Global Connections and Emerging Inequalities in Europe

Global Connections and Emerging Inequalities in Europe
Author: Deema Kaneff,Frances Pine
Publsiher: Anthem Press
Total Pages: 195
Release: 2011
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780857289698

Download Global Connections and Emerging Inequalities in Europe Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book explores connections between poverty and migration in the context of the expansion of neoliberalism in Europe. The last decade has witnessed a massive movement of people in response to rising inequalities as a result of political changes and economic reforms implemented across the continent. As people seek new opportunities, movement itself becomes part of the process of generating new inequalities. The chapters in this volume provide vivid examples of local participation in such global processes.

Ethnographies of Grey Zones in Eastern Europe

Ethnographies of Grey Zones in Eastern Europe
Author: Ida Harboe Knudsen,Martin Demant Frederiksen
Publsiher: Anthem Press
Total Pages: 213
Release: 2015-04-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781783084128

Download Ethnographies of Grey Zones in Eastern Europe Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Over the last two decades, Eastern Europe has experienced extensive changes in geo-political relocations and relations leading to everyday uncertainty. Attempts to establish liberal democracies, re-orientations from planned to market economics, and a desire to create ‘new states’ and internationally minded ‘new citizens’ has left some in poverty, unemployment and social insecurity, leading them to rely on normative coping and semi-autonomous strategies for security and social guarantees. This anthology explores how grey zones of governance, borders, relations and invisibilities affect contemporary Eastern Europe.

The Dialectical Meaning of Offshored Work

The Dialectical Meaning of Offshored Work
Author: Miłosz Miszczyński
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 199
Release: 2019-08-12
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9789004411692

Download The Dialectical Meaning of Offshored Work Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The Dialectical Meaning of Offshored Work analyzes how offshoring investments function as a platform for intercultural encounters among corporate actors and local populations of hosting communities.

Global Villages

Global Villages
Author: Ger Duijzings
Publsiher: Anthem Press
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2014-12-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781783083510

Download Global Villages Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book explores the multiple effects of globalization on urban and rural communities, providing anthropological case studies from postsocialist Bulgaria. As globalization has been studied largely in urban contexts, the aim of this volume is to shift attention to the under-examined countryside and analyse how transnational links are transforming relations between cities, towns and villages. The volume also challenges undifferentiated notions of ‘the countryside’, calling for an awareness of rural economic and social disparities which are often only associated with urban environments. The work focuses on how the ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ have been reconfigured following the end of socialism and the advent of globalization, in socioeconomic, as well as political, ideological and cultural terms.

Economies of Favour After Socialism

Economies of Favour After Socialism
Author: David Henig,Nicolette Makovicky
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 254
Release: 2017
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780199687411

Download Economies of Favour After Socialism Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Since the onset of the global economic crisis, activists, policy makers, and social scientists have been searching for alternative paradigms through which to re-imagine contemporary modes of thinking and writing about economic orders. These attempts have led to their re-engagement with fundamental anthropological categories of economic analysis, such as barter, debt, and the gift. Focusing on favours, and the paradoxes of action, meaning, and significance they engender, this volume advocates for their addition to this list of economic universals. It presents a critical re-interrogation of the conceptual relationships between gratuitous and instrumental behaviour, and raises novel questions about the intersection of economic actions with the ethical and expressive aspects of human life. Scholars of post-socialist politics and society have often used 'favour' as a by-word for corruption and clientelism. The contributors to this volume treat favours, and the doing of favours, as a distinct mode of acting, rather than as a form of 'masked' economic exchange or simply an expression of goodwill. Casting their comparative net from post-socialist Central, Eastern, and South Eastern Europe; to the former Soviet Union, Mongolia, and post-Maoist China, the contributors to this volume show how gratuitous behaviour shapes a plethora of different actions, practices, and judgements across religious and political life, imaginative practices, and local moral economies. They show that favours do not operate 'outside' or 'beyond' the economic sphere. Rather, they constitute a distinct mode of action which has economic consequences, without being fully explicable in terms of transactional cost-benefit analyses.

Global Inequalities in World Systems Perspective

Global Inequalities in World Systems Perspective
Author: Manuela Boatca,Andrea Komlosy,Hans-Heinrich Nolte
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2017-09-22
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781351588935

Download Global Inequalities in World Systems Perspective Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

During its 500-year history, the modern world-system has seen several shifts in hegemony. Yet, since the decline of the U.S. in the 1970s, no single core power has attained a hegemonic position in an increasingly polarized world. As income inequalities have become more pronounced in core countries, especially in the U.S. and the U.K., global inequalities emerged as a "new" topic of social scientific scholarship, ignoring the constant move toward polarization that has been characteristic of the entire modern world-system. At the same time, the rise of new states (most notably, the BRICS) and the relative economic growth of particular regions (especially East Asia) have prompted speculations about the next hegemon that largely disregard both the longue durée of hegemonic shifts and the constraints that regional differentiations place on the concentration of capital and geopolitical power in one location. Authors in this book place the issue of rising inequalities at the center of their analyses. They explore the concept and reality of semiperipheries in the 21st century world-system, the role of the state and of transnational migration in current patterns of global stratification, types of catching-up development and new spatial configurations of inequality in Europe’s Eastern periphery as well as the prospects for the Global Left in the new systemic order. The book links novel theoretical debates on the rise of global inequalities to methodologically innovative approaches to the urgent task of addressing them.

Life Course Work and Labour in Global History

Life Course  Work  and Labour in Global History
Author: Josef Ehmer,Carola Lentz
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 424
Release: 2023-09-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 9783111147529

Download Life Course Work and Labour in Global History Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This multidisciplinary volume offers unique perspectives, across the globe and throughout the centuries, on the complexity of the nexus between work and the life course. For industrialized regions, from Germany and Western Europe to China and Japan, it questions the widespread notion of an overall growing working life course instability, since the 1970s. For unindustrialized or industrializing regions, from West Africa to state socialist East Central Europe, as well as for transnational and transcontinental labour migrations, it shows the enormous influence of the extended family and wider kin on individual pathways into and out of work. For early modern Europe, India, and China, and up to twentieth-century state socialism and to current welfare states, it stresses and concretizes the crucial impact of age and gender for both societal labour relations and individual work-related decision making. With all chapters based on original research, the volume reflects a close cooperation between historians, anthropologists, and sociologists. Its multidisciplinary approach finds expression in its methodological plurality, reaching from archival research and sophisticated statistical analyses to biographical interviews and participant observation. This mix allows to grasp the interaction between societal change and individual agency.

Broken Glass Broken Class

Broken Glass  Broken Class
Author: Dimitra Kofti
Publsiher: Berghahn Books
Total Pages: 405
Release: 2023-08-11
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781805393511

Download Broken Glass Broken Class Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Based on a long-term study of the everyday postsocialist politics of labour in the wider context of intense socio-economic transformation in Bulgaria, this book tells the story of the flexibilization of production, the precaritization of work, shifting managerial practices, and ways in which people with different employment statuses live and work together. The ethnography starts with the rapidly moving conveyor belt of a glass factory, where a variety of global and local forces and workers’ divisions meet, and analyses how inequalities are reproduced both at the production site and back home.