Anthropological Economy of Debt

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Alternative Financial Mechanisms
Antoine Heemeryck
Bernard Lietaer
Cargo Cults
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Category=JHMC
Chicago Plan
Colonial Administration
Complementary Currencies
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Eveline Baumann
FranSe Bourdarias
Houari Boumediene
Imaginary Debts
Isabelle GuN
Jean-Michel Servet
Jean-Yves Moisseron
Laurent Bazin
Magalie Saussey
Material Debt
Micro-credit Institutions
Microcredit Institutions
Microcredit Loans
Microcredit Organizations
Monique Selim
Mouhamedoune Abdoulaye Fall
NGO Employee
Pepita Ould Ahmed
Produce Shea Butter
Public Gender Policies
Rotating Credit
Shea Butter
Sovereign Market
Tamil Nadu
Tassadit Yacine
Tom Moerenhout
Typical NGO
Women's Debt
Women's Indebtedness
Women’s Debt
Women’s Indebtedness
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138888838
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Apr 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Debt is often thought of as a mere economic variable governed by a simplistic mechanical logic, ignoring its other facets. Whose debt, and debt of what exactly? This volume analyzes debt as a political and social construct, with a multiplicity of purposes and agents. All of these are vectors of meanings that are highly diverse, and of subtle distinctions; they show that debt is a transverse phenomenon, cutting across spaces that are not merely economic but also domestic, social and political. Each contributor takes a fresh view of the subject, dealing with debt at a different time, in a different society, on a different scale of observation. By adopting a determinedly interdisciplinary approach, the authors reveal in the phenomenon of debt a diversity of social and gendered determinants that amount in some cases to domination, allegiance or slavery, and in others to solidarity and emancipation. Debt is at one and the same time shared, imposed, political and gendered.

Bernard Hours is Director of Research at the Research Institute for Development (Paris, France). Pepita Ould Ahmed is a socio-economist at the Research Institute for Development (Paris, France).