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The Handbook of economic sociology
599
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1995
Year
SocioeconomicsHeterodox EconomicsInstitutional EconomicsEconomic HistoryIndustrial OrganizationEconomic InstitutionsAustrian EconomicsPolitical EconomyPhilosophy Of EconomicsPublic HealthComparative EconomicsEconomicsTransaction Cost TheoryLabor EconomicsBusiness HistorySociologyBusinessBusiness EconomicsSimultaneous Understanding
During recent years social scientists have come to reaffirm that understanding almost any facet of social life requires a simultaneous understanding of how economic institutions work and how they are influenced by values and norms. Sociology, and especially economic sociology, is well equipped to be of assistance in this endeavor. Neil Smelser and Richard Swedberg bring together leading sociologists, economists, and political scientists in The Handbook of Economic Sociology, the first comprehensive view of this vital and growing field. This excellent volume is a compilation of some of the best writing in this field over the past decade, including basic works like Oliver Williamson's transaction cost theory of the firm, and [is] a helpful comparison of economic sociology to mainstream economics. —Francis Fukuyama, Foreign Affairs This is the first comprehensive theoretical and empirical account of the burgeoning field of economic sociology. The scholarship is consistently strong. . .. The book will be greeted warmly and read by serious scholars throughout the social sciences. —Robert K. Merton This is a bold, ambitious, almost daunting project. ... It will surely become the standard reference book for the field—the sort of text every scholar will have to know-, consult, and cite. —Viviana Zelizer