Prof. Dr. Mükerrem Hiç Dr. Özlen Hiç
... critical assumption leading to Keynesian UNE was P&W-rigidities; REH was not the critical assumption although it is deemed so by New Classicals (Klamer 1984). Secondly the New Classicals would not open any discussion if REH were not accepted. Eager to enter into discussions with them, New Keynesians ...
... critical assumption leading to Keynesian UNE was P&W-rigidities; REH was not the critical assumption although it is deemed so by New Classicals (Klamer 1984). Secondly the New Classicals would not open any discussion if REH were not accepted. Eager to enter into discussions with them, New Keynesians ...
Analytical philosophy and ecological economics John O`Neill and
... social use values (politically evaluated) for which the formal calculus in monetary exchange values fails to provide a real measure – not only in socialist societies but also in capitalist economies. Hence the ‘revolutionary’ aspect of the environmental issue both as a theoretical and a practical pr ...
... social use values (politically evaluated) for which the formal calculus in monetary exchange values fails to provide a real measure – not only in socialist societies but also in capitalist economies. Hence the ‘revolutionary’ aspect of the environmental issue both as a theoretical and a practical pr ...
Anthropology`s Multiple Temporalities and its Future in
... locate their object of study outside of real historical time. However, and this too was attributable to Malinowski’s lead and success in fundraising, by the late colonial period most ethnographers began to build diachronic elements into their study. The extent to which they engage with history conti ...
... locate their object of study outside of real historical time. However, and this too was attributable to Malinowski’s lead and success in fundraising, by the late colonial period most ethnographers began to build diachronic elements into their study. The extent to which they engage with history conti ...
The Evaluation of Post-Keynesian Economics
... Economics and then give the developments of Post-Keynesian Economics in terms of their assumptions and methodology, later on we will discuss the current state of Post-Keynesian Economics. Post-Keynesian school of macroeconomics was developed in the mid ‘80s as a reaction not only against New Classic ...
... Economics and then give the developments of Post-Keynesian Economics in terms of their assumptions and methodology, later on we will discuss the current state of Post-Keynesian Economics. Post-Keynesian school of macroeconomics was developed in the mid ‘80s as a reaction not only against New Classic ...
Disappearing Worlds: Anthropology and Cultural Studies in Hawai`i
... Knowing that it is risky to generalize about geocultural regions—especially in terms that reduce easily to binary oppositions—we want to draw attention to contrasts between parts of the Pacific that are relatively more literate, mobile, and connected and those which are (relatively) more oral, fixed ...
... Knowing that it is risky to generalize about geocultural regions—especially in terms that reduce easily to binary oppositions—we want to draw attention to contrasts between parts of the Pacific that are relatively more literate, mobile, and connected and those which are (relatively) more oral, fixed ...
D i s a p p e a r i n g Worlds: Anthropology and Cultural Studies in
... Knowing that it is risky to generalize about geocultural regions—especially in terms that reduce easily to binary oppositions—we want to draw attention to contrasts between parts of the Pacific that are relatively more literate, mobile, and connected and those which are (relatively) more oral, fixed ...
... Knowing that it is risky to generalize about geocultural regions—especially in terms that reduce easily to binary oppositions—we want to draw attention to contrasts between parts of the Pacific that are relatively more literate, mobile, and connected and those which are (relatively) more oral, fixed ...
Anthropology and Archaeology: A changing relationship
... One possible way to write this book was as a volume entitled ‘Anthropology for Archaeologists’. A book with this title already exists (Orme 1981), as do others with similar aims (Hodder 1982). As well as not wanting to cover old ground, I soon became convinced that to explain anthropology to archaeo ...
... One possible way to write this book was as a volume entitled ‘Anthropology for Archaeologists’. A book with this title already exists (Orme 1981), as do others with similar aims (Hodder 1982). As well as not wanting to cover old ground, I soon became convinced that to explain anthropology to archaeo ...
world anthropologies - Ram-Wan
... own production. The network has three inter-related goals: a) to examine critically the international dissemination of anthropology - as a changing set of Western discourses and practices - within and across national power fields, and the processes through which this dissemination takes place; b) t ...
... own production. The network has three inter-related goals: a) to examine critically the international dissemination of anthropology - as a changing set of Western discourses and practices - within and across national power fields, and the processes through which this dissemination takes place; b) t ...
Open Access - Lund University Publications
... anthropologists who made their journeys in two different moments of the twentieth century. The first one, and the one who is going to be a central figure of this thesis, is Bronisław Malinowski, the author and main character of A Diary in the strict sense of the term. The second anthropologist is Ki ...
