A Civil Economy: Transforming the Marketplace in the Twenty-First CenturyUniversity of Michigan Press, 2009 M11 10 - 328 pages A civil society is one in which a democratic government and a market economy operate together. The idea of the civil economy--encompassing a democratic government and a market economy--presumes that people can solve social problems within the market itself. This book explores the relationship between the two, examining the civil underpinnings of capitalism and investigating the way a civil economy evolves in history and is developed for the future by careful planning. Severyn T. Bruyn describes how people in three sectors--government, business, and the Third Sector (nonprofits and civil groups)--can develop an accountable, self-regulating, profitable, humane, and competitive system of markets that could be described as a civil economy. He examines how government officials can organize markets to reduce government costs; how local leaders deal with global corporations that would unfairly exploit their community resources; and how employees can become coparticipants in the development of human values in markets. A Civil Economy is oriented to interdiciplinary studies of the economy, assisting scholars in diverse fields, such as business management, sociology, political science, and economics, in developing a common language to examine civic problems in the marketplace. As an undergraduate text, it evokes a mode of thought about the development of a self-accountable system of markets. Students learn to understand how the market economy becomes socially accountable and self-reliant, while remaining productive, competitive, and profitable. Sveryn T. Bruyn is Professor of Sociology, Boston College. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 50
Page x
... self-regulation will actually oc- cur. The author stresses the regulatory environment and the forms that enterprises are encouraged to take as crucial to outcomes that, at best, will include worker empowerment as well as identification ...
... self-regulation will actually oc- cur. The author stresses the regulatory environment and the forms that enterprises are encouraged to take as crucial to outcomes that, at best, will include worker empowerment as well as identification ...
Page xiii
... self-regulating. There is still a long way to go before this ideal of self-regulation is fully understood. To increase the power of self-regulation, people in the market must show more signs of being socially accountable, symbiotic, and ...
... self-regulating. There is still a long way to go before this ideal of self-regulation is fully understood. To increase the power of self-regulation, people in the market must show more signs of being socially accountable, symbiotic, and ...
Page 10
... self-regulatory practices. The detailed story of how the market came to so- cially govern itself—from factories to ... regulation became, in some measure, a substitute for government controls. In this history of self-development people ...
... self-regulatory practices. The detailed story of how the market came to so- cially govern itself—from factories to ... regulation became, in some measure, a substitute for government controls. In this history of self-development people ...
Page 13
... self-regulation. And when associations accomplished this task of self-governance effectively, the state did not need to regulate them in that social activity.21 For the remainder of this chapter, we will examine the dynamic interplay ...
... self-regulation. And when associations accomplished this task of self-governance effectively, the state did not need to regulate them in that social activity.21 For the remainder of this chapter, we will examine the dynamic interplay ...
Page 15
... self-interest in the private sector. In still other terms, competition is made possible through co- operation.The basis for a self-regulating economy is accomplished through negotiation between competing powers, through civil ...
... self-interest in the private sector. In still other terms, competition is made possible through co- operation.The basis for a self-regulating economy is accomplished through negotiation between competing powers, through civil ...
Contents
Part II A Developing Economy | 85 |
Part III A Global Economy | 179 |
Great Ideas in the Academy | 231 |
Notes | 247 |
Index | 301 |
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accountability Adam Smith American argue banks become beneµts capital capitalist charter charter schools chemicals civic movements civil associations civil development civil economy civil markets civil privatization civil society co-ops cohousing community land trusts companies compete competition competitors con×ict contract cooperative corporations costs create culture customers decentralized deµned dioxin efµciency employee ownership environment environmental ernment example federal global markets global µrms green chemistry groups idea in×uence industry International investment kets labor leaders Mae-Wan Ho market failure ment million Mondragon monitor moral mutual National networks NGOs nonproµt nonproµt sector ofµce ofµcials operate organizations percent policies political private sector problems professional programs proµt proµtable regulation requires rules safety self-governance self-management self-regulation signiµcant Smith social social capital speciµc stakeholders standards Third Sector tion toxic trade associations UNCTAD United University workers York µeld µnance µnancial µnd µrst