Economics and Morality
Anthropological Approaches
Contributions by Catherine S. Dolan, Christina Garsten, Rhoda H. Halperin, Tor Hernes, Walter E. Little University at Albany, Bill Maurer University of California, Aaron Z. Pitluck, Rebecca Prentice, Dinah Rajak, Joel Robbins, Andrew Walsh, Cynthia Werner Edited by Katherine E. Browne, B. Lynne Milgram
Publication date:
10 September 2008Length of book:
292 pagesPublisher
AltaMira PressDimensions:
246x167mm7x10"
ISBN-13: 9780759112018
In Economics and Morality, the authors seek to illuminate the multiple kinds of analyses relating morality and economic behavior in particular kinds of economic systems. The chapters explore economic systems from a variety of diverse indigenous and capitalist societies, focusing on moral challenges in non-Western economic systems undergoing profound change, grassroots movements and moral claims in the context of capitalism, and morality-based movements taking place within corporate and state institutions. The anthropological insights of each chapter provide the value of firsthand fieldwork and ethnographic investigation, as well as the tradition of critically studying non-Western and Western societies. Because the moral challenges in a given capitalist society can no longer be effectively addressed without considering the interaction and influences of different societies in the global system, the international ethnographic research in this book can help document and make sense of the changes sweeping our planet.
Economic activity involves more than rational, calculating individuals buying and selling with each other, as amply demonstrated by the essays in Economics and Morality. The breadth of this collection is impressive, ranging from exchange in Papua New Guinea, ethical consumption in the UK, and toxic waste in the U.S. to stocks and shares in global markets. In these cases we begin to see the morality of economy, the ways in which values, relationships, and economic actions reflect and shape each other. That ghostly 'rational actor' may pervade popular and even scholarly economic thought, but this collection shows how different is the economic activity that we see around us.