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25-04-2012
Results of the grants competition: research papers in economic sociology, 2012 (E-journal "Economic Sociology")

17-03-2012
Grants competition: research papers in economic sociology (electronic journal "Economic Sociology"). Deadline: April 1, 2012.

28-12-2011
Workshop on Embeddedness and Embedding, University of Gdańsk, 14–15 of May 2012

19-09-2011
International conference in Moscow "Embeddedness and Beyond: Do Sociological Theories Meet Economic Realities?" October 25-28, 2012. Deadline – February 15, 2012.

01-06-2011
Workshop on multilevel and multimode governance in the context of globalization (Deadline for proposal sumbission - June 15)

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Государственный университет - Высшая школа экономики
Журнал "Экономическая социология"
Лаборатория экономической социологии

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North, Douglass C. Understanding the Process of Economic Change. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005. Table of contents
Abstract
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Excerpt

In this landmark work, a Nobel Prize-winning economist develops a new way of understanding the process by which economies change. Douglass North inspired a revolution in economic history a generation ago by demonstrating that economic performance is determined largely by the kind and quality of institutions that support markets. As he showed in two now classic books that inspired the New Institutional Economics (today a subfield of economics), property rights and transaction costs are fundamental determinants. Here, North explains how different societies arrive at the institutional infrastructure that greatly determines their economic trajectories.

North argues that economic change depends largely on "adaptive efficiency," a society's effectiveness in creating institutions that are productive, stable, fair, and broadly accepted--and, importantly, flexible enough to be changed or replaced in response to political and economic feedback. While adhering to his earlier definition of institutions as the formal and informal rules that constrain human economic behavior, he extends his analysis to explore the deeper determinants of how these rules evolve and how economies change. Drawing on recent work by psychologists, he identifies intentionality as the crucial variable and proceeds to demonstrate how intentionality emerges as the product of social learning and how it then shapes the economy's institutional foundations and thus its capacity to adapt to changing circumstances.

Understanding the Process of Economic Change accounts not only for past institutional change but also for the diverse performance of present-day economies. This major work is therefore also an essential guide to improving the performance of developing countries.





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