Cultural political economy and critical policy studies
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Jessop, Bob (Author)
Title
Cultural political economy and critical policy studies
Abstract
This article introduces cultural political economy as a distinctive approach in the social sciences, including policy studies. The version presented here combines critical semiotic analysis and critical political economy. It grounds its approach to both in the practical necessities of complexity reduction and the role of meaning-making and structuration in turning unstructured into structured complexity as a basis for ‘going on’ in the world. It explores both semiosis and structuration in terms of the evolutionary mechanisms of variation, selection, and retention and, in this context, also highlights the role of specific forms of agency and specific technologies. These general propositions are illustrated from ‘economic imaginaries’ (other types of imaginary could have been examined) and their relevance to economic policy. Brief comments on crisis-interpretation and crisis-management give this example some substance. The conclusion notes some implications for research in critical policy studies.
Publication
Critical Policy Studies
Volume
3
Issue
3-4
Pages
336-356
Date
April 28, 2010
Language
English
ISSN
1946-0171
Accessed
2016-09-17, 5:42 p.m.
Library Catalog
Taylor and Francis+NEJM
Citation
Jessop, Bob. 2010. “Cultural Political Economy and Critical Policy Studies.” Critical Policy Studies 3 (3–4): 336–56. DOI: 10.1080/19460171003619741.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- complexity
- crisis
- crisis-management
- cultural political economy
- cultural turn
- finance-led accumulation
- green new deal
- neoliberalism
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