|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Understanding consumption requires looking at the systems by which
goods and services are provided - not just how they are produced
but the historically evolved structures, power relations and
cultures within which they are located. The Systems of Provision
approach provides an interdisciplinary framework for unpacking
these complex issues. This book provides a comprehensive account of
the Systems of Provision approach, setting out core concepts and
theoretical origins alongside numerous case studies. The book
combines fresh understandings of everyday consumption using
examples from food, housing, and water, with implications for
society's major challenges, including inequality, climate change,
and prospects for capitalism. Readers do not require prior
knowledge across the subject matter covered but the text remains
significant for accomplished researchers and policymakers,
especially those interested in the messy real world realities
underpinning who gets what, how, and why across public and private
provision in global, national, and historical contexts.
This collection offers pathbreaking framing of the material culture
of financialisation. It begins with a tight definition of
financialisation in order to distinguish the phenomenon of
financialisation from its effects and from the looser associations
prevalent within much of the literature such as the presence of
credit or even simply (more extensive) monetary relations. To
locate financialisation within economic and social reproduction, of
which material culture is a part, close attention is paid to the
distinctive forms of financialisation arising from commodification,
commodity form and commodity calculation. The differences in the
extent to which, and how, these prevail are addressed through the
innovative system of provision approach and its framing of material
culture through use of ten distinctive attributes of such cultures,
known as the 10Cs (Constructed, Construed, Conforming, Commodified,
Contextual, Contradictory, Closed, Contested, Collective and
Chaotic). This framing of the cultures attached to financialisation
is then illustrated through case studies demonstrating the diverse
ways in which shifting cultures have served to embed
financialisation in our daily lives. After a discussion of the
material culture of financialisation itself there are two sector
examples which review financial cultures in the provision of water
and housing. These are followed by considerations of
financialisation in financial literacy and financial inclusion, the
media and, finally, well-being. The chapters in this book were
originally published in a special issue of New Political Economy.
Any student, academic, or practitioner wanting to succeed in
development studies, radical or mainstream, must understand the
World Bank's role and the evolution of its thinking and activities.
"The Political Economy of Development" provides tools for gaining
this understanding and applies them across a range of topics. The
research, practice and scholarship of development are always set
against the backdrop of the World Bank, whose formidable presence
shapes both development practice and thinking. This book brings
together academics that specialize in different subject areas of
development and reviews their findings in the context of the World
Bank as knowledge bank, policy-maker and financial institution. The
volume offers a compelling contribution to our understanding of
development studies and of development itself. "The Political
Economy of Development" is an invaluable critical resource for
students, policy-makers, and activists in development studies.
|
|