an inspiring contribution to the conceptual discussion of competition in the social sciences and beyond.
Ana Rogojanu, Georg Wolfmayr, Department of European Ethnology, University of Vienna, Economic Sociology
Competition offers a program for research, parsing competition into four elements: actors, relationships, desire, and scarcity (p. 6). That structure is valuable; it provides a framework for exploring how competition originates in and brings meaning to different sectors of society.
Mark J. Zbaracki, Ivey Business School, Administrative Science Quarterly
Prizes, contests, league tables—much of social life has been transformed into a sport. The essays in this fascinating volume make sense of both the allure and the costs of vying to be at the top of the charts, and reveal the massive social construction project that undergirds competing.
Walter W. Powell, Stanford University
In a welcome return to a classic theme in social science, this book goes beyond the standard economic analysis of competition in markets to help us understand who brokers competition and how it plays out, using case studies ranging from Christmas decorations to food waste rankings. A serious and important analysis.
Christopher Hood, University of Oxford
This exceptional volume gathers a variety of provocative papers that as a whole set a new, important agenda on the sources and consequences (good and bad) of competition. It is a must read for anyone interested in understanding how competition has become a default solution for many aspects of social and economic life, and how we should become more mindful about embracing it as a cure-all for problems we face.
Michael Lounsbury, University of Alberta
A strength...is the diverse settings they accumulate to show the range of settings in which competition and performance measures are used.
Mark J. Zbaracki, Administrative Science Quarterly