The market and the nation: Austrian (dis)agreements

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The market and the nation: Austrian (dis)agreements
Abstract
This article relates contemporary Austria's much-discussed and internally contested identity politics to transnational socio-economic transformations and their far-reaching local/national effects. A qualitative analysis of (wide-ranging contributions to) current debates on the environment, food production, climate change, social inequality and welfare, higher education, art, migration, and unemployment reveals a recurring pre-occupation with expanding/encroaching markets, their advocated limits, assumed costs or promises. The negotiation of national identities is shown to unfold in relation to three inter-related phenomena: first, widening commodification; second, what Karl Polanyi termed the 'double-movement' between 'dis-embedded' economics and political counter-assertions; third, competing ideological visions of the relationship between economic activity/market forces and social order, group boundaries, solidarities and hence exclusions/inclusions.
Publication
Social Identities
Volume
14
Issue
2
Pages
161-187
Date
March 2008
Journal Abbr
Social Identities
Language
English
ISSN
13504630
Short Title
The market and the nation
Accessed
2017-06-25, 2:33 a.m.
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Karner, Christian. 2008. “The Market and the Nation: Austrian (Dis)Agreements.” Social Identities 14 (2): 161–87. DOI: 10.1080/13504630801931237.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
  • Austria
  • commodification
  • economic anthropology
  • globalization
  • identity politics
  • markets
  • migration
  • nationalism
  • political science
  • public contracts
  • qualitative research
  • social order
  • socioeconomics

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