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Patriarchal Hierarchy = Market Capitalism and Production in Afghanistan /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Patriarchal Hierarchy/ by Kambaiz Rafi.
Reminder of title:
Market Capitalism and Production in Afghanistan /
Author:
Rafi, Kambaiz.
Description:
XVII, 327 p. 17 illus.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Economics. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-98407-6
ISBN:
9783030984076
Patriarchal Hierarchy = Market Capitalism and Production in Afghanistan /
Rafi, Kambaiz.
Patriarchal Hierarchy
Market Capitalism and Production in Afghanistan /[electronic resource] :by Kambaiz Rafi. - 1st ed. 2022. - XVII, 327 p. 17 illus.online resource.
1. Introduction -- 2. Literature Review: New Institutionalist Economics (NIE) -- 3. Theoretical Framework; Embodied Institutions -- 4. Enabling Environment Approach (EEA) and Aid Expenditure in Post-2001 Afghanistan -- 5. Method -- 6. Data Analysis: Habitus and Practical Knowledge of Production -- 7. Data Analysis: Elements of the Field -- 8. Data Analysis: Habitus and Adaptive Strategies for Enterprise Continuation -- 9. Conclusion.
This book examines the reconstruction of Afghanistan’s economy during the US and international occupation of the country between 2001 and 2021. Applying an institutionalist framework and based on extensive empirical data, it focuses on resource allocation by private individuals in manufacturing activities. As such, market-oriented policy adopted in this period is analysed to highlight its suitability in such a context for achieving relatively better and more productive resource allocation. The book underscores ‘socially contingent knowledge’ and its role in private resource allocation where the private sector’s involvement is fledgling, bringing out the limitations and possibilities that this feature entails. It raises important questions and deals with problems that are relevant to contemporary debates in economics and political economy of development. Kambaiz Rafi is a researcher in political economy with a PhD from UCL (University College London). His research focuses on economic resource allocation, and the role institutions play in economic development. Born in Afghanistan, he has studied in India, and the United Kingdom and holds a United States citizenship. He writes regularly in English and Persian for peer reviewed journals and online media. .
ISBN: 9783030984076
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-030-98407-6doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
555568
Economics.
LC Class. No.: HB74.P65
Dewey Class. No.: 338.9
Patriarchal Hierarchy = Market Capitalism and Production in Afghanistan /
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1. Introduction -- 2. Literature Review: New Institutionalist Economics (NIE) -- 3. Theoretical Framework; Embodied Institutions -- 4. Enabling Environment Approach (EEA) and Aid Expenditure in Post-2001 Afghanistan -- 5. Method -- 6. Data Analysis: Habitus and Practical Knowledge of Production -- 7. Data Analysis: Elements of the Field -- 8. Data Analysis: Habitus and Adaptive Strategies for Enterprise Continuation -- 9. Conclusion.
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This book examines the reconstruction of Afghanistan’s economy during the US and international occupation of the country between 2001 and 2021. Applying an institutionalist framework and based on extensive empirical data, it focuses on resource allocation by private individuals in manufacturing activities. As such, market-oriented policy adopted in this period is analysed to highlight its suitability in such a context for achieving relatively better and more productive resource allocation. The book underscores ‘socially contingent knowledge’ and its role in private resource allocation where the private sector’s involvement is fledgling, bringing out the limitations and possibilities that this feature entails. It raises important questions and deals with problems that are relevant to contemporary debates in economics and political economy of development. Kambaiz Rafi is a researcher in political economy with a PhD from UCL (University College London). His research focuses on economic resource allocation, and the role institutions play in economic development. Born in Afghanistan, he has studied in India, and the United Kingdom and holds a United States citizenship. He writes regularly in English and Persian for peer reviewed journals and online media. .
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