Economic Sociology

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A01=Jeffrey K. Hass
Author_Jeffrey K. Hass
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Civil Society
Class
comparative capitalism
Corporations
Crisis
Double Entry
Double Entry Bookkeeping
DSGE Model
Economic Development
Economic Organization
Economic Sociology
Economic Theory
Economics
Environment
Environmental Sociology
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnicity
Federal Reserve
Gdp Growth
Gender
Glass Cliff
global financial crises
Globalization
Hallway Hangers
Human Suffering
Inequality
institutional economics
Introduction
Jeff Hass
labour market structures
Markets
new economic policy
Occupy Wall Street
Organizations
Post-recession Recovery
power relations in markets
Propose EU Constitution
Public Policy
Quadrant Iii
Race
Race/Ethnicity
RaceEthnicity
Recession
Shadow Banks
SK Group
Small Firm Networks
social inequality in economic systems
social justice
social well-being
Socialism
Sociological Critique
Sociology
South Korean Migrants
state intervention analysis
The State
UK Independence Party
Vice Versa
Virtual Economy
Wage Inflation Spiral
War
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138217645
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Economic Sociology provides the clearest and most comprehensive account of the promises of economic sociology. It shows how economies are more than supply-and-demand curves, individual profit motives, and efficient performance: they are forms of power and structure, grounded in institutions and culture. What is calculated, how, and why? Are profit and efficiency always so central to economic structures and outcomes? What shapes change and reproduction in economic practices and policies? How have classes and states, using power and institutions, created and continue to shape the economic world we live in? This second edition presents a critical and sophisticated, yet approachable analysis of economic behavior and phenomena.

After describing key concepts and logics of economic sociology and of economic sociology (its eternal cousin and competitor), Hass turns the sociologist’s analytic eye to the heart of economic practices comparing how they work in the United States, Europe, East Asia, Latin America, and post-socialist Russia and China. The volume addresses crucially important economic issues that touch our well-being and justice: the rise and structuring of capitalism; relations between states and economies; economic policies; economies and inequality; and organizations and corporations. Causes and consequences of globalization and the Great Recession are laid out for the reader.

With economics and economic sociology placed side-by-side in this journey of how economies operate in the past and present, the reader gets different perspectives on economic reality. Power and culture, institutions and fields, classes and corporations interact on this historical and global stage. Written in a clear and direct style, this textbook will appeal to students and scholars in economic sociology, sociology of work, economics, social policy, political economy and comparative sociology

Jeffrey K. Hass is Associate Professor of Sociology in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Richmond, USA, and part-time Professor Faculty of Economics, in the Department of Economic Theory, at St. Petersburg University, Russia. He works on post-socialist institutional and organizational change and on economics and economic sociology. He also explores wartime political economy in the USSR, practices of survival in the Blockade of Leningrad, and the nature of war and practices. In addition to articles and book chapters on economics, politics, and social change, his books include Economic Sociology; Power, Culture, and Economic Change in Russia; Rethinking the Post-Soviet Experience; and Re-examining the History of the Russian Economy. His areas of interest and expertise are economic sociology, political sociology, political economy, social change, power, organizational sociology, and comparative/historical sociology.

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