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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Moving Beyond Capitalism"

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Agartan, Kaan. « Moving beyond capitalism ». Labour & ; Industry : a journal of the social and economic relations of work 30, no 1 (25 septembre 2019) : 97–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10301763.2019.1670988.

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Waitzkin, Howard. « Moving Beyond Capitalism for Our Health ». International Journal of Health Services 50, no 4 (5 mai 2020) : 458–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0020731420922827.

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Deepening crises now affect not only the capitalist health system in the United States, but also the national health programs of countries that have achieved universal access to services. In our recent collaborative book, Health Care Under the Knife: Moving Beyond Capitalism for Our Health, we analyze these changing structural conditions and argue that the struggle toward viable national health programs now must become part of a struggle to move beyond capitalism. Privatization, cutbacks in public-sector services and institutions, and public subsidization of private profit-making through transfer of tax revenues into private insurance corporations have worsened under neoliberal policies. Financialization of capitalist economies includes the increasingly oligopolistic and financialized character of health insurance, both public and private. Those struggling for just and accessible health systems now need to confront the shifting social class position of health professionals. Due to loss of control over the work process and a reduced ability to generate high incomes compared to other professional workers, the medical profession has become proletarianized. To achieve national health programs that will remain viable over a long term, a much more fundamental transformation needs to reshape not just health care, but also the capitalist state and capitalist society.
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Brown, Raven E. « Book Review : Moving Beyond Capitalism ». Review of Radical Political Economics 51, no 2 (10 septembre 2018) : 342–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0486613418782776.

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Campbell, Al. « Moving Beyond Capitalism : Human Development and Protagonistic Planned Socialism ». Science & ; Society 86, no 2 (avril 2022) : 182–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.1521/siso.2022.86.2.182.

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Major transformations of existing social orders require a broad belief: it is possible to build a viable alternative that addresses the major problems of the existing society. Social discussions involving a multitude of “mid-level concrete” models, or “previsions,” of such a viable alternative combine with the existing social discontent to create such social beliefs. The broad concept of “socialism” designates an organization of society and its production that does not involve some group of people living off their appropriation of part of the production of the rest of society. This paper presents some of the elements of a prefigurative conceptualization called Protagonistic Planned Socialism, which belongs to the Democratic Planned Socialism family of models. Its central elements are protagonistic collective self-determination of the operation of all the institutions of society by its members, consciously socially planned social production, and social labor processes that support and promote human development.
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Arnold, Colin. « Regrounding Populism : Moving Beyond Questions of Definition and Content ». Journal of World-Systems Research 24, no 2 (14 août 2018) : 337–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/jwsr.2018.867.

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While conventional studies of electoral populism acknowledge that such mobilizations are linked tosignificant economic crises, their preoccupation with defining what exactly populism is often leads them to downplay the unified structural roots of different sorts of populistmobilizations. Thisessaypresents the beginnings of an alternative framework for the study of electoral populism that draws on the neo-Gramscian theory of political articulation that links studies of global economic crises with conventional theories of populism.While crisesare an endemic feature of global capitalism, their political manifestation is shaped bythe variedinstitutional structures and legacies in which they are translated.
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Perlstadt, Harry. « Health Care Under the Knife : Moving Beyond Capitalism for Our Health ». Social Forces 98, no 4 (4 juillet 2019) : 1–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sf/soz099.

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Zanoni, Patrizia. « Prefiguring alternatives through the articulation of post- and anti-capitalistic politics : An introduction to three additional papers and a reflection ». Organization 27, no 1 (janvier 2020) : 3–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1350508419894699.

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In this introduction to the second part of the special issue on alternative economies published in Organization in 2017, I first briefly chart key fora where the debate has continued in the last two years, and then present the three additional contributions included here. Moving the conversation forward, I argue that, in order to evaluate the prefigurative potential of alternative organizations, we need to address more thoroughly the relation between alternatives and their outside. A productive place to ground this reflection is in the debate between post-capitalism and anti-capitalism. The main lines of this debate are reconstructed based on the keynote speeches delivered by Jodi Dean and Stephen Healy at the last Rethinking Marxism conference held in Amherst, Massachusetts, in September 2013. I conclude by claiming that post-capitalist immanence should be articulated with an anti-capitalist communist horizon, and advance the Open Marxist notion of de-mediation of social relations as key to do this. Although capitalist institutions (e.g. the market, the state) mediate all social relations, mediation is never definitive, as it always contains the possibility for its own negation, de-mediation. So conceived, de-mediation redefines our understanding of class struggle beyond the capital-labor relation in the workplace, into society as a whole, broadening the ethical and political scope of the organizational research agenda on alternatives to capitalism.
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Osburg, John. « Global Capitalisms in Asia : Beyond State and Market in China ». Journal of Asian Studies 72, no 4 (24 septembre 2013) : 813–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021911813001629.

