Home » Economy » Regulation theory, a new state of knowledge (Dunod “Éco Sup”, 2023)

Regulation theory, a new state of knowledge (Dunod “Éco Sup”, 2023)

by Alexandra Hartman Editor-in-Chief

2023-11-28 23:00:00
Page 0: Start pages | Page 1 to 16: Robert Boyer, Jean-Pierre Chanteau, Agnès Labrousse and Thomas Lamarche – Introduction. Regulation theory: analyzing a changing world | Page 19 to 27: Agnès Labrousse – Chapter 1. Regulation theory as a heuristic matrix | Page 28 to 37: Robert Boyer – Chapter 2. Regimes of accumulation and appropriation | Page 38 to 43: Bruno Amable and Stefano Palombarini – Chapter 3. Institutional hierarchies and complementarities | Page 44 to 50: André Orléan – Chapter 4. The institutional construction of value | Page 51 to 56: Bruno Amable and Stefano Palombarini – Chapter 5. Economy and politics: the dominant social bloc | Page 57 to 64: Thomas Lamarche – Chapter 6. Meso approach to regulation theory | Page 65 to 72: Matthieu Montalban – Chapter 7. Productive models, a heterodox microeconomics? | Page 73 to 85: Jean-Pierre Chanteau – Chapter 8. What is regulation? | Page 87 to 95: Louison Cahen-Fourot – Chapter 9. Economy and ecology: the social relationship to the environment | Page 96 to 103: Catherine Bodet and Thomas Lamarche – Chapter 10. Gender, a phantom social relationship | Page 104 to 113: Bruno Théret – Chapter 11. State and politics in the theory of regulation | Page 114 to 121: Catherine Laurent – Chapter 12. Knowledge regime and regulation through opacity | Page 122 to 129: Jean-Christophe Graz and Charlie Dannreuther – Chapter 13. Regulation theory and the international | Page 130 to 136: Vincent Frigant – Chapter 14. The diversity of forms of competition | Page 137 to 146: Sandrine Michel – Chapter 15. The return of the salary ratio? A regulationist investigation | Page 148 to 154: Catherine Laurent – Chapter 16. Scientific pluralism and interdisciplinarity | Page 155 to 163: Robert Boyer and Sandrine Michel – Chapter 17. Detecting diet changes: what methods? | Page 164 to 171: Hiroshi Nishi – Chapter 18. Modeling of economic growth regimes from a regulationist perspective | Page 172 to 179: Marc Lavoie – Chapter 19. Keynesian models for the theory of regulation | Page 180 to 186: Emmanuel Lazega – Chapter 20. Social network analysis for regulation theory | Page 187 to 194: Juliette Rouchier – Chapter 21. Multi-agent simulation: marginal or promising? | Page 195 to 202: Pierre Labarthe and Eléonore Schnebelin – Chapter 22. Contributions of mixed methods to the theory of regulation | Page 203 to 210: Stéphane Longuet – Chapter 23. Discourse analysis: concepts and tools for political economy | Page 212 to 218: Jonathan Marie – Chapter 24. Post-Keynesian theory and regulation theory: from dialogue to hybridization? | Page 219 to 226: Cédric Durand – Chapter 25. The essential Marxist anchoring of the theory of regulation | Page 227 to 234: Florence Jany-Catrice – Chapter 26. Articulating conventionalist and regulationist analyses: the case of measuring inflation | Page 235 to 240: Ève Chiapello – Chapter 27. Regulation theory and analysis of management tools | Page 241 to 248: Quentin Ravelli – Chapter 28. Regulation theory and sociology | Page 249 to 255: Natacha Aveline – Chapter 29. Regulation theory and geography: what reciprocal contributions? | Page 256 to 262: Andy Smith – Chapter 30. Regulation through the prism of political work: the European multiscalar case | Page 263 to 270: Bob Jessop and Ngai-Ling Sum – Chapter 31. Cultural political economy | Page 273 to 279: Franck-Dominique Vivien – Chapter 32. Environmental crisis, sustainability and ecological transition in the age of Capitalocene | Page 280 to 286: Nelo Magalhães – Chapter 33. Regimes of accumulation and appropriation and material flows over a long period | Page 287 to 295: Arnaud Buchs – Chapter 34. Regulation of resources and mode of water use: analyzing institutional diversity and change | Page 296 to 302: Laurence Scialom – Chapter 35. Climate and central banking: towards a new central banking regime? | Page 304 to 313: Robert Boyer – Chapter 36. From one crisis to another: advances in theory | Page 314 to 319: Mickaël Clévenot – Chapter 37. Analysis of the accumulation regime and the mode of regulation of financialization | Page 320 to 326: Engelbert Stockhammer – Chapter 38. Crises of regimes driven by finance | Page 327 to 335: Benjamin Lemoine – Chapter 39. A relational approach to the power links