Mapping the territory of economic risk


Autoria(s): Donoghue, Geraldine
Contribuinte(s)

Velayutham, S.

Ebert, N.

Watkins, S.

Data(s)

2010

Resumo

It is widely contended that we live in a „world risk society‟, where risk plays a central and ubiquitous role in contemporary social life. A seminal contributor to this view is Ulrich Beck, who claims that our world is governed by dangers that cannot be calculated or insured against. For Beck, risk is an inherently unrestrained phenomenon, emerging from a core and pouring out from and under national borders, unaffected by state power. Beck‟s focus on risk's ubiquity and uncontrollability at an infra-global level means that there is a necessary evenness to the expanse of risk: a "universalization of hazards‟, which possess an inbuilt tendency towards globalisation. While sociological scholarship has examined the reach and impact of globalisation processes on the role and power of states, Beck‟s argument that economic risk is without territory and resistant to domestic policy has come under less appraisal. This is contestable: what are often described as global economic processes, on closer inspection, reveal degrees of territorial embeddedness. This not only suggests that "global‟ flows could sometimes be more appropriately explained as international, regional or even local processes, formed from and responsive to state strategies – but also demonstrates what can be missed if we overinflate the global. This paper briefly introduces two key principles of Beck's theory of risk society and positions them within a review of literature debating the novelty and degree of global economic integration and its impact on states pursuing domestic economic policies. In doing so, this paper highlights the value for future research to engage with questions such as "is economic risk really without territory‟ and "does risk produce convergence‟, not so much as a means of reducing Beck's thesis to a purely empirical analysis, but rather to avoid limiting our scope in understanding the complex relationship between risk and state.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39374/

Publicador

The Australian Sociological Association (TASA)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39374/1/Donoghue_TASA_2010.pdf

http://www.tasa.org.au/uploads/2011/01/Donoghue-Geraldine.pdf

Donoghue, Geraldine (2010) Mapping the territory of economic risk. In Velayutham, S., Ebert, N., & Watkins, S. (Eds.) TASA 2010 Conference Proceedings : Social Causes, Private Lives, The Australian Sociological Association (TASA), Sydney, NSW, pp. 1-16.

Direitos

Copyright 2010 Please consult the author

Fonte

Division of Research and Commercialisation

Palavras-Chave #160800 SOCIOLOGY #Ulrich Beck #Globalization #Risk Society #Economic Risk #Economic Integration #Sociology of risk
Tipo

Conference Paper