Decommodification and Egalitarian Political Economy

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Decommodification and Egalitarian Political Economy
Abstract
This article contends that decommodification is an appropriate concept for understanding diverse initiatives such as fair trade, microfinance, open source, social enterprises, and the environmental commons as component features of a common process. Decommodification is conceived as any political, social, or cultural process that reduces the scope and influence of the market in everyday life. Given recent transformations in market societies, a more expansive framework for decommodification is urgently required. Decommodification would insulate non-market spheres from market encroachments; increase the provision of public goods and expand social protection; promote democratic control over the market by creating economic circuits grounded in a logic predicated on social needs rather than profit; and undermine market hegemony by revealing the market’s true social costs and consequences. By ensuring basic needs, enhancing individual capacities and capabilities, and promoting social cooperation and collaboration, decommodification constitutes a central feature of an egalitarian agenda.
Publication
Politics & Society
Volume
38
Issue
3
Pages
310-346
Date
September 1, 2010
Journal Abbr
Politics & Society
Language
English
ISSN
0032-3292
Accessed
2017-02-14, 3:18 p.m.
Library Catalog
SAGE Journals
Citation
Vail, John. 2010. “Decommodification and Egalitarian Political Economy.” Politics & Society 38 (3): 310–46. DOI: 10.1177/0032329210373069.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
  • decommodification
  • double movement
  • icy silence
  • sociology

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