Journal of Cultural Economy
... They do not stand outside of hegemonic economies or economics but rather short-circuit them from within, or route certain elements of them though other pathways. In doing so, I argued, they resemble social inquiry itself, which takes elements from one domain and explains them in terms of others, mak ...
... They do not stand outside of hegemonic economies or economics but rather short-circuit them from within, or route certain elements of them though other pathways. In doing so, I argued, they resemble social inquiry itself, which takes elements from one domain and explains them in terms of others, mak ...
Michael Rosen: Jerry Cohen – an Appreciation
... “DiaMat” was beside the point. Although the idea that science can get by quite well without any epistemological or metaphysical guidance from philosophy sounds like positivism, Althusser‟s form of it was actually very different. Where the positivists thought that all sound science shared a single st ...
... “DiaMat” was beside the point. Although the idea that science can get by quite well without any epistemological or metaphysical guidance from philosophy sounds like positivism, Althusser‟s form of it was actually very different. Where the positivists thought that all sound science shared a single st ...
The Knowledge Society: Innovation, Multimedia and the Postmodern
... are now code words for the technological invention and management of change (not terms for aesthetic and political radicalism). Furthermore, in the past decade we have moved from computers to information to knowledge as the distinguishing feature of postmodern societies, but on the basis of concepti ...
... are now code words for the technological invention and management of change (not terms for aesthetic and political radicalism). Furthermore, in the past decade we have moved from computers to information to knowledge as the distinguishing feature of postmodern societies, but on the basis of concepti ...
Post-Classical Political Economy
... ence of interdependencies, for example, voluntary choice alone cannot be trusted to produce efficient outcomes.7 When economists do take social influences seriously, Granovetter argues, they end up at the other extreme, as do many sociologists: with an oversocialized conception of individuals. They ...
... ence of interdependencies, for example, voluntary choice alone cannot be trusted to produce efficient outcomes.7 When economists do take social influences seriously, Granovetter argues, they end up at the other extreme, as do many sociologists: with an oversocialized conception of individuals. They ...
The narrative constitution of identity: A relational and
... and western. Most important, they claim that it is only in the context of this theoretical sleight of hand, one that claims universality for the particnlaristic and androcentric, that the experiences of others are suppressed, denied, and devalued in the first place. Thus the theoretical response has ...
... and western. Most important, they claim that it is only in the context of this theoretical sleight of hand, one that claims universality for the particnlaristic and androcentric, that the experiences of others are suppressed, denied, and devalued in the first place. Thus the theoretical response has ...
in PDF format
... managers have been selected and/or trained not be economic actors” (Miller and Hammond 1994: 23). And, of course, there is then no collective action problem in the first place, because it is “solved” by blurring the assumption about human behavior on which the model is built. Due to what is known ab ...
... managers have been selected and/or trained not be economic actors” (Miller and Hammond 1994: 23). And, of course, there is then no collective action problem in the first place, because it is “solved” by blurring the assumption about human behavior on which the model is built. Due to what is known ab ...