Shaping of Socio-Economic Systems (RLE Social Theory)

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A01=Philippe DeVille
A01=Thomas Baumgartner
A01=Tom Burns
actor
Actor System Dynamics
Aggregate Consumer Price Indices
Author_Philippe DeVille
Author_Thomas Baumgartner
Author_Tom Burns
Category=JHBA
Category=KCS
Con Seq Uences
conflict resolution studies
Contemporary Societies
CT UR
DC Technology
development economics research
developments
differential
Differential Accumulation
Distributional Conflicts
dynamics
economic inequality
EEC Country
enterprises
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Import Price Increases
inflationary
Inflationary Developments
institutional change
institutions
International Banks
Latin American Inflation
Lip Workers
OECD Variety
Pe Rc
power dynamics analysis
Pr Ic
pressures
RLE
self-managed
Self-managed Enterprises
self-management
Self-management Agreements
Self-management Institutions
Social Systems
social systems theory
Socio-economic Development
socio-political institutional transformation
Socioeconomic Development
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138989993
  • Weight: 544g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jan 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Actor-systems dynamics is an innovative, multidisciplinary methodology for investigating and analyzing social struggles over economic resources and the related interplay between economic and socio-political institutions and processes. The authors, sociologists and economists, offer a systemic perspective on contemporary socio-economic issues such as economic crisis, unemployment, inflation, economic democracy and development; in their analyses, they identify several of the key factors that drive people to interact, to initiate change and transformation as well as to resist such change.

Major underlying themes in the book are: Conflict over the distribution of economic resources and economic policies and institutions; the structural bases of economic inequality and conflict; the shaping and reshaping of socio-economic institutions, and the contradictions, conflicts and instabilities evoked by such developments; the failure of orthodox economic theories, including Keynesianism, in the face of recurrent economic crises and instabilities; the development and application of an open, dynamic actor-oriented systems theory – grounded in the social sciences – addressing complex socio-economic phenomena in ways diverging substantially from conventional economics. All in all, the papers collected here deal, on the one hand, with social power, conflict, and struggle concerning economic resources and institutions and, on the other hand, the structural and other factors which drive powering initiatives, conflict, and social innovation and transformation.

The book is addressed to a broad spectrum of social and managerial scientists concerned with socio-economic issues, institutions, and development.

Thomas Baumgartner, Tom Burns, Philippe DeVille