Communities and Capital

Local Struggles against Corporate Power and Privatization

Title Details

Pages: 160

Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in

Formats

Hardcover

Pub Date: 04/01/2017

ISBN: 9-780-8203-5221-3

List Price: $78.95

Paperback

Pub Date: 02/03/2000

ISBN: 9-780-8203-2173-8

List Price: $24.95

Communities and Capital

Local Struggles against Corporate Power and Privatization

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  • Description
  • Contributors
Capitalism has long been idealized as a symbol of success, power, and free enterprise. In reality, while capitalism has brought wealth and success to some people, many others are rapidly losing opportunities to make a living as globalization transfers more and more control over local resources to distant powers. Today there is a growing sense that something is wrong with a system that treats people as mere components of the production process, focusing on efficiency to such extremes that services to citizens of even wealthy nations are neglected. The eleven anthropologists, economists, and researchers represented in this volume address this disparity of global capitalism and offer surprising solutions to the present effects of the burgeoning "global marketplace" on some of today's struggling communities. The essays, ranging in subject matter from the preservation of traditional fishing communities in New England to the effects of NAFTA, emphasize the need to reestablish grassroots development and locally focused use of resources and champion the concerns of contemporary poor and working-class people. In its consideration of possible alternatives to the profoundly damaging effects of uncontrolled global capitalism, Communities and Capital offers a new perspective that balances the power and success of capitalism with a recognition of its costs.

Mark Moberg

Barbara J. Garrity-Blake

Margaret W. Kedia

John R. Bort

James C. Sabella

Mark A. Grey

Tara Skipper

David T. Spangler

Sara R. Collins

About the Author/Editor

Thomas W. Collins (Editor)
THOMAS W. COLLINS is a professor of anthropology at the University of Memphis. He is coauthor of Stratification and Resegregation: The Case of the Crossover High School, Memphis and editor of Cities in a Wider Context.

John D. Wingard (Editor)
JOHN D. WINGARD is a professor of anthropology at the University of Memphis.