000 01620pab a2200181 454500
008 180718b2007 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aBeamish, Thomas D.
245 _aEconomic sociology in the next decade and beyond
260 _c2007
300 _ap.993-1014.
362 _aApr
520 _aThis article assesses "Economic Sociology in the Next Decade and Beyond". In addressing this broad thematic, as it relates to what some have called the new economic sociology, the article notes the "legacy effectg" that a polemic with conventional economic conceptualizations has had on the recent reemergence and shape of this field, the relationship that the predominate schools of thought have to one another and the centrifugal tendencies they currently exhibit in this field, and the relationship this field of study currently has to general sociological theories and research streams. The article expressly argues that it is essential to the current and future relevance of the new economic sociology that it seek to bridge key concepts and ideas across methodologically and substantively distinct subfoci within its purview; enhance the theoretical continuity between its findings and theoretical insights and those that explain more generic sociological processes; and more explicitly theorize the role of agency, materiality, and the place of inequality in economic contexts, especially markets, as these are currently undertheorized in this field of study. - Reproduced.
650 _aSociology
650 _aEconomic sociology
773 _aAmerican Behavioral Scientist
908 _aN
909 _a73843
999 _c73843
_d73843