Paratexto

Index

2020; Emerald Publishing Limited; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1108/s0190-128120200000040013

ISSN

0190-1281

Resumo

Citation (2020), "Index", Wood, D.C. (Ed.) Anthropological Enquiries into Policy, Debt, Business, and Capitalism (Research in Economic Anthropology, Vol. 40), Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, pp. 243-249. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0190-128120200000040013 Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited Copyright © 2020 Emerald Publishing Limited INDEX Index Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate notes. A’uwẽ-Xavante, 220–221 owners, 226–229 and theft, 223–226 Activism, 144 Actual price, 73, 75–76 Ad hoc rules, 75 Age set system, 231 Agency, 49 Agents of development, 50 Aide à la reprise ou à la création d’entreprise (ARCE), 133 Aihö’ubuni, 227, 229 Airbnb, 180 Airline Deregulation Act, 73 Allocation option for taxes, 30 Alternative to capitalism, 128–147 American Dream, 116 American Economic Association (AEA), 153 Amorphous dyadic patron-client exchange networks, 198 Anthropocene, 48–49 Anthropological/anthropology fieldwork, 174 paradigm, 26–32 scholarship, 170 of tax justice, 31 Anthropology of taxation, 26 critiquing Furusato Nozei, 37–39 Furusato Nozei tax system, 33–36 Japan’s tax history and current Japanese tax system, 32–33 socio-political and economic anthropologic critiques, 39–42 socio-political economics to anthropological paradigms, 26–32 Anticipated revolution, 220 Artisanal fishers, 8 Artisanal fishing, 9, 17 Ascendant revenue management, 82 Assemblymen (veradores), 198 Attention, 38 Australian Tax Receipt system, 41 Authentic Cuban Salsa, 175 Authenticity, 173–174 Beliefs of capitalism, 149–163 Benefactor sentiment, 38 Blackness in Cuba, 179 Blockade, 185n2 Blue revolution, 17 Brackishwater aquaculture in Nagapattinam, 17 Brackishwater shrimp aquaculture, 11 Brazil Brazilian modernization, 210–211 bribes, kickbacks, and dyadic exchanges, 213–214 bribes and kickbacks on construction projects, 199–200 corruption in, 194–195 dyadic exchanges in Brazilian businesses, 211–213 election for Mayor of Fortaleza in 2012, 195–197 Medieval European worldview, 206–207 Medieval Portugal and formation of Brazilian Worldview, 207–209 modernity and Brazilian religious culture, 200–202 networkes of dyadic exchanges in Mina s Gerais, 197–199 pilgrimage, saints, and popular Catholicism, 202–205 Vows and fulfillment in African-Derived and other Brazilian religions, 209–210 Brazilian modernization, 210–211 Brazilian religious culture, 200–202 Brazilian Worldview formation, 207–209 Bribes on construction projects, 199–200 and dyadic exchanges, 213–214 Broken Hill Propriety Limited (BHP), 53 Business owners, 150, 154–155 capitalists beliefs in, 159–162 in Latin America, 150 policy implications, 162–163 Cadeia de bemfeiturias, 208 Capital accumulation process, 129 Capitalism, 92, 146–147 alternative to, 128–147 Capitalist technology, 222 Capitalists beliefs, 150 business owners in, 159–162 in EA, 151–153 in EB, 153–154 Catholic Counter Reformation, 208–209 Catholicism, 209 Circumstantial analysis of algorithmic rules, 85 Citizenship, 27 “Clan”, 65n6 Collective force, 220–221, 235 Collective shamanism, 228 Comité d’Etablissement (CE), 143 Commodification, 180–184 Community, 50 development, 61 economy, 130 vague definitions of, 57–60 Community Mine Continuation Agreement (CMCA), 54 Competitive equilibrium paradigm, 27 Concentric dualism, 235n11 Conceptualizing debt, 116, 118 as family affair, 118–121 Conflict, 155, 159 Contribution tax, 27 Control function, 26 Cooperative(s), 135 emancipatory potential of, 146 emancipatory promise of, 129–131 enterprises, 135 model, 2 SA, 135 Copper, 53–54 Corporate social responsibility (CSR), 49 Corruption, 194–195 Cost, 2 of relocation, 8–19 Credential inflation, 115 Credit, 104 Crisis, 110 Cuban dance