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  1. The global diffusion of public policies: Social construction, coercion, competition, or learning?Frank Dobbin, Beth Simmons & Geoffrey Garrett - manuscript
    Social scientists have sketched four distinct theories to explain a phenomenon that appears to have ramped up in recent years, the diffusion of policies across countries. Constructivists trace policy norms to expert epistemic communities and international organizations, who define economic progress and human rights. Coercion theorists point to powerful nation-states, and international financial institutions, that threaten sanctions or promise aid in return for fiscal conservatism, free trade, etc. Competition theorists argue that countries compete to attract investment and to sell exports (...)
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  • Rethinking the state: Genesis and structure of the bureaucratic field.Pierre Bourdieu, Loic J. D. Wacquant & Samar Farage - 1994 - Sociological Theory 12 (1):1-18.
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  • On the Cunning of Imperialist Reason.Pierre Bourdieu & Loïc Wacquant - 1999 - Theory, Culture and Society 16 (1):41-58.
    This article poses the question of the social and intellectual conditions for genuine social scientific internationalism, through an analysis of the worldwide spread of a new global vulgate resulting from the false and uncontrolled universalization of the folk concepts and preoccupations of American society and academe. The terms, themes and tropes of this new planetary doxa - `multiculturalism', `globalization', `liberals versus communitarians', `underclass', racial `minority' and identity, etc. - tend to project and impose on all societies American concerns and viewpoints, (...)
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  • The Exclusive Society: Social Exclusion, Crime and Difference in Late Modernity.Jock Young - 1999 - SAGE Publications.
    Jock Young charts the move of the last 30 years from an inclusive society of stability and homogeneity to an exclusive society of change and division - where blame is apportioned to vulnerable sections of the community.
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  • (1 other version)Ordering Insecurity.Loïc Wacquant - 2008 - Radical Philosophy Review 11 (1):1-19.
    The sudden growth and glorification of the penal state in the United States after the mid-1970s (and in Western Europe two decades later) is not a response to the evolution of crime, but a reaction to—and a diversion from—the social insecurity produced by the fragmentation of wage labor and the destabilization of ethnoracial hierarchies following the discarding of the Fordist-Keynesian compact. It partakes of a new government of poverty wedding restrictive “workfare” and expansive “prisonfare,” which ensnares the precarious fractions of (...)
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  • (1 other version)Ordering Insecurity.Loïc Wacquant - 2008 - Radical Philosophy Review 11 (1):1-19.
    The sudden growth and glorification of the penal state in the United States after the mid-1970s (and in Western Europe two decades later) is not a response to the evolution of crime, but a reaction to—and a diversion from—the social insecurity produced by the fragmentation of wage labor and the destabilization of ethnoracial hierarchies following the discarding of the Fordist-Keynesian compact. It partakes of a new government of poverty wedding restrictive “workfare” and expansive “prisonfare,” which ensnares the precarious fractions of (...)
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