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Global Capitalism: A Sociological Perspective

ISBN: 978-0-745-64450-9

March 2010

Polity

180 pages

Description
The global financial crisis has challenged many of our most authoritative economic ideologies and policies. After thirty years of reshaping the world to conform to the market, governments and societies are now calling for a retreat to a yet undefined new economic order.

In order to provide a guide to what the twenty-first-century economy might look like, this book revisits the great project of Global Capitalism. What did it actually entail? How far did it go? What were its strengths and failings? By deconstructing its core ideas and examining its empirical record, can we gain clues about how to move forward after the crisis? Miguel Centeno and Joseph Cohen define capitalism as a historically-evolving and socially-constructed institution, rooted in three core economic activities trade, finance and marketing and identify the three key challenges that any new economic system will need to surmount inequality, governance, and environmental sustainability.

This accessible and engaging book will be essential reading for students of economic sociology, and all those interested in the construction of our economic future.


About the Author

Miguel Angel Centeno is Musgrave Professor of Sociology and a Professor of International Affairs at Princeton University. He previously served as the founding Director of the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies and Master of Wilson College at Princeton. He has published many books as author or editor.

Joseph N. Cohen is the author of Global Capitalism: A Sociological Perspective, published by Wiley.

Features
  • Timely overview and investigation of global capitalism and the lessons it can offer in the wake of the financial crisis.
  • Focuses on three core economic activities Ð trade, finance and marketing Ð and the role they play in global capitalism.
  • Looks forward by identifying the three key challenges that any new economic system will need to surmount Ð inequality, governance, and environmental sustainability.
  • Accessible and engaging reading for students of economic sociology, and all those interested in the construction of our economic future.