instruction, 175–180 Cuban self-employment system, 174 “Cuentapropismo” (see Self-employment opportunities (trabajo por cuenta propia)) Cultural/culture, 49 of modernity, 194 primitives, 18 tourism, 173 Customer segmentation, 74 Cyclones strike (1977), 10 Dance instruction, 171 Dance instructor, 176–178 Debt, 2, 104 conceptualizing, 116, 118–121 student loan, 111, 120 Debtocracy, 110 Decision-making, 134–136 Defaulted loans, 116 Degeneration thesis, 130 Delinquent loans, 116 Democracy, 77 Development Fund, 61 Dialogical democracy, 87n11 Diametral dualism, 235n11 Division of labor, 137–141 Dualisms, 221 Dyadic exchanges, 213–214 in Brazilian businesses, 211–213 network in Mina s Gerais, 197–199 Dynamic optimization algorithms, 72 software, 74 Dynamic pricing, 87n4 Economic deviance, 92 growth indicators, 50 ideology, 150, 155, 159 liberalization in Cuba, 170 marginalization, 9 mentality, 152 sociology, 29 units expansion across international borders, 181–183 value, 131 Economic anthropology (EA), 29, 31, 150 capitalists’ beliefs in, 151–153 critiques of taxation, 39–42 Economic beliefs (EB), 149 capitalists’ beliefs in, 153–154 Economic wrongdoing, 92–96 conflicting moral economies and relational definition of, 103–105 high-risk and predatory mortgage lending as, 96 during housing bubble, 96–99 during mortgage crisis, 100 En masse relocation, 11–12 Entrepreneurship, 150, 180–184 “Equal salary for equal work”, 142 Ethnography of price, 73 Eurocentric cultural heritage, 48 Exchange tax, 27 Expected Family Contribution (EFC), 119 Extractive industry in Indigenous territories, 49–50 sustainable development and, 56 Family affair, conceptualizing debt as, 118–121 FAO, 17 “Federative principle” theory, 231 Fiber boat, 9–10 Financial crisis (2008), 131 Fiscal functions, 26 “Folk” Catholicism, 201 Food security, 17 Forecast, 72, 81 Foreign capital, 155, 161 France Milkerie worker cooperative in, 128–147 PriceMatch in, 77 Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), 119 Free market beliefs, 150 ideology, 151 Furusato Nozei tax system, 26, 32–36 critiquing Furusato Nozei, 37–39 GDP, 9 General-purpose money, 29 Gift paradigm, 30, 39 Global policy planning, 48 beneficiaries as passive recipients, 62 conservative models of development, 60–62 discord between national objectives and corporate action, 55–57 OTML, 53–55 PNG, 50–51 PNG’s sustainable development objectives, 51–53 vague definitions of “community”, 57–60 Global Social Networks, 181–183 Gold, 53–54 Graduation comes obligation, 116–118 Gram Panchayats, 9 Greenhouse gas emissions, 49 Heritage, 49, 56–57 Hierarchically ordered inequality, 206 High-risk lending as economic wrongdoing, 96–100 Home repossession victims as economic wrongdoers, 101–103 Hometown Tax (see Furusato Nozei tax system) Hometown Tax Donation Program, 2 Homo economicus, 152 Housing bubble, economic wrongdoing during, 96–99 Human judgment, 81–82 Hutede’wa, 228 IceCream, 128 Ideal-type workplace democracy, 129 Indigenous Central Brazil A’uwẽ-Xavante and theft, 223–226 A’uwẽ-Xavante owners, 226–229 dialogical approach, 221 mutualism, 220–221 Proudhon on myth, property, mutualism, and polytechnics, 222–223 Theft of Jaguar’s Fire, 229–236 Indigenous Peoples, 49, 65n2 Industrialization, 200 Inequality, 92 Information asymmetries, 101 Institutional factors, 72 Institutional isomorphism, 130 Institutionalized inequality, 1 Intentional development, 50 International business platforms, 180 Intriguing, 87n14 Japan’s Furusato Nozei tax program, 26 Japan’s tax history, 32–33 Japanese Local Allocation Tax disbursement, 32 Japanese tax system, 32–33 Job-creating business model, Milkerie came up with, 131–134 Justice in taxation, 31 Kastam, 60 Kattumarams, 9–10, 17 Kickbacks on construction projects, 199–200 and dyadic exchanges, 213–214 Kollam, 13 Labor law, 142 Labor market liberalization, 172 Lava Jato, 199 Leadership, 233 “Leave no-one behind” signals, 