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Economies of Favour after Socialism

Edited by David Henig and Nicolette Makovicky

in OUP Catalogue from Oxford University Press

Abstract: Since the onset of the global economic crisis, activists, policy makers, and social scientists have been searching for alternative paradigms through which to re-imagine contemporary modes of thinking and writing about economic orders. These attempts have led to their re-engagement with fundamental anthropological categories of economic analysis, such as barter, debt, and the gift. Focusing on favours, and the paradoxes of action, meaning, and significance they engender, this volume advocates for their addition to this list of economic universals. It presents a critical re-interrogation of the conceptual relationships between gratuitous and instrumental behaviour, and raises novel questions about the intersection of economic actions with the ethical and expressive aspects of human life. Scholars of post-socialist politics and society have often used 'favour' as a by-word for corruption and clientelism. The contributors to this volume treat favours, and the doing of favours, as a distinct mode of acting, rather than as a form of 'masked' economic exchange or simply an expression of goodwill. Casting their comparative net from post-socialist Central, Eastern, and South Eastern Europe; to the former Soviet Union, Mongolia, and post-Maoist China, the contributors to this volume show how gratuitous behaviour shapes a plethora of different actions, practices, and judgements across religious and political life, imaginative practices, and local moral economies. They show that favours do not operate 'outside' or 'beyond' the economic sphere. Rather, they constitute a distinct mode of action which has economic consequences, without being fully explicable in terms of transactional cost-benefit analyses. Contributors to this volume - Chris Hann, Max Planck Institute Halle/Saale David Henig, University of Kent Martin Holbraad, University College London Caroline Humphrey, University of Cambridge Deema Kaneff, University of Birmingham Alena Ledeneva, University College London Nicolette Makovicky, University of Oxford Madeleine Reeves, University of Manchester Tomasz Rakowski, University of Warsaw Katherine Swancutt, Kings College London

Date: 2016
ISBN: 9780199687411
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