Political Power and Social Theory
Political Power and Social Theory
Davis, Diane
Emerald Publishing Limited
05/2005
256
Dura
Inglês
9780762311903
15 a 20 dias
Showcases scholarship by historical, political, and economic sociologists grouped around three broad subjects with historical relevance. The subjects in this volume are: the relationship between race, class, and urban politics, and how racial identities interact with each other; and more.
List of Contributors. Editorial Board. Editorial Statement. List Of Reviewers. Editor's Introduction. (D.E. Davis). Part I: Historical Studies of Race, Class, and Urban Politics. Class, Race, and Urban Politics: The 1920s Ku Klux Klan Movement in the United States. (C. Rhomberg). A Tale of Two Bourgeoisies: Race, Class, and Citizenship in San Francisco and Cincinnati, 1870-1911. (J. Haydu). Part II: Citizens, States, and Social Movements in Colonial and Transnational Context. Her Majesty's Sable Subjects: Subaltern Masculinities in Post-Emancipation Jamaica. (M. Sheller). Europe's Atlantic Empires: Early Modern State Formation Reconsidered. (J.C.A. Smith). Thinking Locally, Acting Globally? What the Seattle WTO Protests Tell Us About the Global Justice Movement. (G.H. Murphy, S. Pfaff). Part III: Scholarly Controversy: A Debate on the Social Origins of Corporate Irresponsibility. Corporate Malfeasance and the Myth of Shareholder Value. (F. Dobbin, D. Zorn). On the Importance of Analyzing Economic Scandals and Contemporary Economic Institutions: A Comment on Dobbin and Zorn. (R. Swedberg). The Power of Ideas? The Possibility of a Myth of Shareholder Value. (E.S. Clemens). The Historical Context of Sharehold Value Capitalism. (M.S. Mizruchi, H. Kimeldorf). The End of (Shareholder Value) Ideology? (N. Fligstein). The Promise of Economic Sociology. (F. Dobbin, D. Zorn).
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Showcases scholarship by historical, political, and economic sociologists grouped around three broad subjects with historical relevance. The subjects in this volume are: the relationship between race, class, and urban politics, and how racial identities interact with each other; and more.
List of Contributors. Editorial Board. Editorial Statement. List Of Reviewers. Editor's Introduction. (D.E. Davis). Part I: Historical Studies of Race, Class, and Urban Politics. Class, Race, and Urban Politics: The 1920s Ku Klux Klan Movement in the United States. (C. Rhomberg). A Tale of Two Bourgeoisies: Race, Class, and Citizenship in San Francisco and Cincinnati, 1870-1911. (J. Haydu). Part II: Citizens, States, and Social Movements in Colonial and Transnational Context. Her Majesty's Sable Subjects: Subaltern Masculinities in Post-Emancipation Jamaica. (M. Sheller). Europe's Atlantic Empires: Early Modern State Formation Reconsidered. (J.C.A. Smith). Thinking Locally, Acting Globally? What the Seattle WTO Protests Tell Us About the Global Justice Movement. (G.H. Murphy, S. Pfaff). Part III: Scholarly Controversy: A Debate on the Social Origins of Corporate Irresponsibility. Corporate Malfeasance and the Myth of Shareholder Value. (F. Dobbin, D. Zorn). On the Importance of Analyzing Economic Scandals and Contemporary Economic Institutions: A Comment on Dobbin and Zorn. (R. Swedberg). The Power of Ideas? The Possibility of a Myth of Shareholder Value. (E.S. Clemens). The Historical Context of Sharehold Value Capitalism. (M.S. Mizruchi, H. Kimeldorf). The End of (Shareholder Value) Ideology? (N. Fligstein). The Promise of Economic Sociology. (F. Dobbin, D. Zorn).
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.