between private finance and the State | Page 336 to 342: Julien Vercueil and Adrien Faudot – Chapter 40. Annuity regimes: unity and diversity | Page 344 to 350: Jérôme Blanc – Chapter 41. Alternative currencies and recomposition of the monetary regime | Page 351 to 358: Pepita Ould-Ahmed – Chapter 42. An analysis of monetary plurality by its margins | Page 359 to 366: Isabelle Guérin – Chapter 43. The genre of money and debt | Page 367 to 373: Pierre Alary – Chapter 44. The monetary institution and social transformations in Northern Laos | Page 374 to 381: Pepita Ould-Ahmed – Chapter 45. Logic and resilience of tontines in Morocco | Page 382 to 388: Kako Nubukpo – Chapter 46. A common currency for West Africa? Challenges and obstacles | Page 389 to 396: Robert Guttmann – Chapter 47. The contested dollar standard and the emergence of multipolar capitalism | Page 397 to 403: Michel Aglietta – Chapter 48. The race for global monetary supremacy in the digital age: the transformation of the international monetary system | Page 405 to 411: Carole Brunet and Esther Jeffers – Chapter 49. Gender, work and varieties of capitalism: where are we? | Page 412 to 418: Pierre Girard – Chapter 50. Social activity report and structural change: the case of Senegal | Page 419 to 427: Axel Magnan and Catherine Laurent – Chapter 51. Institutional change and social relationship of activity in agriculture | Page 428 to 437: Nicolas Da Silva – Chapter 52. Reconfigurations of the social state in the countries of the North | Page 438 to 446: Thomas Lamarche and Sandrine Michel – Chapter 53. Break in the trajectory of higher education and research: a meso analysis | Page 448 to 454: Xabier Itçaina – Chapter 54. The territories of economics | Page 455 to 461: Jean-Paul Domin and Amandine Rauly – Chapter 55. Hospital deregulation: the symptom of a new health regime | Page 462 to 470: Florence Gallois – Chapter 56. Commodification of health systems and home help | Page 471 to 479: Gilles Allaire – Chapter 57. Regimes of accumulation and socialization of agriculture and food | Page 480 to 487: Bernard Jullien – Chapter 58. Forms of financialization of automobile manufacturing | Page 488 to 495: Jérémie Bastien – Chapter 59. The transformations of European professional football: a meso-regulatory analysis | Page 496 to 502: Sabine Montagne – Chapter 60. Political configurations of the financial sector | Page 504 to 513: Jean-Pierre Chanteau and Nicolas Postel – Chapter 61. Conceptualizing the company in the theory of regulation | Page 514 to 520: Nadine Richez-Battesti – Chapter 62. Thinking regarding the diversity of ESS companies | Page 521 to 528: Pascal Grouiez – Chapter 63. Global value chains: a meso-regulatory perspective | Page 529 to 536: Matthieu Montalban – Chapter 64. Digital economy and industrial organization: challenges of platform capitalism | Page 537 to 544: Gilles Allaire – Chapter 65. Regulation theory and commons | Page 547 to 553: Bruno Amable – Chapter 66. Diversity and domination of national capitalisms | Page 554 to 562: Julien Vercueil – Chapter 67. Regulation and crises of a rentier regime: Russia | Page 563 to 569: Éric Magnin – Chapter 68. Dependent capitalism in central and eastern Europe | Page 570 to 576: Miguel Bruno and Denise Gentil – Chapter 69. Growth and crisis in Brazil | Page 577 to 583: Julio César Neffa and Gustavo Ludmer – Chapter 70. Argentina: conflicts between two logics and recurrence of crises | Page 584 to 591: Bruno Losch – Chapter 71. Trajectories of sub-Saharan Africa: plurality, specificities and asynchronies in globalization | Page 592 to 597: Hironori Tohyama and Yuji Harada – Chapter 72. The diversity of Asian capitalism: from economic institutions to politico-economic regimes | Page 598 to 603: Yasuro Hirano and Toshio Yamada – Chapter 73. An original regime destabilized by international openness: the case of Japan | Page 604 to 611: Akinori Isogai and Hiroyasu Uemura – Chapter 74. Market-firm hierarchical relationship and its transformations for the Japanese economy | Page 612 to 619: Elsa Lafaye de Micheaux – Chapter 75. Capitalisms of South-East Asia: the case of Malaysia | Page 620 to 628: Ngai-Ling Sum – Chapter 76. The transformation of China’s accumulation regime and its (trans-)regional modes since 2013 | Page 629 to 642: End pages.
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#Regulation #theory #state #knowledge #Dunod #Éco

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