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Image of THE ARCHITECTURE OF MARKETS: AN ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY OF TWENTY-FIRST-CENTURY CAPITALIST SOCIETIES

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THE ARCHITECTURE OF MARKETS: AN ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY OF TWENTY-FIRST-CENTURY CAPITALIST SOCIETIES

FLIGSTEIN, NEIL - Personal Name;

Market societies have created more wealth, and more opportunities for more people, than any other system of social organization in history. Yet we still have a rudimentary understanding of how markets themselves are social constructions that require extensive institutional support. This groundbreaking work seeks to fill this gap, to make sense of modern capitalism by developing a sociological theory of market institutions. Addressing the unruly dynamism that capitalism brings with it, leading sociologist Neil Fligstein argues that the basic drift of any one market and its actors, even allowing for competition, is toward stabilization. The Architecture of Markets represents a major and timely step beyond recent, largely empirical studies that oppose the neoclassical model of perfect competition but provide sparse theory toward a coherent economic sociology. Fligstein offers this theory. With it he interprets not just globalization and the information economy, but developments more specific to American capitalism in the past two decades--among them, the 1980s merger movement. He makes new inroads into the ''theory of fields,'' which links the formation of markets and firms to the problems of stability. His political-cultural approach explains why governments remain crucial to markets and why so many national variations of capitalism endure. States help make stable markets possible by, for example, establishing the rule of law and adjudicating the class struggle. State-building and market-building go hand in hand. Fligstein shows that market actors depend mightily upon governments and the members of society for the social conditions that produce wealth. He demonstrates that systems favoring more social justice and redistribution can yield stable markets and economic growth as readily as less egalitarian systems. This book will surely join the classics on capitalism. Economists, sociologists, policymakers, and all those interested in what makes markets function as they do will read it for many years to come.


Availability
10006119330.122 FLI aRLC MM (Rak Buku Umum)Available
Detail Information
Series Title
-
Statement of Responsibility
Neil Fligstein
Call Number
330.122 FLI a
Publisher
New Jersey : Princeton University Press., 2001
Collation
xiv, 274 p. : ill. ; 21 cm.
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
0-691-00522-2
Classification
330.122
Content Type
-
Edition
-
Subject(s)
Buku Umum
Economics
Sociological Aspect
United States
Capitalism
Economic Conditions 1981
Social Aspects
Specific Detail Info
-
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No other version available

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RLC MM FEB-UI
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RLC MM-FEBUI (Library) occupies the right side of the ground floor of the MM FEB UI Building with a reading room capacity of more than 60 people.
 
The MM-FEB UI library service system is closed (closed access); where the user does not have direct access to the collection shelf. Or in other words, users are not allowed to take their own books from the collection shelf

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