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Adam Smith
Known for his work "The Wealth of Nations," Adam Smith emphasized the centrality of division of labor and the pursuit of individual self-interest in driving economic activity.
Division of Labor
Adam Smith's concept highlighting the specialization of tasks within a production process to increase efficiency and productivity.
Invisible Hand
Refers to Adam Smith's idea that individuals pursuing their self-interest unintentionally contribute to the collective wealth and well-being of society.
Karl Marx
Marx provided a foundational contribution to the analysis of economics and society, focusing on historical change, social relations in capitalism, and the role of political economy.
Dialectical Totality
Derived from Hegel, Marx's concept that historical societies are interconnected wholes where components like war and technology have dialectical relationships.
Alienation
Marx's idea of the separation of individuals from their own worth or labor, often seen in capitalist societies where workers are disconnected from the products of their labor.
Class Struggle
The central point of Marx's theory, highlighting the historical conflict between social classes, particularly the bourgeoisie and the proletariat.
Globalization Prediction
Marx and Engels predict the development of a global market and interdependence in economic relations.
Labour as a Commodity
The theory that labor is treated as a commodity and serves as the driving force behind economic reality.
Bourgeoisie and Proletariat
The simplified class antagonism between the capitalist class (bourgeoisie) and the working class (proletariat) in industrial society.
Industrial Revolution
The period marked by the revolutionized production through steam and machinery, leading to the centralization of capital and the rise of industrial millionaires.
Economic Crises Theory
Marx's theory of capitalist crises, including the concept of overproduction and the subsequent destruction of productive forces to overcome crises.
Structure vs Superstructure
The dialectical relationship between the economic structure of society and the superstructure, encompassing politics, law, and ideology.
Division of Labor
The concept of the division of labor within different modes of production, leading to roles with varying power and the development of social organization.
Capitalism Contradiction
The inherent contradiction within capitalism between productive forces and social relations of production, leading to class antagonism and economic crises.
Role of Dominant Class
The influence of the dominant class on shaping societal ideas and the superstructure, legitimizing and fostering their specific interests.
Industrial Reserve Army
Concept where labor supply exceeds demand leading to low wages.
French Revolution Values
Liberte, fraternity, solidarite, representing core principles.
Small Victories in Communist Manifesto
Refers to minor improvements like reduced work hours.
Welfare State Development
Outcome of labor struggles where leftist liberals or labor parties come to power.
Marx's Predictions
Included the quick collapse of capitalism, which did not materialize as expected.
Max Weber's Contribution
Widened economic and political economy boundaries, historicized capitalism.
Protestant Work Ethic
Weber's thesis linking Protestantism to the foundation of capitalism.
Rational Capital Accounting
Involves appropriation of production elements, free markets, rational technology, calculable law, free labor, and commercialization.
Weber's Methodology
Integrated interpretive and explanatory approaches in cultural and social sciences.
Weber's Causal Analysis
Traces historical changes to causality, considering counterfactual comparisons.
Thesis of correlation between religious ethics and culture of capitalism
Weber's exploration of the relationship between religious ethics and the development of capitalism, emphasizing the impact of religious beliefs on economic structures.
Gemeinschaft (community) and Gesellschaft (society)
Weber's distinction between community (based on a sense of belonging) and society (based on rational interests), highlighting different forms of social relations.
Economic action
The specific exercise of action oriented towards economic goals, with rational economic action being a typical type in capitalism driven by goal pursuit.
Power
The ability to influence others, with a distinction between legitimate power (accepted by the subject) and traditional/charismatic authority.
Entrepreneur
Central to Schumpeter's economic theory, defined as an innovator disrupting the equilibrium of the economic system through new combinations of productive factors.
Charismatic authority
Power exercised by individuals believed to possess supernatural abilities, relying on followers' belief in their exceptional qualities.
Entrepreneurship
The function of innovation that does not require ownership and can be credited, introducing a productive force (entrepreneurship) not linked to economic risk or firm membership, distinguishing between routine managers and innovative entrepreneurs.
Leadership
Involves the capacity to think new, grasp the essential, act quickly, understand by intuition, and requires a bold and focused personality type different from routine managers.
Social Stratification
The hierarchical order of families in classes, where individuals belong independently of their wills, with continuous social mobility processes based on the ability to adapt to society's needs and perform leadership roles.
