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In: Mirovaja ėkonomika i meždunarodnye otnošenija: MĖMO, Heft 8, S. 98-115
The paper represents the materials of the discussion of the following topics: "The way of the evolution of social and cultural spaces" (N. Zagladin), "Russian political nation: problems of conceptualizing and consolidation" (S. Peregudov), "Realities of a changing world" (V. Sheinis), "Time and spatial integrity of the emerging global world"(L. Goricheva), "On economic growth and human development" (E. Sadovaya).
In: Routledge Frontiers of Political Economy
In: Public administration: an international journal, Band 12, Heft 1, S. 103-115
ISSN: 1467-9299
In: Palgrave Studies in the History of Social Movements
In: Springer eBooks
In: History
1. Introduction: Moralizing Capitalism: Agents, Discourses and Practices of Capitalism and Anti-Capitalism in the Modern Age; Stefan Berger & Alexandra Przyrembel -- Part I History of Knowledge -- 2. Teaching Capitalism. The Popularization of Economic Knowledge in Britain and Germany (1800-1850); Sandra Maß -- 3. Moralizing Wealth: German Debates about Capitalism and the Jews in the Early Twentieth Century; Alexandra Przyrembel -- 4. The Moral Foundation of Modern Capitalism: Towards a Historical Reconsideration of Max Weber's 'Protestant Ethic'; Thomas Sokoll -- Part II Capitalism and the Political -- 5. We only Want to pay what is fair': Taxes as Moral Culture in Canada 1867-1917; Elsbeth Heaman -- 6. Humanizing Capitalism. The Educational Mission of the Ford Foundation in West Germany and the United States (1945-1960); Wim de Jong -- 7. 'Corporate citizens' at the United Nations: The 1973 GEP Hearings and the New Spirit of Multinational Business; Christian Olaf Christiansen -- Part III Ethics and Merchants -- 8. Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde: Taming Animal Spirits by Commercial Honour? The New York Stock Exchange during the Progressive Era; Boris Gehlen -- 9. Bankruptcy and Morality in a Capitalist Market Economy. The Case of Mid-Nineteenth 19th Century France; Jürgen Finger -- Part IV Social Movements and Moral Concerns -- 10. US Catholicism and Economic Justice: 1919-1929; Giulia D'Alessio -- 11. The Discourse against 'Shameful Profiteering' in Greece, 1914-1925: Notions of Exploitation, Anticapitalist Morality and the Concept of Moral Economy; Nikos Potamianos -- 12. Dilemmas of Moral Markets: Conflicting Narratives in the West German Fair Trade Movement; Benjamin Möckel -- 13. Economic Boom, Workers' Literature, and Morality in the West Germany of the 1960s and early 1970s; Sibylle Marti
World Affairs Online
In: Globalizations, Band 7, Heft 1-2, S. 261-273
ISSN: 1474-774X
In: Interventions: international journal of postcolonial studies, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 271-289
ISSN: 1469-929X
In: Esprit: comprendre le monde qui vient, Heft 1/260, S. 54-169
ISSN: 0014-0759
World Affairs Online
Capitalism Reassessed provides a broad view of different types of advanced capitalist economic systems and is based on an empirical analysis of twenty-one OECD nations. The book looks at why capitalism developed in Western Europe rather than elsewhere. It shows the close influences of the cultural system on the economic system. The analysis compares the economic and social performance of the capitalist economic systems along a variety of economic and social criteria. It also analyzes how capitalism will change in the twenty-first century
In: Capitalism, nature, socialism: CNS ; a journal of socialist ecology, Band 7, S. 111-121
ISSN: 1045-5752
Explores parallels between the misery of slavery & poverty in the era of primitive capitalist accumulation in the Middle Ages & at present. Examples such as the selling of organs, working conditions of women in the Third World, prostitution, & environmental degradation are discussed as indicators of the present high levels of misery. It is suggested that these considerations lead to one fundamental thesis: capitalist development has always been unsustainable because of its human impact. This contradiction is felt particularly strongly by women, who are in the position of the unwaged worker in a wage economy & therefore denied an autonomous existence. Falling birth rates in the advanced industrialized countries are taken as a rejection of conditions produced by capitalism. It is argued that the repressed knowledges of women & indigenous populations should find a way of emerging & being heard. D. M. Smith