Contemporary Economic Sociology

Regular price €64.99
2000a
A01=Fran Tonkiss
advanced
Antiglobalisation Movement
Author_Fran Tonkiss
capitalist
Capitalist World Economy
castells
Castells 2000a
Category=JH
Category=JHBA
Category=JHBL
Category=JHM
Category=KCP
Civil Society
class and status dynamics
compression
Contemporary Capitalist Economies
Contemporary Economic Life
Contemporary Economies
Contemporary Societies
cultural economy studies
Economic Governance
economic restructuring in society
economies
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
FDI Stock
Fordist Production
Fordist Systems
Human Development Index
IMF Policy
IMF Structural Adjustment Programme
International Economic Governance
labour
Mass Industrial Production
Non-income Poverty
Nonmaterial Goods
political economy analysis
post-industrial society
process
Silicon Valleys
social exclusion theory
Social Organisation
Social Reproduction
space
TCC
time
transnational economic processes
UN
World Gdp

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415300940
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Apr 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Contemporary Economic Sociology closely examines critical and contemporary issues in the sociology of economic life.

Bringing together a range of theoretical perspectives, Fran Tonkiss examines major shifts in the organization of economy and society - from the politics of globalization to the cultural economy, social exclusion and the 'end' of class. This new volume is organized around three core themes (globalization, production and inequality) and answers the questions:

  • how are transnational processes re-making contemporary economies?
  • can capitalist globalization be governed or resisted?
  • do class relations still shape people’s social identities?
  • how can we think about inequality in national and international contexts?

Key changes in each of these domains raise new challenges for analyzing social and economic relations, power, agency and identity. Setting these changes in a transnational context, this book examines how these issues are being re-shaped in contemporary societies, and explores competing frameworks for understanding such changes. Drawing on arguments from economic sociology, politics and policy studies, political economy and critical geography, the text focuses on both conceptual approaches to the social study of the economy, and trans-national processes of social and economic restructuring.

The arguments provide a critical overview of current concerns for economic sociology, and extend the boundaries of the discipline to a new set of questions. The text is particularly relevant to undergraduate and graduate students and scholars in the fields of economic and political sociology, politics and government, geography, economics and international relations.

Fran Tonkiss is Lecturer in Sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science. She is the author of Space, the City and Social Theory (Polity, 2005), the co-author of Market Society (Polity, 2001), and the co-editor of Trust and Civil Society (Macmillan, 2000).