Capitalist Dynamism
Entrepreneurship in modern capitalist society, involving a mix of emotional and rational elements, planning, and a drive to achieve and create, essential for the system's vitality.
Polanyi's Critique
Challenges the classical economic theory's universal validity, emphasizing the embeddedness of the economy in social relations, critiquing utilitarian individualism and homo economicus rationality assumptions.
Technological revolution
Refers to the significant advancements in technology that lead to increased productivity in production processes, freeing labor and land from historical constraints.
Social Redistribution Mechanism (SRM)
A concept discussed by Polanyi, where governments and unions implement laws to mitigate the negative impacts of technological advancements on labor and the environment, setting constraints on the free market.
Reciprocity
A mode of distribution where transactions occur between symmetrical groups, often based on anthropological studies, emphasizing relationships and alliances through gift-giving.
Redistribution
Involves transactions moving to and from a central authority, common in empires where the state collects and redistributes resources, aiming to allocate capital to specific groups or institutions.
Exchange
Describes transactions facilitated by money, representing a heuristic value applied to various situations, with a focus on the transfer of goods and services through monetary means.
Goal-attainment (G)
Refers to how society establishes specific goals legitimized by dominant values and mobilizes the population to achieve them. Parsons and Smelser identified this as the 'polity' subsystem, mainly constituted by the government.
Integration (I)
Involves handling individual and group conflicts and promoting social solidarity. It includes the legal system, peacekeeping aspects of the state, differential allocation of facilities and rewards, and maintaining stratification.
Latent pattern-maintenance and system-management (L)
Involves maintaining the consistency and integrity of societal values through institutions like religion, science, family, and education.
Economic theory
Theorizes values of system selection and received criticism for explaining static functions but not social change.
Wallerstein's world system theory
Classifies relations between economy and society into three ideal types - Empire, World system economy, and Socialism.
Modernity and modernization
Focuses on the process towards modernity, with a shift towards advanced modern countries post the USSR collapse.
Ulrich Beck and the risk society
Discusses the shift from distributional conflicts over 'goods' to conflicts over 'bads' like nuclear risks and environmental threats in modern society.
Globalization
Involves increasing financial, technological interdependence, social connectedness, and cultural and political fragmentation, leading to a growth of networks of interdependence.
Hyperglobalizers
Scholars who view globalization as an irreversible process impacting all aspects of life, particularly focusing on economic and financial globalization.
Sceptics
Scholars who argue that globalization is not a new phenomenon, comparing current globalization to the early 20th century and emphasizing the continuity in foreign investment percentages.
Neo-liberal vs Neo-marxists
The debate between those who believe the benefits of globalization outweigh the drawbacks (Neo-liberals) and those who argue the negative impacts are more significant (Neo-marxists).
Homogenization vs Heterogenization
The concept of globalization involving both the standardization of culture and economics (homogenization) and the diversification of culture (heterogenization).
Nation-state vs Multinational Firms
The discussion surrounding the role and power of nation-states versus multinational corporations in the context of globalization.
Erosion of National Sovereignty
The process of diminishing national sovereignty due to factors like international monetary institutions and global regulations.
Interdependence vs Fragmentation
The key contradiction in globalization today, balancing increasing interdependence with growing fragmentation.
EU Political Entity
Various interpretations of the European Union's political entity, its institutional architecture, and decision-making processes.
European Integration
The process of European integration starting with the Community for Coal and Steel, leading to the establishment of the European Union post-Maastricht Treaty.
Supranational Union
The perspective that views the European Union as a supranational entity with actors setting norms and shaping the European polity through spillover processes.
European Union (EU)
Martinelli views the EU as more than just an international organization, not comparable to the World Trade Organization or a full-fledged union.
Interdevelopmental Approach
Applied to the Maastricht Treaty's second and third pillars, focusing on common foreign defense policy and judicial cooperation.
Supranational Communicatiarian Approach
Applied to the common European space under the EU's first pillar.
Treaty on the European Union & Treaty on the Functioning of the EU
Signed in 2007 in Lisbon and enforced in 2009, systematizing and organizing EU laws and norms.
European Council
Comprised of heads of state and government, defining directions and priorities of the EU, and making collective decisions.
European Commission
Acts as the executive branch, initiating the legislative process and overseeing common European affairs.
European Parliament
Approves most laws on the supranational level, sharing legislative power with the Council.
