• Produktbild: Globalization and Inequalities
  • Produktbild: Globalization and Inequalities

Globalization and Inequalities Complexity and Contested Modernities

135,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

23.07.2009

Verlag

Sage Publications

Seitenzahl

520

Maße (L/B/H)

24,4/17/2,8 cm

Gewicht

850 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-8039-8518-6

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

23.07.2009

Verlag

Sage Publications

Seitenzahl

520

Maße (L/B/H)

24,4/17/2,8 cm

Gewicht

850 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-8039-8518-6

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

Noch keine Bewertungen vorhanden

Verfassen Sie die erste Bewertung zu diesem Artikel

Helfen Sie anderen Kundinnen und Kunden durch Ihre Meinung.

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

Bewertungen (0)

  • Produktbild: Globalization and Inequalities
  • Produktbild: Globalization and Inequalities
  • 1. Introduction: Progress and modernities
    What is Progress?
    More money or longer life?
    Progress as a contested project
    Economic development
    Equality
    Human Rights
    Human development, well-being and capabilities
    Competing projects: neoliberalism and social democracy
    Contesting conceptions of progress
    Multiple Complex Inequalities
    Multiple and intersecting inequalities
    Complex inequalities: difference, inequality and progress
    Modernity? Postmodernity? Not yet Modern? Varieties of Modernity?
    Modernity or postmodernity?
    Late, second or liquid modernity?
    Multiple modernities?
    Not yet modern?
    Varieties of modernity
    Defining modernity
    Globalization
    Globalization as the erosion of distinctive and separate societies
    Resistant to globalization
    Already global
    Coevolution of global processes with trajectories of development
    Implications of globalization for social theory
    Complexity Theory
    2. Theorising multiple social systems
    Multiple Inequalities and Intersectionality
    Regimes and Domains
    System and Its Environment: Over-Lapping, Non-Saturating, Non-Nested Systems
    Societalisation not Societies
    Emergence and Projects
    Bodies, Technologies and the Social
    Path Dependency
    Co-evolution of Complex Adaptive Systems in Changing Fitness Landscapes
    3. Economies
    Redefining the Economy
    Domestic Labour as Labour
    State Welfare as part of the Economy
    What are Economic Inequalities? What is Progress in the Economy?
    From Pre-Modern to Modern: The Second Great Transformation
    Global Processes and Economic Inequalities
    What global processes?
    Country Processes
    Varieties of Political Economy
    Varieties of employment relations
    Varieties of Welfare Provision
    Critical turning points into varieties of political economy
    4. Polities
    Reconceptualising Types of Polities
    States
    Nations
    Nation-States?
    Organised religions
    Empires
    Hegemon
    Global political institutions
    Polities Overlap and do not Politically Saturate a Territory
    Democracy
    Democracy and modernity
    Redefining democracy
    The development of democracy
    5. Violence
    Developing the Ontology of Violence
    Modernity and Violence
    Path Dependency in Trajections of Violence
    Global
    6. Civil societies
    Theorising Civil Society
    Modernity and Civil Society
    Civil Society Projects
    Global Civil Societies and Waves
    Examples of waves
    7. Regimes of complex inequality
    Beyond Class Regimes
    Gender Regimes
    Ethnic Regimes
    Further Regimes of Complex Inequalities
    Disability
    Sexual orientation
    Intersecting Regimes of Complex Inequality
    8. Varieties of modernity
    Neoliberal and Social Democratic Varieties of Modernity
    Path Dependency at the Economy/Polity Nexus?
    Welfare provision
    Conclusions on welfare
    Employment regulation
    Inequality
    Conclusions on political economy
    Path Dependency at the Violence Nexus
    Modernity and path dependency
    Indicators
    Development, inequality and violence
    Gendered violence
    Path dependency of the violence nexus in OECD countries
    Violence, economic inequality and the polity/economy nexus
    Conclusions on violence
    Gender Regime
    Public and domestic gender regimes
    Development and the public gender regime
    Domestic and public gender regimes and gender inequality
    Varieties of public gender regimes
    Democracy and Inequality
    9. Measuring progress
    Economic Development
    Equality
    Economic inequality
    Global economic inequality
    Beyond the household
    Economic inequalities and flows
    Economic inequalities in summary
    Inequalities in non-economic domains
    Democracy
    Human Rights
    Human Development, Well-Being and Capabilities
    Key Indicator Sets: What Indicators; What Underlying Concepts of Progress?
    Extending the Frameworks and Indicators of Progress: Where do Environmental
    Sustainability and Violence Fit?
    Environmental sustainability
    Violence
    Achievement of Visions of Progress: Comparing Neoliberalism and Social Democracy
    Economic development: neoliberalism vs. social democracy
    Equality: neoliberalism vs. social democracy
    Human rights: neoliberalism vs. social democracy
    Human development, well-being and capabilities: neoliberalism vs. social democracy
    Trade offs or complementary?
    10. Comparative paths through modernity: neoliberalism and social democracy
    Political Economy
    Violence
    Gender Transformations: The Emergence of Employed Women as the New Champions of Social Democracy
    Employed women as the new champions of social democracy
    Dampeners and Catalysts of Economic Growth: War and Gender Regime
    Transformations
    Conclusions
    11. Contested futures
    Financial and Economic Crisis 2007-9
    Contesting Hegemons and the Future of the World
    12. Conclusions
    The Challenge of Complex Inequalities and Globalization to Social Theory