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Market relations and the competitive process / edited by Stan Metcalfe, Alan Warde.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: New dynamics of innovation and competitionPublisher: New York : Manchester University Press, [2002]Copyright date: ©2002Description: 1 online resource (214 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 0719064686
  • 9780719064685
  • 1417576421
  • 9781417576425
  • 9781526137524
  • 1526137526
  • 9781847790293
  • 1847790291
  • 9786610734429
  • 6610734429
  • 1280734426
  • 9781280734427
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Market relations and the competitive process.DDC classification:
  • 306.3/42 21
LOC classification:
  • HF1414 .M367 2002eb
Online resources:
Contents:
On the complexities and limits of market organisation / Richard R. Nelson -- Markets, embeddedness and trust : problems of polysemy and idealism / Andrew Sayer -- Cognition and markets / Brian J. Loasby -- Competition as instituted economic process / Mark Harvey -- Markets, materiality and the 'new economy' / Don Slater -- Between markets, firms and networks : constituting the cultural economy / Fran Tonkiss -- Regulatory issues and industrial policy in football / Jonathan Michie and Christine Oughton -- The evolution of the UK software market : scale of demand and the role of competences / Suma S. Athreye -- Open systems and regional innovation : the resurgence of Route 128 in Massachusetts / Michael H. Best.
Summary: There has been increasing interest and debate in recent years on the instituted nature of economic processes in general and the related ideas of the market, in particular the competitive process. This debate lies at the interface between two largely independent disciplines, economics and sociology, and reflects an attempt to bring the two fields of discourse more closely together. This book explores this interface in a number of ways, looking at the competitive process and market relations from a number of different perspectives. It includes a wide range of contributors, most of whom are leading writers and thinkers in the field. The book considers the social role of economic institutions in society and examines the various meanings embedded in the word 'markets', as well as developing arguments on the nature of competition as an instituted economic process, rather than as competition being something that disturbs norms or institutions. It goes on to consider the deeper and more involved connection between markets and cognition, explaining how institutions can ease cognitive difficulties, and the effect of culture on markets and competition is also fully studied. This book will be of vital use to students and academics working in the fields of economics, sociology and business studies. It sketches the agenda for future research about markets and the competitive process.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

On the complexities and limits of market organisation / Richard R. Nelson -- Markets, embeddedness and trust : problems of polysemy and idealism / Andrew Sayer -- Cognition and markets / Brian J. Loasby -- Competition as instituted economic process / Mark Harvey -- Markets, materiality and the 'new economy' / Don Slater -- Between markets, firms and networks : constituting the cultural economy / Fran Tonkiss -- Regulatory issues and industrial policy in football / Jonathan Michie and Christine Oughton -- The evolution of the UK software market : scale of demand and the role of competences / Suma S. Athreye -- Open systems and regional innovation : the resurgence of Route 128 in Massachusetts / Michael H. Best.

Print version record.

There has been increasing interest and debate in recent years on the instituted nature of economic processes in general and the related ideas of the market, in particular the competitive process. This debate lies at the interface between two largely independent disciplines, economics and sociology, and reflects an attempt to bring the two fields of discourse more closely together. This book explores this interface in a number of ways, looking at the competitive process and market relations from a number of different perspectives. It includes a wide range of contributors, most of whom are leading writers and thinkers in the field. The book considers the social role of economic institutions in society and examines the various meanings embedded in the word 'markets', as well as developing arguments on the nature of competition as an instituted economic process, rather than as competition being something that disturbs norms or institutions. It goes on to consider the deeper and more involved connection between markets and cognition, explaining how institutions can ease cognitive difficulties, and the effect of culture on markets and competition is also fully studied. This book will be of vital use to students and academics working in the fields of economics, sociology and business studies. It sketches the agenda for future research about markets and the competitive process.

English.

Open Access EbpS

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