European Court of Justice
Interprets EU laws and treaties, establishing the superiority of EU law over member state law.
European Central Bank (ECB)
Established by the Maastricht Treaty for eurozone member states, responsible for monetary and currency policy implementation.
Sovereignism
Defines nationalism in EU member states, emphasizing national identity and sovereignty.
Globalization
Leads to countermovements affirming local identity, challenging the importance of national identity.
Nationalism
Ideology linked to nation-building, emphasizing the nation-state and various dimensions like genealogical, cultural, and civil aspects.
Imagined Community
Concept by Anderson highlighting the nation as an imagined political community fostering comradeship.
Nationalist Ideology
Explored by Albertini and Brass, emphasizing loyalty to the state and merging culture with politics.
European Project
Aims to end European wars and develop a European identity to bypass nationalism in member states.
Supranational Institutions
Institutions that operate above the level of individual nations, with authority and powers that transcend national boundaries.
Nationalist Ideology
Belief in the importance of national identity, sovereignty, and independence, often leading to opposition to supranational integration.
European Super State
Concept of a highly centralized and powerful European Union that imposes its will on member states and citizens.
Euro Sceptics
Individuals or groups skeptical of the European Union and its policies, often advocating for reduced EU influence and more national autonomy.
Social Market Economy
Economic system combining free market principles with social policies, aiming to balance economic growth with social welfare and stability.
European Central Bank (ECB)
The ECB played a key role in addressing the financial crisis in the European Union, particularly during Draghi's presidency in July 2012, implementing policies like quantitative easing to stabilize the economy.
Quantitative Easing
A monetary policy tool used by central banks, such as the ECB, to increase the money supply by purchasing government securities or other securities, aiming to stimulate the economy.
European Welfare State
Refers to the social welfare systems in European Union member states, characterized by principles of social cohesion, protection, and non-violent conflict resolution, with different models like liberal anglo-saxon, Nordic social democratic, and communitarian continental European.
Liberal Anglo-Saxon Model
A welfare state model focused on providing benefits for basic needs, with minimal state intervention, private provision of services, and emphasis on individual responsibility, prevalent in countries like the United States.
Nordic Social Democratic Model
A universalistic welfare state model providing high-quality government services to all citizens, with strong decommodification effects, active labor policies, and high taxes to finance social programs, common in Scandinavian countries.
Communitarian Continental European Model
A welfare state model based on employment-related, status-based social insurance schemes, with roots in socialist trade unionism and Christian social thinking, emphasizing communitarian solidarity and autonomy from the government, seen in countries like Germany, France, and Italy.
European Social Model
A distinct feature of the European Union encompassing specific European capitalism, social welfare, and common norms and policies aimed at promoting social cohesion, protection, and welfare across member states.
European Social Union (ESU)
A proposed concept to complement the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) within the EU, aiming to develop a coherent social policy framework, fair labor markets, and welfare systems through principles like work-life balance, social protection, and transparent working conditions.
Single Federal Welfare State
A desirable but challenging goal to invest in the social dimension and move towards a unified welfare system.
European Solidarity
Growing sentiment across borders within the EU, leading to joint actions and decisions during crises like the Covid pandemic.
Next Generation EU
A 750 billion euro investment program integrating the EU Budget for 2021-2027, focusing on areas like green transition, digital transformation, and social provisions.
Euro-Bonds
Bonds issued on the world financial market, guaranteed by the EU, to finance programs like the Recovery and Resilience Fund.
Common Foreign Defence Policy
A priority for the EU post-Ukraine war, aiming to establish a unified military structure and enhance strategic autonomy.
Strategic Compact
A defense and security instrument allowing rapid deployment of a multinational military force, emphasizing the need for a common foreign policy.
Common Defence Policy
A policy aimed at coordinating defense efforts among European Union member states.
Defence Expenditures
The amount of money spent by countries on military personnel, equipment, and operations.
Strategic Compact
A plan or agreement outlining strategic goals and actions to be taken in the field of defense.
Fragmentation
The state of being divided or broken into smaller parts, often referring to the lack of unity or coordination among different entities.
Integration
The process of combining different parts or elements into a unified whole, often used in the context of military cooperation among EU member states.
Coordination of Foreign Policies
The alignment and harmonization of different countries' approaches and strategies towards international affairs.