49, 51 Legal licenses, 179–180 Liberalization of labor market, 183 Life Satisfaction, 155, 159 Limited-purpose money, 29 Loan repayment, 117 Local Allocation Tax, 33 Locke’s theory of property, 232 Long Term Fund, 61 Market(s), 151 capitalism, 194 economy, 155, 161 mentality, 152 rationality, 92 socialism, 173 Mayors (prefeitos), 198 Means, 156–158 Medieval European worldview, 206–207 Medieval Portugal, 207–209 Memoranda of understanding (MoU), 12 Microeconomic theory of price discrimination, 85 Milkerie worker cooperative in France, 128 capitalism, 146–147 decision-making, 134–136 division of labor, 137–141 emancipatory promise of Cooperatives, 129–131 Milkerie came up with Job-creating business model, 131–134 Milkerie income distribution, 141–146 Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), 49 Mineral extraction, 56 Mining, Minerals and Sustainable Development Project Report of 2002 (MMSD), 53 Modern cooperatives, 129 Modern fishing, 17 Modernity, 200–202 Moral economy, 85, 92–93 conflicting moral economies and relational definition of economic wrongdoing, 103–105 of neoliberalism, 93–94, 105 Mortgage crisis, 92 economic wrongdoing during, 100 Most Backward Caste (MBC), 9 Mutualism, 220 Proudhon on, 222–223 Myth, Proudhon on, 222–223 Neoliberal policy, 109–110 Neoliberalism, 2, 39, 92–94 in Cuba, 172–174 New technologies, 155, 161 “Non-binding” contract, 81 Non-governmental organizations (NGOs), 11–12 Obligation tax, 27 Oikonomia, 206 Oil crisis (1973), 73 Ok Tedi Development Foundation (OTDF), 61 Ok Tedi Mining Limited (OTML), 53–55 “One size fits all” approach, 60 Open borders, 155, 159 Open defecation, 15 Operation Red Card, 199 Organic food coop, 136 Orixás, 209 Ownership, 233 Pahöri’wa, 227 Panatenaico, 199 Papua New Guinea (PNG), 50 PNG’s sustainable development objectives, 51–53 Vision 2050, 57 Parent PLUS loans, 120–121 Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT), 212n2 Patron, 198 Pattanavar, 8–9 Patterns of behavior, 3 Pay-as-you-earn system, 32 Pentecostalism, 210 Philanthropy, 30 Pilgrimage, 202–205 Plataforma de Afectados por la Hipoteca (PAH), 93 Pôle territorial de cooperation économique (PTCE), 132 Political-economic apparatuses shifting, 183–184 Political-economic theory, 220 Polytechnics, Proudhon on, 222–223 Popular Catholicism, 201, 202–205 Post-colonial imaginations, 173 Post-disaster reconstruction process, 8 Post-soviet socioeconomic transformations, 173 Post-tsunami Nagapattinam, South India coastal and near-shore commons, 16–19 new housing and water, 12–13 post-disaster reconstruction process, 8 relocation, 11–12 sanitation and new housing, 14–16 water and coast, 8–11 Pre-Reformation Roman Catholicism, 201 Predation, 234, 234n11 Predatory mortgage lending as economic wrongdoing, 96–100 Prescriptores, 99, 102 Price(s), 72 ethnography of, 73 of higher education, 109–121 idea for performing, 81–85 price-based RM, 80–81 price-based solution, 80–81 realization, 72 recommendation, 75 suggestion, 75 variable, 76–80 PriceMatch, 72–73, 75, 77, 80 Pricing algorithm, 75, 81 Primitive practices, 17 Private investment, 155, 159 Privatization processes, 171 “Profesores de musica y otras artes” (teachers of music and other arts), 171 Profitable cultural resources, 175 Promessas (vows), 205 and fulfillment in African-derived and other Brazilian religions, 209–210 Property accumulation, 220 Proudhon on, 222–223 Property Management Systems, 76 PROS solution, 82 Prosthetic price, 72–73 Protestant Reformation, 208 Proudhon, Pierre-Joseph, 220–221 on myth, property, mutualism, and polytechnics, 222–223 Proudhon’s theory of mutuality, 232 Public universities, 110 “Public–private partnership” approach, 11 “Quantity-based” RM, 80–81 Rank-and-file worker, 144–145 Reciprocity, 235n11 Recruiting clients, art of, 178–180 Religion, 222 religion-based cultural-historic practices, 3 Research in Economic Anthropology (REA), 1 Revenue management (RM), 72, 87n4 system, 72, 73–75 variable prices and work of explanation, 76–80 Rhetorical rules, 82 Riverine systems, 10 Robust social welfare system, 170 Romeiros (pilgrims), 203 Saints, 202–205 Salaries per professional category, 142 Sanitation and new housing, 14–16 Scott’s theory of knowledge, 87n16 SD, 156–158 Securitisation, 102 Self-development, 62, 171, 185 opportunities (trabajo por cuenta propia), 170 Self-governance, 220 Self-help groups (SHGs), 21 Self-interested individual, 92 Self-management, 220 Shrimp aquaculture, 11 Shrimp farms, 17–18 Social and solidarity economy (SSE), 131 Social welfare system, 184 Société à responsabilité limitée (SARL), 135 Société anonyme (SA), 135 Société Coopérative et Participative (SCOP), 130 Société par actions simplifiée (SAS), 135, 145n3 Socio-cultural activities, 171 Socio-political critiques of taxation, 39–42 Socio-political economics to anthropological paradigms, 26–32 Software as a Service (SaaS), 75 Spanish real estate bubble, 92 Staff representatives (délégué du personel), 143 State socialism, 3 Structural inequalities, 49 Student loan debt, 111, 120 Sugar cane, 208 Sumak kawsay/buen vivir, 60 Sustainability, 56 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) SDG 13, 51 SDG 9, 51 Symbolic economy of predation, 234 “Tax-for-gift” relationships, 38 Tax(es), 26 character of paying, 30 policy innovation, 26 revenue, 37, 42 skeleton, 28 Taxation, 26–27 financial contribution in, 30 justice in, 31 operational reality of, 28 socio-political economics of, 27, 31 Technical democracy, 87n11 Technical rules, 82–83 Technology, 72 Tede’wa, 226 Telecommunication advancements in Cuba, 180 Temporary worker (Intérimaire), 143 Terra nullius, 57 Theft of Jaguar’s Fire, 229–236 Tourism, 185n3 in Cuba, 172–174 Transformative dynamics of self-employed dance instruction, 170–184 TripAdvisor, 180 Trust, 155, 159 Tsunami (2004), 8 Two-tier technology, 76 United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII), 48 University of Wisconsin System (UW System), 112 Ur Panchayat, 9 Variables, 156–158 prices, 76–80 Voluntary donations of fiscal “tax” gifts, 31 Wahitede’wa, 228 Wamari, 227 Waradzu hunting, 226 Wasteland, 8 Water, 10–11, 19 new housing and, 12–13 Wicksellian connection, 27, 30 Wilcoxon Rank-Sum Test, 161 Work of explanation, 76–80 Worker control cooperative law and, 135 in economy, 131, 145 Workplace democracy, 128, 136 World Bank, 9, 17, 60 Yield, 87n4 management, 72–73, 87n4 Book Chapters Prelims Introduction: Policy, Debt, Business and Capitalism (AMID Encroaching Neoliberalism) Part I: National and International Policy Chapter 1: The Cost of Relocation: Water and Fishers in Post-Tsunami Nagapattinam, South India Chapter 2: A New Case in The Anthropology of Taxation: The Social Science of Critiquing Japan’s Furusato Nozei Tax Program Chapter 3: In Search of “The Complete Story”: Indigenous Peoples and Structural Inequalities in Global Policy Planning Part II: Cost and Debt Chapter 4: Predicting Prices, Persuading Users: Price Recommendations and The Rhetorical Logic of Algorithms Chapter 5: Mortgage Lending and Economic Wrongdoing During the Spanish Housing bubble Chapter 6: The Price of Higher Education: Experiences of American Student Loan Borrowers Part III: Business and Capitalism Chapter 7: Milkerie Worker Cooperative in France: Some Evidence on Why Cooperatives Struggle to Propose an Alternative to Capitalist Enterprise Chapter 8: Are Business Owners True Believers in Capitalism? Evidence From Latin America Chapter 9: The Transformative Dynamics of Self-Employed Dance Instruction in Havana, Cuba’s Tourism Industry Part IV: Economic Behavior and Theory in Brazil Chapter 10: When is a Kickback Like Fulfilling a Vow to a Saint? “Popular” Religions, Dyadic Exchanges, and Corruption in Brazil Chapter 11: The Theft of the Jaguar’s Fire is not Property in Indigenous Central Brazil Index

Referência(s)