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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jeffrey K. Hass (University of Richmond, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: 2nd edition Weight: 0.660kg ISBN: 9781138217645ISBN 10: 1138217646 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 31 March 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1. Economic Sociology Unbound 2. The Significant Other: Economic Theory 3. Making and Shaping Economies: States, Institutions, and Policies 4. Heart and Soul of the Economy: Labor and Organizations 5. Economies and Inequality 6. Contemporary Great Transformations: Socialism and Post-Socialism 7. Global Economy, Global Recession Conclusion: Frontiers and Challenges of Economic SociologyReviews"""Many textbooks in economic sociology are either too difficult or too generic for undergraduates. This book strikes the right balance between academics and accessibility that allows students to grapple with the material. The book provides excellent elaboration and summary of theoretical perspectives in economic sociology. It engagingly uses current events and historical examples to demonstrate the power of those perspectives. As a scholar of Soviet and post-Soviet Russia, Hass brings unique insight into questions of economic sociology, including socialist alternatives to capitalism and the evolution of globalization. The broad canvas of the book helps students to think comparatively about the economy rather than focus on historically-specific instances in venues they are more familiar with."" Andrew Buck, Chair of Sociology, University of Southern Indiana, USA ""Hass promises to explore the politics and assumptions on which much of our economic life is based. He does this and suggests how economic sociology can improve our understanding of our contemporary world. Brilliantly researched and lucidly written."" Miguel Centeno, Professor of Sociology and International Affairs, Princeton University, USA ""Jeff Hass' book on Economic Sociology is not just an excellent introductory text on this increasingly prominent field, but a deep and well-crafted sociological critique of the economic fundamentalism that permeates the political debates of our times. Hass' book teaches us about the importance of power, organizations, fields, institutions, and cultures for understanding how economies operate differently under alternative social and political contexts. While many economists see society as a constraint to the economy, Hass convincingly argues that the economy is part of society and cannot exist without it. The book has many layers and will be of use to different types of readers – undergraduate students on a first contact with this field, economists who want to get familiarized with the sociological critique of economic theory and reflect on their own work, or policy analysts and practitioners who seek to better adapt their economic policies to the needs and customs of the people whom they aim to serve."" Jorge Rodriguez, Serra Hunter Associate Professor in Sociology and Criminology, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain" Many textbooks in economic sociology are either too difficult or too generic for undergraduates. This book strikes the right balance between academics and accessibility that allows students to grapple with the material. The book provides excellent elaboration and summary of theoretical perspectives in economic sociology. It engagingly uses current events and historical examples to demonstrate the power of those perspectives. As a scholar of Soviet and post-Soviet Russia, Hass brings unique insight into questions of economic sociology, including socialist alternatives to capitalism and the evolution of globalization. The broad canvas of the book helps students to think comparatively about the economy rather than focus on historically-specific instances in venues they are more familiar with. Andrew Buck, Chair of Sociology, University of Southern Indiana, US Hass promises to explore the politics and assumptions on which much of our economic life is based. He does this and suggests how economic sociology can improve our understanding of our contemporary world. Brilliantly researched and lucidly written. Miguel Centeno, Professor of Sociology and International Affairs, Princeton University, US Many textbooks in economic sociology are either too difficult or too generic for undergraduates. This book strikes the right balance between academics and accessibility that allows students to grapple with the material. The book provides excellent elaboration and summary of theoretical perspectives in economic sociology. It engagingly uses current events and historical examples to demonstrate the power of those perspectives. As a scholar of Soviet and post-Soviet Russia, Hass brings unique insight into questions of economic sociology, including socialist alternatives to capitalism and the evolution of globalization. The broad canvas of the book helps students to think comparatively about the economy rather than focus on historically-specific instances in venues they are more familiar with. Andrew Buck, Chair of Sociology, University of Southern Indiana, USA Hass promises to explore the politics and assumptions on which much of our economic life is based. He does this and suggests how economic sociology can improve our understanding of our contemporary world. Brilliantly researched and lucidly written. Miguel Centeno, Professor of Sociology and International Affairs, Princeton University, USA Jeff Hass' book on Economic Sociology is not just an excellent introductory text on this increasingly prominent field, but a deep and well-crafted sociological critique of the economic fundamentalism that permeates the political debates of our times. Hass' book teaches us about the importance of power, organizations, fields, institutions, and cultures for understanding how economies operate differently under alternative social and political contexts. While many economists see society as a constraint to the economy, Hass convincingly argues that the economy is part of society and cannot exist without it. The book has many layers and will be of use to different types of readers - undergraduate students on a first contact with this field, economists who want to get familiarized with the sociological critique of economic theory and reflect on their own work, or policy analysts and practitioners who seek to better adapt their economic policies to the needs and customs of the people whom they aim to serve. Jorge Rodriguez, Serra Hunter Associate Professor in Sociology and Criminology, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain Author InformationJeffrey K. Hass is Associate Professor of Sociology in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Richmond, USA, and part-time Professor Faculty of Economics, in the Department of Economic Theory, at St. Petersburg University, Russia. He works on post-socialist institutional and organizational change and on economics and economic sociology. He also explores wartime political economy in the USSR, practices of survival in the Blockade of Leningrad, and the nature of war and practices. In addition to articles and book chapters on economics, politics, and social change, his books include Economic Sociology; Power, Culture, and Economic Change in Russia; Rethinking the Post-Soviet Experience; and Re-examining the History of the Russian Economy. His areas of interest and expertise are economic sociology, political sociology, political economy, social change, power, organizational sociology, and comparative/historical sociology. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |