Fr. 100.00

Economy/society - Markets, Meanings, and Social Structure

English · Paperback / Softback

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Informationen zum Autor Bruce Carruthers Ph.D. University of Chicago 1991. Areas of interest include historical and comparative sociology, economic sociology, sociology of law and sociology of organizations. Carruthers has written three books, City of Capital Politics and Markets in the English Financial Revolution (Princeton University, 1996), Rescuing Business: The Making of Corporate Bankruptcy Law in England and the United States (Oxford, 1998), and Economy/Society: Markets, Meanings and Social Structure (Pine Forge Press, 2000). His current research projects are on the evolution of credit decision-making as a problem in the sociology of trust, and worldwide changes in bankruptcy law in the era of a globalized world economy. He has had visiting fellowships at the Russell Sage Foundation and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, and received a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship. He is methodologically agnostic, and does not believe that the qualitative/quantitative distinction is worth fighting over. Sarah Babb is a Professor of Sociology at Boston College. She specializes in the areas of Economic Sociology, Latin America, Political Sociology, Comparative and Historical Sociology, Organizations and Globalization. Her most recent book is Managing Mexico: Economists from Nationalism to Neoliberalism. Klappentext This long-awaited Second Edition continues to offer an accessible introduction to the way social arrangements affect economic activity, and shows that economic exchanges are deeply embedded in social relationships. Understanding how society shapes the economy helps us answer many important questions. For example, how does advertising get people to buy things? How do people use their social connections to get jobs? How did large bureaucratic organizations come to be so pervasive in modern economies - and what difference does it make? How can we explain the persistence of economic inequalities between men and women and across racial groups? Why do some countries become rich while others stay poor? This book presents sociological answers to questions like these, and encourages its readers to view the economy through a sociological lens. Zusammenfassung Understanding how society shapes the economy helps us answer many important questions. For example! how does advertising get people to buy things? How do people use their social connections to get jobs? This title presents sociological answers to questions like these. Inhaltsverzeichnis Chapter 1: The Embeddedness of Markets Markets and Their Alternatives Markets and Their Preconditions The Embeddedness of Markets The Consequences of Markets The Variety of Capitalisms Globalization Outline of the Book Chapter 2: Marketing and the Meaning of Things Things and Meaning Commodities as Gifts Consumerism Consumers and Debt Advertising Diversity and Consumerism Consumerism and Globalization Conclusion Chapter 3: Organizations and the Economy The Power of the Boss Organizations around the Globe Organizations and Internal Labor Markets The Organizational Context for Conflict Workplace and Personal Life The Formation of an Organizational Economy Conclusion Chapter 4: Networks in the Economy What Is a Network? Why Networks Matter Individual Networks The Importance of Networks in Markets Conclusion Chapter 5: Banking and Finance What Does a Financial System Do? Finance and Development Regulation and Deregulation Disintermediation Innovation and Status Household Finance Globalization and Finance Conclusion Chapter 6: Economic Inequality Inequality in Perspective Inequality and Efficiency Explaining Recent Trends in Income Inequality Globalization Rac...

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