Principles of economic sociology / Richard Swedberg
Yayıncı: Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, [2003]Telif hakkı tarihi:©2003Tanım: xvi, 366 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmİçerik türü:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0691074399
- 9780691074399
- 0691130590
- 9780691130590
- 21
- HM548 .S94 2003
| Materyal türü | Ana kütüphane | Koleksiyon | Yer numarası | Durum | İade tarihi | Barkod | Materyal Ayırtmaları | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kitap
|
Mehmet Akif Ersoy Merkez Kütüphanesi Genel Koleksiyon | Non-fiction | HM548 .S94 2003 (Rafa gözat(Aşağıda açılır)) | Kullanılabilir | 025722 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 305-355) and index
The classics in economic sociology -- Contemporary economic sociology -- Economic organization -- Firms -- Economic and sociological approaches to markets -- Markets in history -- Politics and the economy -- Law and the economy -- Culture and economic developmen t-- Culture, trust, and consumption -- Gender and the economy -- The cat's dilemma and other questions for economic sociologists
The last fifteen years have witnessed an explosion in the popularity, creativity, and productiveness of economic sociology, an approach that traces its roots back to Max Weber. This important new text offers a comprehensive and up-to-date overview of economic sociology. It also advances the field theoretically by highlighting, in one analysis, the crucial economic roles of both interests and social relations. Richard Swedberg describes the field's critical insights into economic life, giving particular attention to the effects of culture on economic phenomena and the ways that economic actions are embedded in social structures. He examines the full range of economic institutions and explicates the relationship of the economy to politics, law, culture, and gender. Swedberg notes that sociologists too often fail to properly emphasize the role that self-interested behavior plays in economic decisions, while economists frequently underestimate the importance of social relations. Thus, he argues that the next major task for economic sociology is to develop a theoretical and empirical understanding of how interests and social relations work in combination to affect economic action. Written by an author whose name is synonymous with economic sociology, this text constitutes a sorely needed advanced synthesis--and a blueprint for the future of this burgeoning field
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