Menu Expand
The New Sociology of Economic Behaviour:

The New Sociology of Economic Behaviour:

Ralph Fevre

(2003)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

What are the solid achievements of the sociology of economic behaviour? What have been the main failures and omissions? How will the subject develop? In this assured and timely volume, the author demonstrates how the sociology of economic behaviour was hijacked by the economic sociology which grew out of Parsons' interpretation of Weber. This development meant that the moral considerations of classical sociology only received attention as means to economic ends. Economic sociology is based on insupportable assumptions about the power of economic rationality which also obscures the political nature of economic behaviour. The book seeks to revitalize the classical approach and introduces students to the essential ideas in the field. It also shows researchers and graduate students how to make use of concepts like demoralization, cheap labour, dignity at work and a fair day's pay to develop critiques of current economic arrangements.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Acknowledgements;
Acronyms and glossary;
Executive summary:
* Background to the conflict;
* The impact of the conflict;
* Immediate peace-keeping and humanitarian response;
* The peace process;
* Conclusion;
* Summary of recommendations;
2. Introduction;
3. Background to the conflict;
* Introduction;
* Under-development and uneven development in Ghana;
* Population and ethnic groups in the Northern Region;
* Land, production, and settlement;
* Governance;
* Ethnicity and identity;
* Conclusion;
4. The War and its Impact;
* The conflict;
* The impact;
5. Peace-Keeping and humanitarian relief and rehabilitaion;
* Peace-keeping;
* Government relief and rehabilitation programmes;
* NGO relief and rehabilitation programmes;
* NGO/government co-operation;
6. The Peace Process;
* Government peace initiatives;
* NGO initiatives;
* Peace-awareness campaign;
* the Kumasi Peace Agreement:issues addressed;
* Peace projects initiatedby NGO's and religious bodies;
* Relationship with the government;
* Assessment of the situation and future prospects;
7. Conclusion;
8. Recommendations;
* For the consortium;
* For local government;
* For traditional authority and civil-society leaders;
* For central government;
* For donors;