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After more than thirty years of economic reforms, China appears to have settled into a form of state capitalism that is likely to endure as long as the Communist Party retains power. This essay provides a critical overview of some of the key features and contradictions that characterize this particular form of capitalism and reviews some recent influential critiques of this system. Many observers have viewed the resurgence of the state-controlled economy as a shift away from policies more hospitable to both indigenous entrepreneurs and foreign capital in the 1980s and 1990s. Drawing on the author's own research with entrepreneurs in China, however, this essay argues for the importance of moving beyond the dichotomy of the controlling state and the free market.
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MacEwan, Arthur. « Book Review : Health Care Under the Knife : Moving Beyond Capitalism for Our Health ». Review of Radical Political Economics 52, no 1 (13 septembre 2019) : 155–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0486613419854817.

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Barredo-Zuriarrain, Juan, Jon Las Heras Cuenca et Carlos Rodriguez González. « Post-Keynesian Financialised growth models as an alternative to Varieties of Capitalism : (in)stability, institutions and taxonomic method ». Revista de Economía Mundial, no 65 (28 décembre 2023) : 71–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.33776/rem.vi65.7722.

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This article evaluates the potential of the Post-Keynesian literature on growth models to gain influence over the Varieties of Capitalism approach within Comparative Political Economy. It shows that the future analytical strength of the latter approach depends, primarily, on the ability to consolidate macroeconomic principles consistent with a dynamic reality. On the other hand, Post-Keynesian macroeconomic foundations allow financialised growth models to capture the importance of power struggles in long-term growth as well as to integrate crises as recurrent and inherent phenomena to capitalist economies. That said, Post-Keynesian challenge to become a beacon within CPE lies on moving beyond country-based analyses towards the construction of a systematic association between, on the one hand, the institutional aspects shared between countries and, on the other hand, their classification on growth models.
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Thèses sur le sujet "Moving Beyond Capitalism"

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Ema, Rasmusson Emma. « FIGHTING FOR EXISTENCE : Exposing, questioning and moving beyond colonial practices within the Swedishplanning framework for mining establishments ». Thesis, Örebro universitet, Institutionen för humaniora, utbildnings- och samhällsvetenskap, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-60774.

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The aim of this thesis is to centre three people’s stories, their experiences and un-­ derstandings of the Swedish planning framework for mining establishments. The sto-­ ries centred are from Sami people whom in different ways analyses, questions, chal-­ lenges and changes the diverse expressions of colonialism, racism and capitalism within this framework. Through centring indigenous and decolonial planning this the-­ sis tries to expose colonial planning practices and how indigenous knowledges, worldviews and perspectives are made marginalised. But at the same time it reformu-­ lates, reconstruct and reimagines planning where non-­hierarchical and relational thinking is centred. This thesis is made through guidance of (mainly) indigenous and decolonial theories, methodologies and methods.
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Livres sur le sujet "Moving Beyond Capitalism"

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DuRand, Cliff, dir. Moving Beyond Capitalism. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315596167.

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DuRand, Cliff. Moving Beyond Capitalism. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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DuRand, Cliff. Moving Beyond Capitalism. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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DuRand, Cliff. Moving Beyond Capitalism. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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DuRand, Cliff. Moving Beyond Capitalism. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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Moving Beyond Capitalism. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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Moving Beyond Capitalism. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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Waitzkin, Howard. Health Care under the Knife : Moving Beyond Capitalism for Our Health. Monthly Review Press, 2018.

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Waitzkin, Howard. Health Care under the Knife : Moving Beyond Capitalism for Our Health. Monthly Review Press, 2018.

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Magrass, Yale R., et Charles Derber. Moving Beyond Fear : Upending the Security Tales in Capitalism, Fascism, and Democracy. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Moving Beyond Capitalism"

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Mendoza, Marcos. « Territorializing Capital : Moreno’s Gift and the Political Economy of Nature in Argentine Patagonia ». Dans Tourism and Conservation-based Development in the Periphery, 29–46. Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-38048-8_2.

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Abstract This chapter examines the political economy of nature and the legacy of Francisco Moreno, scientist and explorer, within ArgentinePatagonia. Moreno is institutionally recognized for a land donation he made to the federalgovernment in 1903, which is celebrated for inaugurating the national park conservation movement. This Moreno-centric official history, however, has rendered invisible state violence and Indigenous dispossession as preconditions of national conservation. Moving beyond this official history of conservation, the discussion highlights two histories of capitalist territorialization. The first focuses on the clearing-out strategy pursued by the Argentine government to open Patagonia for colonization and agrarian capitalism. The second attends to the re-territorialization of space through the creation of national parks and the promotion of leisure capitalism. Using the concept of “the gift” to assess Moreno’s legacy, this chapter shows that the “spirit of the gift”—heralded by the Argentine federal government—is chained to these two projects of capitalist territorialization. These territorialization histories challenge the halcyon representation of Moreno’s gift promoted by the state. Drawing upon scholarship in politicalecology, this study is a contribution to an emerging critical assessment of “the gift” within Patagonian conservation.
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Hurley, Patrick T., et Laura E. Taylor. « Conclusion : Moving Beyond Competing Rural Capitalisms and Uneven Environment Management in Exurbia ». Dans A Comparative Political Ecology of Exurbia, 285–301. Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-29462-9_13.

