Freedom, Equality and the Market

Regular price €235.60
A01=Barry Hindess
argument
Author_Barry Hindess
Britain's Inflation
Britain’s Inflation
british
Capitalist Ruling Class
Category=JBF
Category=JHB
citizenship studies
consensus
Crosland's Argument
Crosland's View
Crosland’s Argument
Crosland’s View
Distributional Impact
economic governance
Education System
Egalitarian Considerations
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Goldthorpe's Argument
goldthorpes
Goldthorpe’s Argument
Gough's Analysis
Gough’s Analysis
Government Economic Management
governments
Hayek's Account
Hayek’s Account
Hobbesian Dilemma
inflation
Le Grand
Lower Socio-economic Categories
Marshall's Argument
Marshall’s Argument
Marxist social analysis
Mature Working Class
Modern Class System
Open University Set Book
PAYE
political economy of social services
public sector intervention
SDP.
social policy theory
Social Service Expenditure
Socioeconomic Categories
Spontaneous Social Order
state
successive
view
welfare
welfare state critique
West Germany
Working Class Patients

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138467309
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Nov 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This new textbook for students of social theory considers the role of public intervention in social and economic processes. It is a clear, critical discussion of different theoretical and political perspectives on social policy.
Barry Hindess begins with theconsensus view, shared by senior politicians, civil servants, and academics throughout much of the postwar period. This view depends on two beliefs: in the capacity of government to manage the economy; and in the development of a qualitatively new relationship between the state and the population. The first is discussed in relation to Croslands The Future of Socialism, and the second in relation to Marshall‘s conception of citizenship and Titmuss‘s account of social policy.
The consensus view generated serious objections, and Hindess examines two in particular. One is the argument that the view itself causes a destructive, competitive struggle between sectional interests for state intervention in their favour. The other, from the left, is that what Tawney calledthe strategy of equality has failed, and that a more radical attack on inequality is required.
The remaining section looks at the Marxist and liberal alternatives to the consensus view. In conclusion, the author discusses firstly the essentialism of the market both in consensus and (in very different ways) in liberal and Marxist thought; and secondly the place of principles such as freedom and equality in political discussion and the analysis of social conditions. He shows that market and plan are not necessarily incompatible.
Freedom, Equality, and the Market, with its careful assessment of the key texts, will be important reading for undergraduate students of sociology and social policy.