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Journal ArticleDOI

Moral Views of Market Society

TLDR
A review of the relationship between markets and the moral order can be found in this paper, where the authors evaluate how today's scholarship approaches the relationship and argue that a moralized view of markets has become increasingly prominent in economic sociology.
Abstract
Upon what kind of moral order does capitalism rest? Conversely, does the market give rise to a distinctive set of beliefs, habits, and social bonds? These questions are certainly as old as social science itself. In this review, we evaluate how today’s scholarship approaches the relationship between markets and the moral order. We begin with Hirschman’s characterization of the three rival views of the market as civilizing, destructive, or feeble in its effects on society. We review recent work at the intersection of sociology, economics, and political economy and show that these views persist both as theories of market society and moral arguments about it. We then argue that a fourth view, which we call moralized markets, has become increasingly prominent in economic sociology. This line of research sees markets as cultural phenomena and moral projects in their own right, and seeks to study the mechanisms and techniques by which such projects are realized in practice.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Comparative Sociology of Valuation and Evaluation

TL;DR: The authors discusses North American and European research from the sociology of valuation and evaluation (SVE), a research topic that has attracted considerable attention in recent years, focusing on subprocesses such as categorization and legitimation, conditions that sustain heterarchies and valuation and evaluative practices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forage for thought: Mobilizing codes in the movement for grass-fed meat and dairy products

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use qualitative data on the grassroots coalition movement that has spurred a market for grass-fed meat and dairy products in the United States since the early 1990s, and show that the movement's participants mobilized broad cultural codes and these codes motivated producers to enter and persist in a nascent market, shaped their choices about production and exchange technologies, enabled a collective identity, and formed the basis of the products' exchange value.
Book

Alternative Food Networks: Knowledge, Practice, and Politics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce Alternative Food Networks, Fair Trade Circuits and the Politics of Food, and the shifting cultural politics of Fair Trade. But they do not discuss the role of food re-localization in the transition from transparent to virtual living.
Journal ArticleDOI

What is neo-liberalism?

TL;DR: The authors argue that a failure to grasp neo-liberalism as a political form imposes two limitations on understanding its effects: (i) fostering an implicit assumption that European political elites are "naturally" opposed to the implementation of Neo-liberal policies; and (ii) tending to preempt inquiry into an unsettling fact that the most effective advocates of policies understood as Neo-Liberal in Western Europe (and beyond) have often been elites who are sympathetic to, or are representatives of, the left and centre-left.
References
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Book

Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance

TL;DR: Douglass C. North as discussed by the authors developed an analytical framework for explaining the ways in which institutions and institutional change affect the performance of economies, both at a given time and over time.
Posted Content

Institutions, Institutional Change, and Economic Performance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the role that institutions, defined as the humanly devised constraints that shape human interaction, play in economic performance and how those institutions change and how a model of dynamic institutions explains the differential performance of economies through time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outline of a Theory of Practice

TL;DR: Bourdieu as mentioned in this paper develops a theory of practice which is simultaneously a critique of the methods and postures of social science and a general account of how human action should be understood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a fully specified model of long-run growth in which knowledge is assumed to be an input in production that has increasing marginal productivity, which is essentially a competitive equilibrium model with endogenous technological change.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Market for “Lemons”: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a struggling attempt to give structure to the statement: "Business in under-developed countries is difficult"; in particular, a structure is given for determining the economic costs of dishonesty.