ISBN:
978-1-83909-659-4
,
978-1-83909-658-7 /Online
,
978-1-83909-6560-0 /Epub
ISSN:
0190-1281
Language:
English
Pages:
xi, 249 Seiten
,
Illustrationen
Edition:
First edition
Series Statement:
Research in Economic Anthropology volume 40
Keywords:
Indien Japan
;
Spanien
;
USA
;
Frankreich
;
Lateinamerika
;
Kuba
;
Brasilien
;
Indigenität
;
Kapitalismus
;
Wirtschaftliche Bedingungen
;
Wirtschaftlicher Aspekt
;
Wirtschaftlicher Wandel
;
Wirtschaftsethnologie
;
Wirtschaftstheorie
Abstract:
Volume 40 of Research in Economic Anthropology explores current issues in national and international policy, cost and debt, business and capitalism, and economic theory and behavior specifically pertaining to Brazil. The underlying theme running through the collection is the steady encroachment of neoliberalism into economic policy and practice, and the impact this has had on everyday ways of life. In Part I, Raja Swamy explores post-disaster relocation and livelihood issues in Nagapattinam, Tamil Nadu, India, Anthony Rausch and Junichiro Koji investigate Japan's Hometown Tax Donation Program, and Emma Gilberthorpe argues for development plans that incorporate indigenous people's needs and worldviews. In Part II, Vassily Pigounides empirically analyzes a revenue management system originating in France, Irene Sabaté Muriel looks at the moral economy of mortgage lending and economic reasoning during the housing bubble that rocked Spain when it burst in 202020-Jul, and Mathias Krabbe explores debt among US college students. In Part III, Ieva Snikersproge examines a French worker cooperative ice cream venture, Andres Gramajo quantitively measures the strength of capitalist thought among business owners in Latin America, and Michal Stein and John Vertovec explore individual action in the transitional economy in Havana's tourist-oriented dance instruction world. In Part IV, Sidney Greenfield theorizes on two coexisting but disjunct patterns of behavior in Brazil, which give rise to tension, corruption allegations, and public scandals, and Guilherme Falleiros analyzes the structural shifts between global capitalism and indigenous ways of life in the same country. (Umschlagtext)
Description / Table of Contents:
About the authors -- List of contributors -- Introduction: Policy, Debt, Business and Capitalism (AMID Encroaching Neoliberalism), Donald C. Wood -- Part I: National and International Policy -- Chapter 1: The Cost of Relocation: Water and Fishers in Post-Tsunami Nagapattinam, South India, Raja Swamy -- Chapter 2: A New Case in The Anthropology of Taxation: The Social Science of Critiquing Japan`s Furusato Nozei Tax Program, Anthony Rausch and Junichiro Koji -- Chapter 3: In Search of "The Complete Story": Indigenous Peoples and Structural Inequalities in Global Policy Planning, Emma Gilberthorpe -- Part II: Cost and Debt -- Chapter 4: Predicting Prices, Persuading Users: Price Recommendations and The Rhetorical Logic of Algorithms, Vassily Pigounidès -- Chapter 5: Mortgage Lending and Economic Wrongdoing During the Spanish Housing Bubble, Irene Sabaté Muriel -- Chapter 6: The Price of Higher Education: Experiences of American Student Loan Borrowers, Mathias Sosnowski Krabbe -- Part III: Business and Capitalism -- Chapter 7: Milkerie Worker Cooperative in France: Some Evidence on Why Cooperatives Struggle to Propose an Alternative to Capitalist Enterprise, Iewa Snikersproge -- Chapter 8: Are Business Owners True Believers in Capitalism? Evidence From Latin America, Andrés Marroquín -- Chapter 9: The Transformative Dynamics of Self-Employed Dance Instruction in Havana, Cuba`s Tourism Industry, Michal Stein and John Vertovec -- Part IV: Economic Behavior and Theory in Brazil -- Chapter 10: When is a Kickback Like Fulfilling a Vow to a Saint? "Popular" Religions, Dyadic Exchanges, and Corruption in Brazil, Sidney M. Greenfield -- Chapter 11: The Theft of the Jaguar`s Fire is not Property in Indigenous Central Brazil, Guilherme L. H. Falleiros -- Index
Note:
Enthält eine Einführung und 11 Beiträge
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