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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Paul Langley (Reader in Economic Geography, Reader in Economic Geography, Durham University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.70cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.396kg ISBN: 9780198778882ISBN 10: 0198778880 Pages: 236 Publication Date: 14 April 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents1: Introduction 2: Financial Crisis Governance 3: Liquidity 4: Toxicity 5: Solvency 6: Risk 7: Regulation 8: Debt 9: ConclusionReviewsOffers an innovative analysis of how the global financial crisis of 2007 was governed ...Recommended -- CHOICE Langley has provided us with a new intellectual architecture, a robust approach to the dazzling complexities of the crisis and its aftermath, while also exposing the cultural exigencies underwriting wealth creation and popular security in our time. By so doing he extends and refines the ambitions of cultural economy, an emerging interdisciplinary field drawing on expertise in sociology, geography, anthropology, business, and organizational studies. -- Douglas R. Holmes, Binghamton University Langley offers a distinctive, theoretically sophisticated analysis of how the most serious financial crisis for nearly a century was managed. -- Donald MacKenzie, Professor of Sociology, University of Edinburgh Liquidity Lost presents a remarkable alternative perspective on the recent financial crisis. Both popular and critical accounts have been quick to understand the response to the economic upheaval in familiar categories: the state intervened to save the market. By contrast, Paul Langley shows how, in their efforts to navigate the crisis, policymakers reformatted both the regulatory instruments of government and the mechanisms of the economy. Among the books striking accomplishments is its account of how economics works both in the wild and in real time. -- Stephen J. Collier, Associate Professor, the New School of Public Management If you wonder, like everyone does, why the most severe financial crisis in living memory has not produced a fundamental change in the way we regulate economies and understand the role of banks, read this book. Drawing on an original reading of Deleuzes notions of modulation and mitigation, Langley shows in an empirically detailed manner how crisis response was driven by ad-hoc initiatives, minor modulations and sometimes conflicting approaches that were largely oriented toward rebuilding affective atmospheres of trust. Steering away from grand conceptions of neoliberalism, Langleys attentiveness to the situated contingency of crisis management brings the politics back into our understanding of financial regulation. -- Marieke de Goede, Professor of Politics, University of Amsterdam Offers an innovative analysis of how the global financial crisis of 2007 was governed ...Recommended -- CHOICE Langley has provided us with a new intellectual architecture, a robust approach to the dazzling complexities of the crisis and its aftermath, while also exposing the cultural exigencies underwriting wealth creation and popular security in our time. By so doing he extends and refines the ambitions of cultural economy, an emerging interdisciplinary field drawing on expertise in sociology, geography, anthropology, business, and organizational studies. -- Douglas R. Holmes, Binghamton University Langley offers a distinctive, theoretically sophisticated analysis of how the most serious financial crisis for nearly a century was managed. -- Donald MacKenzie, Professor of Sociology, University of Edinburgh Liquidity Lost presents a remarkable alternative perspective on the recent financial crisis. Both popular and critical accounts have been quick to understand the response to the economic upheaval in familiar categories: the state intervened to save the market. By contrast, Paul Langley shows how, in their efforts to navigate the crisis, policymakers reformatted both the regulatory instruments of government and the mechanisms of the economy. Among the books striking accomplishments is its account of how economics works both in the wild and in real time. -- Stephen J. Collier, Associate Professor, the New School of Public Management If you wonder, like everyone does, why the most severe financial crisis in living memory has not produced a fundamental change in the way we regulate economies and understand the role of banks, read this book. Drawing on an original reading of Deleuzes notions of modulation and mitigation, Langley shows in an empirically detailed manner how crisis response was driven by ad-hoc initiatives, minor modulations and sometimes conflicting approaches that were largely oriented toward rebuilding affective atmospheres of trust. Steering away from grand conceptions of neoliberalism, Langleys attentiveness to the situated contingency of crisis management brings the politics back into our understanding of financial regulation. -- Marieke de Goede, Professor of Politics, University of Amsterdam Author InformationPaul Langley is Reader in Economic Geography at the Department of Geography, Durham University, UK. He has published extensively on many aspects of global finance, and is the author of two previous books: The Everyday Life of Global Finance (Oxford University Press, 2008); and World Financial Orders (Routledge, 2002). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |