In a world of vertiginous inequality, escalating ecological disaster, and extraordinary political and economic turbulence generated by a winner-take-all society seemingly designed to concentrate privilege and power in the hands of a very few, the central question that faces social science—and indeed the world—is whether social protest will change anything, or whether elites will continue to lead the planet and its population to disaster.

All important topics of contemporary social science, including racial justice, environmental change, immigration, economic inequality, and education, to name a few, revolve around this issue. Elites, Nonelites, and Power explores how the question of the power of elites, and the conditions under which that power might be tamed, lie at the heart of social science today. Bringing together a cutting-edge set of multidisciplinary papers on power, elites, and nonelites, that weigh in on these central issues of the world and social science, the collection consider these topics in a new, inclusive way, by drawing in researchers who deal with topics central to elite theory, but who might not be represented in more classic statements of it.

A “go to” piece for several generations of scholars, this is a compelling volume for scholars across the social sciences interested in elite theory.

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Bringing together cutting-edge, multidisciplinary papers that weigh in on central issues of the world and social science, the collection consider power, elites, and nonelites in a new, inclusive way, drawing in researchers who deal with topics central to elite theory, but who might not be represented in more classic statements of it.

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Section 1. The Powers of Elites and Nonelites
Chapter 1. Introduction: Relational Power Theory: Elites and Nonelites; Rebecca Jean Emigh and Dylan Riley
Chapter 2. Streets and Elites: Corruption Grievances in Contemporary Revolutions; Colin J. Beck and Mlada Bukovansky
Chapter 3. Asian Art Patronage: Race, Ethnicity, and Cultural Legitimation; Patricia A. Banks
Chapter 4. Decolonizing Porto? Thinking on the Portuguese “Unfinished” Decolonization Process from a Collaborative Action-Research Project with the City’s Black Communities; Lígia Ferro, Beatriz Lacerda, Lydia Matthews, and Susan Meiselas
Section 2. Elites and Social Transformations
Chapter 5. Elite Conflict and Industry Regulation: How Political Polarization Affects Local Restriction and State Preemption of the U.S. Hydraulic Fracturing Industry; Lori Qingyuan Yue and Yuni Wen
Chapter 6. Elite Politics and Economic Crisis: Hyperinflation in Argentina, 1989-1990; Tod S. Van Gunten
Chapter 7. Elites, Colonialism, and Property Rights in Historical Perspective; Abhishek Chatterjee
Chapter 8. Do Events Shape Race? A Comparative-Historical Examination of the Catholic Irish in 17th-Century Barbados and Montserrat; Caroline Virginia Reilly
Chapter 9. Historical Trajectories of Official Information Gathering in India; Patricia Ahmed, Rebecca Jean Emigh, and Dylan Riley

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781837975846
Publisert
2024-11-28
Utgiver
Vendor
Emerald Publishing Limited
Vekt
520 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
312

Biographical note

Rebecca Jean Emigh is Professor of Sociology at The University of California, Los Angeles, USA. She is a comparative historical sociologist who specializes in long-term social change and the author of multiple prize-winning articles and books on a range of topics, including capitalism, censuses, social theory, and historical demography.

Dylan Riley is Professor of Sociology at The University of California, Berkeley and author of The Civic Foundations of Fascism in Europe and Antecedents of Censuses and Changes in Censuses.