000 -ENCABEZADO |
Número de control [NR] |
03812cam a2200301 i 4500 |
001 - NÚMERO DE CONTROL |
control field |
18496071 |
005 - FECHA Y HORA DE LA ÚLTIMA TRANSACCIÓN |
control field |
20171109090110.0 |
008 - DE LONGITUD FIJA DE DATOS DE ELEMENTOS - INFORMACIÓN GENERAL |
Elementos de longitud fija [NR] |
171109s2015 enk 000 0 eng d |
010 ## - NUMERO DE CONTROL DE LA BIBLIOTECA DEL CONGRESO (LC) [NR] |
Número de control LC [NR] |
2014046018 |
020 ## - NUMERO INTERNACIONAL NORMALIZADO PARA LIBROS [R] |
Número Internacional Normalizado del libro [NR] |
9780190253011 |
020 ## - NUMERO INTERNACIONAL NORMALIZADO PARA LIBROS [R] |
Número Internacional Normalizado del libro [NR] |
9780190253028 |
040 ## - FUENTE DE CATALOGACION [NR] |
Agencia de catalogación original [NR] |
Co-BoUCM |
Idioma de catalogación [NR] |
spa |
Quien Cataloga |
Saul Niño |
Quien Clasifica |
Saul Niño |
041 0# - CODIGO DE IDIOMA [R] |
Código de idioma para texto/pista de sonido o título separado [R] |
Inglés |
082 04 - NUMERO DE CLASIFICACION DECIMAL DEWEY [R] |
Número de clasificación [R] |
330.122 |
Número de la edición [NR] |
20 |
100 1# - ASIENTO PRINCIPAL--NOMBRE PERSONAL [NR] |
Nombre personal [NR] |
Schram, Sanford |
ID Autoridad |
88708 |
245 14 - MENCION DE TITULO [NR] |
Título [NR] |
The return of ordinary capitalism |
Parte restante del título [NR] |
neoliberalism, precarity, occupy |
Mención de responsabilidad, etc. [NR] |
Sanford F. Schram |
260 ## - PUBLICACION, DISTRIBUCION, ETC. (PIE DE IMPRENTA) [R] |
Lugar de publicación, distribución, etc. [R] |
Oxford |
Nombre del editor, distribuidor, etc. [R] |
New York |
-- |
Oxford University Press |
Fecha de publicación, distribución, etc. [R] |
2015 |
300 ## - DESCRIPCION FISICA [R] |
Extensión [R] |
xii, 252 páginas |
520 ## - NOTA DE RESUMEN, ETC. [R] |
Nota de sumario, etc. [NR] |
"As Frances Fox Piven and Richard Cloward argued in the early seventies, in a capitalist economy, social welfare policies alternatingly serve political and economic ends as circumstances dictate. In moments of political stability, governments emphasize a capitalistic work ethic (even if it means working a job that will leave one impoverished); when times are less politically stable, states liberalize welfare policies to recreate the conditions for political acquiescence. Sanford Schram has argued that each swing of this cycle can be seen as producing its own path dependency of diminishing returns for the poor, even while people increasingly become dependent upon public assistance. This produces a new normal in which economic inequality increases with each cycle: political discourse shifts to a focus on national debt while the poor and working class are disciplined to be market-compliant actors. As Schram points out, recent economic downturns have accelerated these shifts. He calls this a return to "ordinary capitalism," or a return to destabilizing conditions that increase political gridlock on issues of social welfare and forestall any momentum to address problems brought about by the changing economy. In this book, Schram, building on a lifetime of writings on public welfare, looks at the ways in which this shift affects social policymaking across a range of policy areas, including welfare policy, drug treatment programs, and education. Drawing on a number of cases, he proposes ways to better account for these shifts toward ordinary capitalism and highlights instances of programs that work well in order to suggest paths toward a more progressive politics"-- |
520 ## - NOTA DE RESUMEN, ETC. [R] |
Nota de sumario, etc. [NR] |
"Combining political theory, historical investigation, and empirical analysis of contemporary politics and public policymaking, this volume plumbs the depths of neoliberalism as the prevailing political-economic logic of the current era of increasing inequality. Chapters address how neoliberalization contributes to the growing economic insecurity of ordinary people in recent decades, the concomitant hollowing out of the welfare state, the ongoing marketization of social welfare programs, the increasing reliance on the private sector for developing, implementing and even the financing of social programs, and resultant political responses on both the Left and the Right (Occupy and the Tea Party in particular). Neoliberalism's effects on politics as well as social and economic policy are examined. Special attention is given to the role of protest politics for keeping alive the possibilities for political action in an age of neoliberal constraints on the ability of ordinary people to exercise political agency. The book concludes with consideration of political strategizing for working through rather than around neoliberalism via a radical, rather than status-quo reinforcing, incrementalism"-- |
546 ## - NOTA DE IDIOMA [R] |
Nota de idioma [NR] |
Texto en inglés |
650 #7 - ASIENTO SECUNDARIO DE MATERIA - TERMINO TEMATICO [R] |
Término temático o nombre geográfico como elemento de entrada [NR] |
Neoliberalismo |
9 (RLIN) |
20188 |
650 #7 - ASIENTO SECUNDARIO DE MATERIA - TERMINO TEMATICO [R] |
Término temático o nombre geográfico como elemento de entrada [NR] |
Economía política |
9 (RLIN) |
13709 |
650 #7 - ASIENTO SECUNDARIO DE MATERIA - TERMINO TEMATICO [R] |
Término temático o nombre geográfico como elemento de entrada [NR] |
Equidad |
9 (RLIN) |
14685 |
650 #7 - ASIENTO SECUNDARIO DE MATERIA - TERMINO TEMATICO [R] |
Término temático o nombre geográfico como elemento de entrada [NR] |
Bienestar social |
9 (RLIN) |
10081 |
650 #7 - ASIENTO SECUNDARIO DE MATERIA - TERMINO TEMATICO [R] |
Término temático o nombre geográfico como elemento de entrada [NR] |
Economía |
9 (RLIN) |
174 |
942 ## - ELEMENTOS DE ENTRADA AGREGADOS (KOHA) |
Sistema de clasificación |
|
Tema principal |
Economía |
Tipo de ítem principal el descrito en 300a |
Libro |
Edición |
1 |
Clasificación |
330.122 |
Parte restante de la signatura top. |
S377r |