Living better together: social relations and economic governance in the work of Ostrom and Zelizer
In: Mercatus studies in political and social economy
Intro -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- List of Tables -- 1 Introduction: Connecting Elinor C. Ostrom and Viviana A. Zelizer -- 1.1 Connected Lives and Associational Beings -- 1.2 Structure of the Volume -- Notes -- Resources -- 2 Why and How Do Social Relations Matter for Economic Lives? -- Notes -- References -- 3 What Relational Work Brings to the Study of the Political Economy -- 3.1 From Separate Domains to Connected Systems -- Separate Domains -- Connected Systems -- Constitutive Relations -- 3.2 From Constitutive Relationships to Relational Work -- Gender, Race, and Political Economy -- 3.3 Political Economy as the Result of Intimate Relations -- 3.4 The Future of Political Economy -- References -- 4 "Circuits of Commons": Exploring the Connections Between Economic Lives and the Commons -- 4.1 A Brief Account of the Commons: Different Types, Similar Methods -- 4.2 A Brief Account of the Circuits of Commerce: Diverse Empirics, Similar Methods -- 4.3 A Common Understanding: Exploring the Possibility of Shared Legacies of Ostrom and Zelizer -- 4.4 Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- 5 Testing Circuits of Commerce in the Distant Past: Archaeological Understandings of Social Relationships and Economic Lives -- 5.1 Circuits of Commerce and Archaeological Data -- Archaeology of the American Southern Plains, 1350-1700 AD -- Dimensions of Circuits of Commerce in the Archaeological Record -- Assessing Dimensions of Circuits of Commerce in the Archaeological Record -- 5.2 Untangling or Retangling Social and Economic Lives -- References -- 6 Bringing the Family Back In: Political Economy and the Family in Liberal Theory -- 6.1 Elinor Ostrom and Viviana A. Zelizer on the Family -- 6.2 Adam Smith and Alexis de Tocqueville's Family Theory -- Adam Smith and the Family -- Alexis de Tocqueville and the Family.