<p>Financial and material resources are correctly perceived as the life blood of terrorist operations, and governments have determined that fighting the financial infrastructure of terrorist organizations is the key to their defeat. Since the attacks of September 11, 2001, a good deal has been learn
Privatization, Vulnerability, and Social Responsibility: A Comparative Perspective
β Scribed by Martha Albertson Fineman; Titti Mattsson; Ulrika Andersson
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 351
- Series
- Gender in Law, Culture, and Society
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Taking a cross-cultural perspective, this book explores how privatization and globalization impact contemporary feminist and social justice approaches to public responsibility. Feminist legal theorists have long problematized divisions between the private and the political, an issue with growing importance in a time when the welfare state is under threat in many parts of the world and private markets and corporations transcend national boundaries. Because vulnerability analysis emphasizes our interdependency within social institutions and the need for public responsibility for our shared vulnerability, it can highlight how neoliberal policies commodify human necessities, channeling unprofitable social relationships, such as caretaking, away from public responsibility and into the individual private family. This book uses comparative analyses to examine how these dynamics manifest across different legal cultures. By highlighting similarities and differences in legal responses to vulnerability, this book provides important insights and arguments against the privatization of social need and for a more responsive state.
β¦ Table of Contents
- Introduction
I. Analyzing Privatization
-
Three Faces of Privatization
-
Big Government Against Social Responsibility: A Vulnerability Critique of Privatizationβs Public Priorities
-
Rethinking Responsibility in Private Law
-
In the Land of Choice: Privatized Reality and Contractual Vulnerability
II. Privatization and Corporatization
-
Entrepreneurial Subjectivity, the Privatization of Risk, and the Ethics of Vulnerability
-
Privatizing Hoodia: Patent Ownership, Benefit Sharing, and Indigenous Knowledge in Southern Africa
-
Credit Counselling in Canada: An Empirical Examination
-
Privatizing and Corporatizing the University: A U.S. and UK Comparison
III. Privatization of Public Services
-
Freedom of Choice over Equality as Objective for the Swedish Welfare State? The Latest Debate on Choice in Education
-
Privatization in the Human Services: Impact on the Front Lines and the Ground Floor
-
Still a responsive state?
-
E-government for the distribution of public services in Sweden: Privatization, Vulnerability and Social Responsibility reshaped
-
What does privatization mean for women in Uganda?
IV. Privatization of the Coercive Power of the State
-
The Human Right to Dignity and Commodification of Prisoners: Considering Worldwide Challenges to Prison Privatization
-
Gendered Aspects of Privatizing Force in Counterinsurgent Warfare
-
Harmed selves harming others β A vulnerability approach to the criminal justice system
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The English language version of proceedings of a bilateral UK/FRG conference held at Philipps Universitaet, Marburg. The theme of this conference was the examination of childhood and youth as life-stages in the context of contemporary social and cultural change, with an eye to future developments.
The goal of this project is to detail the core, defining principles of strategic CSR that differentiate it as a concept from the rest of the CSR/sustainability/business ethics field. It is designed to be a provocative piece, but one that solidifies the intellectual framework around an emerging conce
Our narrower obligations often blind us to larger social responsibilities. The moral claims arising out of special relationshipsβfamily, friends, colleagues, and so onβalways seem to take priority. Strangers ordinarily get, and ordinarily are thought to deserve, only what is left over. Robert E. Goo