... anthropologists who made their journeys in two different moments of the twentieth century. The first one, and the one who is going to be a central figure of this thesis, is Bronisław Malinowski, the author and main character of A Diary in the strict sense of the term. The second anthropologist is Ki ...
Chapter 1: What is anthropology
... The final fate of Truganini, the last full-blooded Tasmanian, was to be displayed in a museum as an artifact of a vanished culture by the very people that drove that culture to extinction. Do humans have the right to study the remains of other humans and to what extent? Do you agree with the stateme ...
... The final fate of Truganini, the last full-blooded Tasmanian, was to be displayed in a museum as an artifact of a vanished culture by the very people that drove that culture to extinction. Do humans have the right to study the remains of other humans and to what extent? Do you agree with the stateme ...
... taken it some new steps forward. He has synthesized recent debates and has applied the approach to historical contexts and to large-scale institutional contexts (globalization) in a highly useful way. Here he makes use of the idea of within-system incremental changes gradually accumulating until a s ...
Marx, Marginalism and Modern Sociology
... branch of the social sciences. It is only in a capitalist society, based on the generalisation of commodity production, that economic theory emerges as a specialised branch of social theory. This is because it is only in a capitalist society that the reproduction of the social relations of productio ...
... branch of the social sciences. It is only in a capitalist society, based on the generalisation of commodity production, that economic theory emerges as a specialised branch of social theory. This is because it is only in a capitalist society that the reproduction of the social relations of productio ...
ANTHROPOlOgy - UTP Publishing
... anthropology texts available. It is pithy and covers all of the critical areas one would expect in an introductory class. The text itself, rich with ethnographic examples, will certainly inspire classroom debates, and discussion questions and classroom activity suggestions are well formulated, encou ...
... anthropology texts available. It is pithy and covers all of the critical areas one would expect in an introductory class. The text itself, rich with ethnographic examples, will certainly inspire classroom debates, and discussion questions and classroom activity suggestions are well formulated, encou ...
Introduction to Post-Social Anthropology
... professors are not professional philosophers; our reading does not pretend at all to be a philosophical reading. We believe, nevertheless, that philosophical issues should always be explicated in anthropology courses. They are always acting in any case, and it is better to start by coming clean abou ...
... professors are not professional philosophers; our reading does not pretend at all to be a philosophical reading. We believe, nevertheless, that philosophical issues should always be explicated in anthropology courses. They are always acting in any case, and it is better to start by coming clean abou ...
Blood of My Blood - The George Washington University
... The Gullah people of the South Carolina Sea Islands offer a focus for research on cultural heritage and commodification. Following the Civil War, the Gullah relocated to the Sea Islands, isolating themselves from the mainland and largely preserving their cultural traditions, language, and beliefs. R ...
... The Gullah people of the South Carolina Sea Islands offer a focus for research on cultural heritage and commodification. Following the Civil War, the Gullah relocated to the Sea Islands, isolating themselves from the mainland and largely preserving their cultural traditions, language, and beliefs. R ...
The Historical Study of Ethnographic Fieldwork: Margaret Mead and
... time. His travels took him on pathways and past battlegrounds that elicited from his Arapesh companions stories of great alliances, rivalries, and the politics of adultery that provoked men to war. There was nothing comparable in Mead's experience that testified to this precolonial Arapesh culture ...
... time. His travels took him on pathways and past battlegrounds that elicited from his Arapesh companions stories of great alliances, rivalries, and the politics of adultery that provoked men to war. There was nothing comparable in Mead's experience that testified to this precolonial Arapesh culture ...
Kinship Terms in Arabic language
... but also locally recognized to fall outside the literal scope of kin relations (however these may be locally construct in relation to local concepts of biological relation). Such kin is "pseudo" in that the metaphorical quality of the kin terms used to describe its relations is locally and openly ac ...
... but also locally recognized to fall outside the literal scope of kin relations (however these may be locally construct in relation to local concepts of biological relation). Such kin is "pseudo" in that the metaphorical quality of the kin terms used to describe its relations is locally and openly ac ...
Experiments in Holism: Theory and Practice in
... partake in the lives of their informants in order to get better observational data – hence the term “participant observation” – is seen as an important reason for the development of a holistic perspective (Kloos 1974: 169; Blok 1977: 49; Kottak 2006: 262–3; Nanda and Warms 2007: 60). Holism, as Marc ...
... partake in the lives of their informants in order to get better observational data – hence the term “participant observation” – is seen as an important reason for the development of a holistic perspective (Kloos 1974: 169; Blok 1977: 49; Kottak 2006: 262–3; Nanda and Warms 2007: 60). Holism, as Marc ...
