Real Life EconomicsPaul Ekins, Manfred Max-Neef The past fifty years have witnessed the triumph of an industrial development that has engendered great social and environmental costs. Conventional economics has too often either ignored these costs or failed to analyse them appropriately. This book constructs a framework within which the wider impacts of economic activity can be both understood and ameliorated. The framework places its emphasis on an in-depth understanding of real-life processes rather than on mathematical formalism, sressing the independence of the economy with the social, ecological and ethical dimensions of human life. |
From inside the book
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... Society (Routledge, London, 1990). Ponna Wignaraja is currently Adviser to the United Nations University onSouth Asian Perspectives. From 1980to 1987he was theChairman ofthe Participatory Institute for Development Alternatives (PIDA) in ...
... Society (Routledge, London, 1990). Ponna Wignaraja is currently Adviser to the United Nations University onSouth Asian Perspectives. From 1980to 1987he was theChairman ofthe Participatory Institute for Development Alternatives (PIDA) in ...
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... society which, inaccordance with Hindu tradition, gave priority toa spiritual way oflife.An English styleof industrialism is outof place wherever swaraj, the calm freedom to follow personal truth,is to rule; Gandhi pleaded for a renewal ...
... society which, inaccordance with Hindu tradition, gave priority toa spiritual way oflife.An English styleof industrialism is outof place wherever swaraj, the calm freedom to follow personal truth,is to rule; Gandhi pleaded for a renewal ...
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... society primarilyas aneconomy, that is, as a society defining itselfin termsof its performance inthe provision of goods. From an economic viewpoint, however, human nature, the functionof politicsand the character ofsocial reform assume ...
... society primarilyas aneconomy, that is, as a society defining itselfin termsof its performance inthe provision of goods. From an economic viewpoint, however, human nature, the functionof politicsand the character ofsocial reform assume ...
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... society. Adam Smithwas thefirst thinkerwho, whenusingthe term 'market', no longerenvisaged alocally determinable ... society governed by the rules of the market. Alternatives. tothe. economy? The transformation of society intoapolitical ...
... society. Adam Smithwas thefirst thinkerwho, whenusingthe term 'market', no longerenvisaged alocally determinable ... society governed by the rules of the market. Alternatives. tothe. economy? The transformation of society intoapolitical ...
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... society. Asa result, the progress of capitalism was punctuated bybitter disputes about whether and to what extent land and forest, grain and money, and workers themselves, could be treated as commodities. In the lastdecades, similar ...
... society. Asa result, the progress of capitalism was punctuated bybitter disputes about whether and to what extent land and forest, grain and money, and workers themselves, could be treated as commodities. In the lastdecades, similar ...
Contents
Section 25 | |
Section 26 | |
Section 27 | |
Section 28 | |
Section 29 | |
Section 30 | |
Section 31 | |
Section 32 | |
Section 9 | |
Section 10 | |
Section 11 | |
Section 12 | |
Section 13 | |
Section 14 | |
Section 15 | |
Section 16 | |
Section 17 | |
Section 18 | |
Section 19 | |
Section 20 | |
Section 21 | |
Section 22 | |
Section 23 | |
Section 24 | |
Section 33 | |
Section 34 | |
Section 35 | |
Section 36 | |
Section 37 | |
Section 38 | |
Section 39 | |
Section 40 | |
Section 41 | |
Section 42 | |
Section 43 | |
Section 44 | |
Section 45 | |
Section 46 | |
Section 47 | |
Section 48 | |
Other editions - View all
Real-life Economics: Understanding Wealth Creation Paul Ekins,Manfred A. Max-Neef No preview available - 1992 |
Real-life Economics: Understanding Wealth Creation Paul Ekins,Manfred A. Max-Neef No preview available - 1992 |
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