JEHLIČKA, Petr, Naděžda JOHANISOVÁ, Eva FRAŇKOVÁ a Petr DANĚK. The Sharing Economy?: Informal Economic Practices in the Post-socialist Countryside. In British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies, annual conference. 2015.
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Základní údaje
Originální název The Sharing Economy?: Informal Economic Practices in the Post-socialist Countryside
Autoři JEHLIČKA, Petr (203 Česká republika, domácí), Naděžda JOHANISOVÁ (203 Česká republika, domácí), Eva FRAŇKOVÁ (203 Česká republika, domácí) a Petr DANĚK (203 Česká republika, domácí).
Vydání British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies, annual conference, 2015.
Další údaje
Originální jazyk angličtina
Typ výsledku Konferenční abstrakt
Obor 50000 5. Social Sciences
Stát vydavatele Velká Británie a Severní Irsko
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
WWW URL
Kód RIV RIV/00216224:14230/15:00088339
Organizační jednotka Fakulta sociálních studií
Klíčová slova anglicky sharing; informal economic practices; post-socialism; countryside
Příznaky Mezinárodní význam
Změnil Změnil: RNDr. Petr Daněk, Ph.D., učo 849. Změněno: 20. 11. 2016 18:47.
Anotace
In the last quarter-century European post-socialist societies have experienced some of the most profound instances of economic neoliberalisation and globalisation. While in practical terms the processes of liberalisation, marketisation and privatisation were initially externally driven by international institutions, domestically the market also enjoyed an elavated symbolic status as part of the introduction of a package of ‘civilising mechanisms‘destroyed under socialism (Holy 1996). This macro-economic restructuring occurred against the background of a set of widespread, yet ‘hidden‘ non-market economic practices at the micro-level such as sharing, caring and mutual help widespread in particular in the countryside. In some areas (household food provisioning, house maintenance and construction) these socities have developed hybrid economies in which vibrant informal economic practices intersect with market-based relatonships. The paper takes issue with dominant accounts of post-socialist informal economic geographies which tend to devalue these everyday informal practices as either relics of the past (‘economies of shortage‘) or as the current survival tactics of the poor, in particular in the post-Soviet space (Round, Williams, Rodgers 2010). Empirically, the paper draws research conducted in Czechia and Poland and builds on insights from the body of work in human geography (Smith and Stenning 2006) and social anthropology (Czegledy 2002; Acheson 2007, Thelen 2011). The paper offers a more positive conceptualisation of post-socialist informal economic practices as forms of social resilience while remaining sensitive to the importance of geographical difference for our understanding of these alternative economic spaces. Given the urgently felt need to seek global alternative economic futures, the paper raises the question whether there is a possibility for the western ‘core‘ (but possibly also for emerging ‘economies‘) to learn from the experience of the post-socialist rural periphery.
Návaznosti
GA14-33094S, projekt VaVNázev: Formy a hodnoty alternativních ekonomických praktik v České republice (Akronym: ALTEKO)
Investor: Grantová agentura ČR, Formy a hodnoty alternativních ekonomických praktik v České republice
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