Visions of Culture : an Introduction to Anthropological Theories and
... against current theoretical trends in anthropology. Today, for example, cultural ecology and cultural evolution have fallen into disfavor, but they were important theoretical lines of inquiry from roughly 1945 to 1975. The several variations on functionalism were important to anthropology from the m ...
... against current theoretical trends in anthropology. Today, for example, cultural ecology and cultural evolution have fallen into disfavor, but they were important theoretical lines of inquiry from roughly 1945 to 1975. The several variations on functionalism were important to anthropology from the m ...
Household Strategies: their conceptual relevance and analytical
... understand how people cope with varying demands upon them and how they perceive those demands. Edwards and Ribbens even argue that this is a kind of 'empowerment' for their female respondents whose voices are otherwise unheard (1991). The extent to which a strong or a weak definition is used therefo ...
... understand how people cope with varying demands upon them and how they perceive those demands. Edwards and Ribbens even argue that this is a kind of 'empowerment' for their female respondents whose voices are otherwise unheard (1991). The extent to which a strong or a weak definition is used therefo ...
The Cult of the Market: Economic Fundamentalism and its
... always operates in the public interest. Nor is it true that self-interest generally is enlightened; more often individuals acting separately to promote their own ends are too ignorant or too weak to attain even these. Experience does not show that individuals, when they make up a social unit, are al ...
... always operates in the public interest. Nor is it true that self-interest generally is enlightened; more often individuals acting separately to promote their own ends are too ignorant or too weak to attain even these. Experience does not show that individuals, when they make up a social unit, are al ...
Jean Baudrillard, Selected Writings
... and sociology. These disciplines were unable to capture the novelty of consumerism because economics was burdened by a doctrine of homo economicus, the free individual acting in the marketplace, and sociology was hampered by a notion of individual taste and a determinist concept of society. Against ...
... and sociology. These disciplines were unable to capture the novelty of consumerism because economics was burdened by a doctrine of homo economicus, the free individual acting in the marketplace, and sociology was hampered by a notion of individual taste and a determinist concept of society. Against ...
Leslie Spier on the Censure of Franz Boas
... account of the censure episode, discussed the identities and institutional ties of those who voted for and against (1998:261-65). Other writers use this episode to consider the ethical problems of covert research and oflinks between anthropologists and intelligence agencies (Fluehr-Lobban 1991; Pric ...
... account of the censure episode, discussed the identities and institutional ties of those who voted for and against (1998:261-65). Other writers use this episode to consider the ethical problems of covert research and oflinks between anthropologists and intelligence agencies (Fluehr-Lobban 1991; Pric ...
PDF
... It is explained by Foster [2004] why it is necessary to approach economic analysis from a network, rather than a production and utility function perspective, when one deals with complex systems. It is argued that dynamic systems are able to adapt in and evolve with a changing environment. As outline ...
... It is explained by Foster [2004] why it is necessary to approach economic analysis from a network, rather than a production and utility function perspective, when one deals with complex systems. It is argued that dynamic systems are able to adapt in and evolve with a changing environment. As outline ...
Economic anthropology
Economic anthropology is a field that attempts to explain human economic behavior in its widest historic, geographic and cultural scope. It is practiced by anthropologists and has a complex relationship with the discipline of economics, of which it is highly critical. Its origins as a sub-field of anthropology began with work by the Polish-British founder of anthropology Bronislaw Malinowski and his French compatriot[?] Marcel Mauss on the nature of reciprocity as an alternative to market exchange. For the most part, studies in economic anthropology focus on exchange. In contrast, the Marxian school known as ""political economy"" focuses on production.Post-World War II, economic anthropology was highly influenced by the work of economic historian Karl Polanyi. Polanyi drew on anthropological studies to argue that true market exchange was limited to a restricted number of western, industrial societies. Applying formal economic theory (Formalism) to non-industrial societies was mistaken, he argued. In non-industrial societies, exchange was ""embedded"" in such non-market institutions as kinship, religion, and politics (an idea he borrowed from Mauss). He labelled this approach Substantivism. The Formalist vs Substantivist debate was highly influential and defined an era.As globalization became a reality, and the division between market and non-market economies – between ""the west and the rest"" – became untenable, anthropologists began to look at the relationship between a variety of types of exchange within market societies. Neo-substantivists examine the ways in which so-called pure market exchange in market societies fails to fit market ideology. Economic anthropologists have abandoned the primitivist niche they were relegated to by economists. They now study the operations of corporations, banks, and the global financial system from an anthropological perspective.