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« Moving Beyond Capitalism ? » Dans Managing in the Next Society, 121–38. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780080942377-17.

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Derber, Charles, et Yale R. Magrass. « From Capitalism to Fascism ». Dans Moving Beyond Fear, 82–120. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315621777-4.

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« Moving beyond the Washington Consensus : Pro-Poor Macroeconomic Policies ». Dans Growth and Change in Neoliberal Capitalism, 11–37. BRILL, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004440418_003.

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Sharone, Ofer. « Moving Beyond Stigma and the Myth of Meritocracy ». Dans The Stigma Trap, 133–54. Oxford University PressNew York, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190239244.003.0007.

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Abstract This chapter reflects on the tenacity of the unemployment stigma, the prospects and obstacles for collective action to challenge the institutions of neoliberal capitalism underlying this stigma, and the lessons that may be learned from the policy response to the Covid-19 pandemic. The chapter analyzes the efforts of a group of unemployed jobseekers who sought to raise awareness about the challenges of long-term unemployment and call for changes in policy. It focuses on the challenge of the activists who desire to make the issue of long-term unemployment visible at the same that they are understandably hesitant—given the stigma of unemployment—to make themselves individually visible. The chapter also discusses how the stigma of unemployment shapes the policy debate and what policies are possible when unemployment is considered in a manner that is not distorted by stigma or the myth of meritocracy.
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Ahuja, Neel. « The Changing Wealth of Nations ». Dans Planetary Specters, 70–97. University of North Carolina Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469664477.003.0003.

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This chapter argues that theories of racial capitalism originating in the field of Black Studies offer a productive method for moving beyond stereotyped imageries of climate migration. Connecting racial capitalism research to studies of the political economies of oil and globalized trade, the chapter analyzes how race is embedded in the extraction of fossil fuels generated by neoliberal networks of trade, financial, and labor globalization across West and South Asia. A theory of racial capitalism extended to considering oil infrastructure integrates analysis of carbon-based neoliberal trade, the development of the South Asia-Gulf migration corridor, and processes of atmospheric waste amplification that cause desertification, sea level rise, and intensified weather disasters. These processes influence the recent emergence of natural capital and green valuation which build upon the wealth divides and labor formations of the oil economy, in the process revaluing nature as a means of expanding capitalist forms of securitization.
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Baldacchino, Jean-Paul. « Chapter 5 Relevance, Ethics and the ‘Good’ in Anthropology Moving beyond the Anthropology : of Crisis to the Ethical Crises in Anthropology ». Dans Morality, Crisis and Capitalism, 110–27. Berghahn Books, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781800736122-007.

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Gerstle, Gary. « The Reach and Limits of the Liberal Consensus ». Dans The Liberal Consensus Reconsidered. University Press of Florida, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813054261.003.0004.

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Revisiting Godfrey Hodgson’s conceptualization of the “liberal consensus,” this chapter finds that during the postwar era a large majority of Americans had come to believe that this state ought to be strong enough to manage capitalism and cushion its destructive effects; to maintain a large enough standing military to contain communism wherever it reared its head in the world; and to operate a system of mass taxation that would yield revenues ample enough to manage capitalism and contain communism. But Americans in the 1950s had reached little agreement about the use of public power in three other major areas of life, race, religion, and sexuality, domains that state governments, not the federal government, traditionally possessed the authority to govern. Once an emboldened federal government began moving in the 1950s to assert its authority over matters of race, religion, and sexuality, it ran into fierce resistance. On these matters there was no consensus, and in consequence conflict emerged as the major theme of American history in the 1960s and beyond.
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Conaghan, Joanne. « Gender and the Labour of Law ». Dans Philosophical Foundations of Labour Law, 271–86. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198825272.003.0015.

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This chapter troubles the notion of ‘labour’ in ‘labour law’ by excavating the material and philosophical roots of the distinction between paid and unpaid labour. Feminists have long argued that labour law is based on a paid work paradigm and that in the context of radical economic and social restructuring in the post-industrial era, labour law scholars must extend the focus of enquiry to encompass unpaid domestic work. The chapter explores how the separation of paid and unpaid labour arose in the context of the transition from feudalism to capitalism and how it came to be explained and justified in liberal political thought. While the primary focus is historical, the concluding section considers the implications for the future of labour law of moving beyond a paid work paradigm.
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