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Cultural political economy, the knowledge-based economy, and the state.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

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Cultural political economy, the knowledge-based economy, and the state. / Jessop, Bob.
The Technological Economy. ed. / Andrew Barry; Don Slater. London: Routledge, 2005. p. 144-166.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Jessop, B 2005, Cultural political economy, the knowledge-based economy, and the state. in A Barry & D Slater (eds), The Technological Economy. Routledge, London, pp. 144-166.

APA

Jessop, B. (2005). Cultural political economy, the knowledge-based economy, and the state. In A. Barry, & D. Slater (Eds.), The Technological Economy (pp. 144-166). Routledge.

Vancouver

Jessop B. Cultural political economy, the knowledge-based economy, and the state. In Barry A, Slater D, editors, The Technological Economy. London: Routledge. 2005. p. 144-166

Author

Jessop, Bob. / Cultural political economy, the knowledge-based economy, and the state. The Technological Economy. editor / Andrew Barry ; Don Slater. London : Routledge, 2005. pp. 144-166

Bibtex

@inbook{7f65a673bb8146a2bc627dc0e93ac07e,
title = "Cultural political economy, the knowledge-based economy, and the state.",
abstract = "This chapter explores the interconnected roles of discourse and governance in constituting the knowledge-based economy in response to the alleged crisis of Atlantic Fordism. It interprets the globalizing knowledge-based economy (KBE) as an increasingly hegemonic meta-object of governance (and, indeed, meta-governance) that involves a complex, heterogeneous, and variable assemblage of social relations, which are articulated to a distinctive set of subjectivities and mediated through material objects and social institutions. It also traces the rise of the KBE as a provisional, partial, and unstable product of distinctive discourses and material practices. It should be emphasized at once that these claims do not imply that capitalism is always characterized by such hegemonic meta-objects of (meta-)governance nor that the latter have some predetermined lifespan (let alone a predetermined life-course) that coincides with some preordained logic of capital. Instead the approach developed here is precisely concerned with what I have elsewhere termed the {\^a}��contingent necessity{\^a}�� of durable institutional orders and with what actor-network theorists have elsewhere described as the problem of how Leviathan (and, by extension, other institutional ensembles) get {\^a}��screwed down{\^a}�� and actors are enrolled behind them (Jessop 1982; Callon and Latour 1981; Callon and Law 1982).",
keywords = "Cultural political economy, the knowledge-based economy, state, governance, meta-governance",
author = "Bob Jessop",
year = "2005",
language = "English",
isbn = "0415336066",
pages = "144--166",
editor = "Andrew Barry and Don Slater",
booktitle = "The Technological Economy",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Cultural political economy, the knowledge-based economy, and the state.

AU - Jessop, Bob

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - This chapter explores the interconnected roles of discourse and governance in constituting the knowledge-based economy in response to the alleged crisis of Atlantic Fordism. It interprets the globalizing knowledge-based economy (KBE) as an increasingly hegemonic meta-object of governance (and, indeed, meta-governance) that involves a complex, heterogeneous, and variable assemblage of social relations, which are articulated to a distinctive set of subjectivities and mediated through material objects and social institutions. It also traces the rise of the KBE as a provisional, partial, and unstable product of distinctive discourses and material practices. It should be emphasized at once that these claims do not imply that capitalism is always characterized by such hegemonic meta-objects of (meta-)governance nor that the latter have some predetermined lifespan (let alone a predetermined life-course) that coincides with some preordained logic of capital. Instead the approach developed here is precisely concerned with what I have elsewhere termed the �contingent necessity� of durable institutional orders and with what actor-network theorists have elsewhere described as the problem of how Leviathan (and, by extension, other institutional ensembles) get �screwed down� and actors are enrolled behind them (Jessop 1982; Callon and Latour 1981; Callon and Law 1982).

AB - This chapter explores the interconnected roles of discourse and governance in constituting the knowledge-based economy in response to the alleged crisis of Atlantic Fordism. It interprets the globalizing knowledge-based economy (KBE) as an increasingly hegemonic meta-object of governance (and, indeed, meta-governance) that involves a complex, heterogeneous, and variable assemblage of social relations, which are articulated to a distinctive set of subjectivities and mediated through material objects and social institutions. It also traces the rise of the KBE as a provisional, partial, and unstable product of distinctive discourses and material practices. It should be emphasized at once that these claims do not imply that capitalism is always characterized by such hegemonic meta-objects of (meta-)governance nor that the latter have some predetermined lifespan (let alone a predetermined life-course) that coincides with some preordained logic of capital. Instead the approach developed here is precisely concerned with what I have elsewhere termed the �contingent necessity� of durable institutional orders and with what actor-network theorists have elsewhere described as the problem of how Leviathan (and, by extension, other institutional ensembles) get �screwed down� and actors are enrolled behind them (Jessop 1982; Callon and Latour 1981; Callon and Law 1982).

KW - Cultural political economy

KW - the knowledge-based economy

KW - state

KW - governance

KW - meta-governance

M3 - Chapter

SN - 0415336066

SP - 144

EP - 166

BT - The Technological Economy

A2 - Barry, Andrew

A2 - Slater, Don

PB - Routledge

CY - London

ER -