Markets on Trial : The Economic Sociology of the U.S. Financial Crisis (Research in the Sociology of Organizations)

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Markets on Trial : The Economic Sociology of the U.S. Financial Crisis (Research in the Sociology of Organizations)

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  • ページ数 666 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780857242419
  • DDC分類 306.3

Full Description

This Book Set of A & B.
Since the mid-20th century, organizational theorists have increasingly distanced themselves from the study of core societal power centers and important policy issues of the day. This has been driven by a shift away from the study of organizations, politics, and society and towards a more narrow focus on instrumental exchange and performance. As a result, our field has become increasingly impotent as a critical voice and contributor to policy. For a contemporary example, witness our inability as a field to make sense of the recent U.S. mortgage meltdown and concomitant global financial crisis. It is not that economic and organizational sociologists have nothing to say. The problem is that while we have a great deal of knowledge about finance, the economy, entrepreneurship and corporations, we fail to address how the knowledge in our field can be used to contribute to important policy issues of the day. This double-volume brings together some of the very top scholars in the world in economic and organizational sociology to address the recent global financial crisis debates and struggles around how to organize economies and societies around the world.

Contents

PART A INTRODUCTION TO THE SPECIAL 2 VOLUME SET Chapter 1: Markets on Trial: Towards a Policy-Oriented Economic Sociology, Michael Lounsbury (University of Alberta) and Paul M. Hirsch (Northwestern University) SECTION I: THE FINANCIAL CRISIS AND ITS UNFOLDING Chapter 2: The Anatomy of the Mortgage Securitization Crisis, Neil Fligstein and Adam Goldstein (University of California at Berkeley) Chapter 3: The Structure of Confidence and the Collapse of Lehman Brothers, Richard Swedberg (Cornell University) Chapter 4: The Role of Ratings in the Subprime Mortgage Crisis: The Art of Corporate and the Science of Consumer Credit Rating, Akos Rona-Tas (University of California at San Diego) and Stefanie Hiss (University of Jena) Chapter 5: Knowledge and Liquidity: Institutional and Cognitive Foundations of the SubPrime Crisis Bruce Carruthers (Northwestern University) Chapter 6: Terminal Isomorphism and the Self-Destructive Potential of Success: Lessons from Sub-Prime Mortgage Origination and Securitization, Jo-Ellen Pozner (University of California at Berkeley), Mary Katherine Stimmler (University of California at Berkeley) & Paul Hirsch (Northwestern University) SECTION II: THE NORMAL ACCIDENT PERSPECTIVE Chapter 7: A Normal Accident Analysis of the Mortgage Meltdown, Don Palmer and Michael Maher (University of California at Davis) Chapter 8: The Global Crisis of 2007-2009: Markets, Politics, and Organizations, Mauro F. Guillen (University of Pennsylvania) and Sandra L. Suarez (Temple University) Chapter 9: Regulating and Redesigning Finance: Market Architectures, Normal Accidents and Dilemmas of Regulatory Reform, Marc Schneiberg (Reed College) and Tim Bartley (Indiana University) Chapter 10: The Meltdown was not an Accident, Charles Perrow (Yale University) PART B SECTION III: HISTORICAL ORIGINS OF THE U.S. FINANCIAL CRISIS Chapter 11: The Misapplication of Mr. Michael Jensen: How Agency Theory Brought Down the Economy and Why it Might Again, Frank Dobbin and Jiwook Jung (Harvard University) Chapter 12: Neoliberalism in Crisis: Regulatory Roots of the U.S. Financial Meltdown, John Campbell (Dartmouth College) Chapter 13: The American Corporate Elite and the Historical Roots of the Financial Crisis of 2008, Mark Mizruchi (University of Michigan) Chapter 14: The Political Economy of Financial Exuberance, Greta Krippner(University of Michigan) SECTION IV: CRISIS PRODUCTION: SPECULATIVE BUBBLES AND BUSINESS CYCLES Chapter 15: The Institutional Embeddedness of Market Failure: Why Speculative Bubbles Still Occur, Mitch Abolafia (State University of New York at Albany) Chapter 16: The Social Construction of Causality: The Effects of Institutional Myths on Financial Regulation, Anna Rubtsova (Emory University), Rich DeJordy (Boston College), Mary Ann Glynn (Boston College) and Mayer Zald (University of Michigan) Chapter 17: Business Cycles, Entrepreneurship, and Economic Crisis in the Commercial Building Market: Toward a Mesoeconomics, Tom Beamish and Nicole Biggart (University of California at Davis) SECTION V: COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL DYNAMICS Chapter 18: Through the Looking Glass: Inefficient Deregulation in the United States and Efficient State-Ownership in China, Doug Guthrie and David Slocum (New York University) Chapter 19: Precedence for the Unprecedented: A Comparative Institutionalist View of the Financial Crisis, Gerald McDermott (University of South Carolina) SECTION VI: A FUTURE SOCIETY AND ECONOMY Chapter 20: After the Ownership Society: Another World is Possible, Jerry Davis (University of Michigan) SECTION VII: POSTSCRIPTS Chapter 21: What If We Had Been in Charge? The Sociologist as Builder of Rational Institutions Ezra Zuckerman (MIT) Chapter 22: The Future of Economics, New Circuits for Capital, and Re-envisioning the Relation of State and Market, Fred Block (University of California at Davis)

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