Introduction : a world turned right way up / Kean Birch and Vlad Mykhnenko -- How neoliberalism got where it is : elite planning, corporate lobbying and the release of the free market / David Miller -- Making neoliberal order in the United States / Kean Birch and Adam Tickell -- Neoliberalism, intellectual property and the global knowledge economy / David Tyfield -- Neoliberalism and the calculable world : the rise of carbon trading / Larry Lohmann -- Tightening the web : the World Bank and enforced policy reform / Elisa van Waeyenberge -- The corruption industry and transition : neoliberalizing post-Soviet space? / Adam Swain, Vlad Mykhnenko and Shaun French -- Remaking the welfare state : from safety net to trampoline / Julie MacLeavy -- Zombieeconomics : the living death of the dismal science / Ben Fine -- From hegemony to crisis? : the continuing ecological dominance of neoliberalism / Bob Jessop -- Do it yourself : a politics for changing our world / Paul Chatterton -- Dreaming the real : a politics of ethical spectacles / Paul Routledge -- Transnational companies and transnational civil society / Leonith Hinojosa and Anthony Bebbington -- Defeating neoliberalism : a Marxist internationalist perspective and programme / Jean Shaoul -- Conclusion : the end of an economic order? / Vlad Mykhnenko and Kean Birch.
Verfügbarkeit an Ihrem Standort wird überprüft
Dieses Buch ist auch in Ihrer Bibliothek verfügbar:
"This is a professional edited collection for the Inside Technology series looking at what the editors call assetization. They ask: what lies in the wake of commodification? How should we characterize and analyze technoscientific capitalism in the era of Uber and Airbnb, the business model sorcery of giants like Google and Genentech, rising immaterial and cognitive labor productivity represented by the explosion in Big Data, and the construction of population behavior as money-making resource? The editors define an asset as something-a piece of land, a skill or experience, a sum of money, a bodily function or affective personality, a life form, a patent or copyright, etc.-that can be owned or controlled, traded, and capitalized as a revenue stream, often involving the valuation of discounted future earnings in the present. Assets can certainly be bought and sold, yes. But the point is to get a durable rent from them, not to sell them away in the market today. How do things become assets, then? They are made so: the asset form is not, it is important to stress, the consequence of some inherent or embodied quality. The intention of this volume is to show how assets are constructed, how a variety of things are and can be turned into assets, examining the interests, activities, skills, organizations, and relations entangled in this process. Another is to stress that technoscientific capitalism entails specific practices that make the uncertainty inherent in innovation understandable and calculable as part of a broader capitalist system. The asset form reflects the tumult in contemporary technoscientific capitalism, in which it becomes harder and harder to draw clear boundaries around what counts as or comes to constitute capitalism How different is assetization from commodification? Which kind of legal constructions, political arrangements, and economic operations does it entail? Where does it find justification? What kind of critique does it call for? The research gathered in this edited volume opens directions in order to tackle these problems from a critical, qualitative perspective"--