other short-term political ruptures due to countermovements. Rodrik's globalization trilemma shows the incompatibility of hyperglobalization with the need for an enlarged democratic policy space. Its nodes...
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Karl Polanyi (1886-1964) est surtout connu pour son livre The Great Transformation, et en particulier pour une idée contenue dans celui-ci : la distinction entre une « économie intégrée dans les relations sociales » et « des relations sociales intégrées dans le système économique ». Selon cet auteur, les activités économiques et techniques n’étaient d’abord qu’une des nombreuses excroissances des activités humaines. L’économie archaïque a donc été au service des besoins humains. Mais, au...
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Karl Polanyi’s double movement is a key tool for conceptualising free market fatigue in African business communities wrought by the insecurities of trade liberalisation. Synthesising Polanyi with Kwame Nkrumah’s work on neo-colonialism, the article argues that exhausted business communities in Africa can contest free market reforms and push for a return to developmentalist strategies, underscoring a double movement. In this discussion it highlights Ghana, a ‘donor darling’ in terms of...
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In this article we argue that reinvigorating socialist politics requires championing a socialist worldview that goes beyond the critique of capitalism. Neglecting such an outlook leaves socialism tethered to the fortunes of capitalism and inhibits a broader account of its own virtues. We begin by explaining why worldview thinking is appropriate today. Then we examine two underappreciated works by Karl Polanyi (his 1927 lecture “On Freedom”) and Charles Taylor (his 1974 essay “Socialism and...
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Karl Polanyi’s The great transformation emphasized the importance of non-market institutions for social equity and stability. In that same era, Friedrich Hayek postulated in The road to serfdom that superior economies were market-based and featured minimal government. I compare these worldviews in relation to property and violent crime. Using US county data, change in crime is modeled as a function of economic structure, economic conditions, and demographics. Consistent with Polanyi, the...
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For Karl Polanyi, the economic system cannot be analyzed in isolation from social institutions. The economicism fallacy neglects social variables that are fundamental for determining economic action and systemic transformations. This implies that the rise of the self-regulated market system and its dominance over social institutions are not a natural movement when analyzed in the light of the entire history of human societies. For the author, what happened was a kind of uprooting of the...
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The conventional way of producing and distributing food is based on the use of agrochemicals, fertilizers, industrial fertilizers and other techniques from the Green Revolution, with increasing dependence on financial-industrial capital, which implies the intensification of the agriculture commodification. The object of this study was the emergence of modes of organization resisting this trend. Based on the theoretical reference of Karl Polanyi (2012a, 2012b), a case study was developed in a...
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As factors of production, labor, money, and land play a role in economics that is rarely understood. The difficulty of deriving the contribution of the individual factor of production to the value of jointly produced final commodities (the famous “problem of imputation”) occupied generations of Austrian economists (Hayek 1984) and inspired Ludwig Mises to produce his 1920 article “Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth” (Mises 1935). Any attempt at rational socialist planning is...
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ABSTRACT A reading of Karl Polanyi’s work gives us a broader and more plural view of the development process beyond the exclusively economic dimension. This scientific text aims to recover the theoretical contribution of Karl Polanyi and its contribution to the understanding of the development process from a plural and substantive conception of economy. The key lesson learned in this research is that regardless of a country’s economic system, one should pay attention to the existing...
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