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El. knyga: State of State: Invisible Hands in Politics and Civil Society

  • Formatas: 240 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Sep-2017
  • Leidėjas: Transaction Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351320542
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 240 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Sep-2017
  • Leidėjas: Transaction Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351320542
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Basing his work on games theory and evolutionary theory and influenced by the writings of F.A. Hayek, Karlson (president, City U. of Stockholm, Sweden) expands on Adam Smith's concept of the "invisible hand" of the marketplace to argue that bureaucracies and policies within states often develop beyond conscious human decision. He argues that this process is what led to the growth of the European welfare state. Believing the welfare state to be harmful to human societies, he argues that constitutional constraints need to be placed on policy making. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

One of the most astonishing features of social, economic and political life is that large-scale patterns, structures and behavioral regularities sometimes organize themselves without anyone intentionally planning their occurrence or without anyone deliberately deciding to bring them about. They evolve as a specific kind of unintended consequence of human action. They are the result of invisible hands. Building on the classic concept "the invisible hand" by Adam Smith, this study presents a general approach, based on the theory of games and evolutionary theory, to explain such large-scale unintended consequences within markets, communities and the state. This analysis by Nils Karlson is further used to explain the growth of the modern "welfare" state. It shows how an unconstrained democratic state through two distinct invisible-hand processes, the logic of conceit and the logic of opportunism, may develop into a "equilibrium" state, The State of State. His work moves classic political economy into the world of political sociology. A normative contractual model is presented and the relative desirability of the state, markets and communities is discussed. A major conclusion is that it is a choice between imperfect alternatives, involving hard decision about more or less rather than absolute judgments of an either/or variety. It is nevertheless suggested that society ought to be radically depoliticized and that constitutional constraints should be introduced in the universe of policy making. Nils Karlson is the president of the City University of Stockholm in Sweden. Prior to that he served as lecturer in Economics and Political Science at Uppsala University. He did post graduate studies at George Mason University. He has worked on the editorial page of Svenska Dagbladet, a major Swedish newspaper has previously been published in newspapers, journals, and edited books. In practical affairs he served as an adviser to the Swedish Minister of Education and Science.

Preface to the Transaction Edition 7(4)
Introduction 11(5)
The Invisible Hand
16(24)
Introduction
16(5)
Spontaneous Patterns
21(7)
The Explanatory Status of Invisible-Hand Processes
28(3)
Intendedly Rational Actors
31(4)
Motivational Assumptions
35(5)
Processes of Spontaneous Patterns
40(36)
Situational Logics
40(3)
Aggregation
43(13)
Bilateral-Interaction Situations
46(6)
Multilateral-Interaction Situations
52(3)
Conclusions
55(1)
Evolutionary Selection
56(20)
Natural Selection
59(5)
Diffused Reinforcement
64(5)
The Role of the Environment
69(4)
The Critique of Functionalism
73(2)
Conclusions
75(1)
Civil Society
76(53)
Introduction
76(4)
Conventions
80(7)
Internalization
85(1)
Conclusions
86(1)
Communities and Social Norms
87(15)
Processes of Aggregation
89(4)
Selection Processes
93(6)
Conclusions
99(1)
Implications for Voluntary Organizations
100(2)
Markets and Prices
102(14)
The Market Process
107(7)
The Invisible Hands in Markets
114(1)
Conclusions
115(1)
Sources of Disorder
116(6)
Conclusions
122(1)
The Introduction of the State
122(7)
The Emergence of the ``Welfare'' State
129(52)
Introduction
129(7)
An Unconstrained Democracy
131(2)
The Relation to Earlier Research
133(3)
The Logic of Conceit
136(23)
Policy-Caused Social Problems
143(7)
Social Justice
150(5)
Effects on Civil Society
155(3)
Conclusions
158(1)
The Logic of Opportunism
159(15)
Narrow Special Interests
161(5)
Myopic Decisions
166(3)
The Democratic Techniques
169(3)
Conclusions
172(2)
A Synthesis
174(2)
The State of State
176(5)
Imperfect Alternatives
181(29)
Introduction
181(2)
A Contractarian Perspective
183(4)
The State, Markets or Communities?
187(16)
Social Order
187(3)
Prosperity
190(3)
The Position of the Weak and Unfortunate
193(5)
Democratic Values
198(4)
Conclusions
202(1)
Prospects for the Desired Changes
203(7)
References 210
Nils Karlson