•  15
    Intellectual traditions can be seen as complex patchworks of ideas, constructed differently by each observer as they learn about the tradition, and harmonized to an extent through the boundary work...
  •  14
    Free gifts and positional gifts: Beyond exchangism
    European Journal of Social Theory 18 (4): 451-468. 2015.
    Social theories of giving have often been shaped by anthropological accounts that present it as a form of pre-market reciprocal exchange, yet this exchangist discourse obscures important contemporary giving practices. This article discusses two types of giving that confound the exchangist model: (1) sharing practices within the family; and (2) free gifts to strangers. Once we reject understandings of giving derived from analyses of non-modern economies, it is possible to see that the gift econom…Read more
  •  11
    The Reality of Social Construction
    Cambridge University Press. 2012.
    'Social construction' is a central metaphor in contemporary social science, yet it is used and understood in widely divergent and indeed conflicting ways by different thinkers. Most commonly, it is seen as radically opposed to realist social theory. Dave Elder-Vass argues that social scientists should be both realists and social constructionists and that coherent versions of these ways of thinking are entirely compatible with each other. This book seeks to transform prevailing understandings of …Read more
  •  11
    Profit and Gift in the Digital Economy
    Cambridge University Press. 2016.
    Our economy is neither overwhelmingly capitalist, as Marxist political economists argue, nor overwhelmingly a market economy, as mainstream economists assume. Both approaches ignore vast swathes of the economy, including the gift, collaborative and hybrid forms that coexist with more conventional capitalism in the new digital economy. Drawing on economic sociology, anthropology of the gift and heterodox economics, this book proposes a groundbreaking framework for analysing diverse economic syste…Read more
  •  11
    The Moral Economy of Digital Gifts
    International Journal of Social Quality 5 (1): 35-50. 2015.
    The significance of giving as a contemporary socio-economic practice has been obscured both by mainstream economics and by the influence of the anthropological tradition. Andrew Sayer’s concept of moral economy offers a more fruitful framework for an economic sociology of contemporary giving, and one that appears to be largely consistent with social quality approaches. This article analyzes giving from the perspective of moral economy, questioning the view that giving is a form of exchange, and …Read more
  •  10
    Moral economies of the digital
    European Journal of Social Theory 21 (2): 141-147. 2018.
    Within thirty years of first appearing, the networked digital economy has spread its tentacles into the lives of half the population of the world, and transformed the balance of power in the commercial economy. Social theory has been slow to recognize the significance and scale of these developments, and this special issue is a contribution to redressing the balance. It is organized around the concept of moral economies: the values and norms that underpin and shape our participation in larger ec…Read more
  •  7
    Ethics and emancipation in action: concrete utopias
    Journal of Critical Realism 21 (5): 539-551. 2022.
    This is an edited transcript of a keynote paper given at IACR's 2021 Annual Conference. The paper outlines a critical realist approach to critique and illustrates its application to the contemporary economy. It argues that responsible, constructive critique depends on ethics, on causal explanation, and on the development of utopian visions. Utopias are tools, and concrete utopias are not visions of whole alternative ready-made societies, but rather partial models that can be built in practice as…Read more
  •  6
    Material Parts in Social Structures
    Journal of Social Ontology 3 (1): 89-105. 2017.
    There has been much debate on whether and how groups of human agents can constitute social structures with causal significance. Both sides in this debate, however, implicitly privilege human individuals over non-human material objects and tend to ignore the possibility that such objects might also play a significant role in social structures. This paper argues that social entities are often composed of both human agents and non-human material objects, and that both may make essential contributio…Read more
  •  5
    Réflexions critiques en marge des notions d’inclusion et d’exclusion
    Laval Théologique et Philosophique 63 (2): 343-362. 2007.
    L’objectif de ces réflexions critiques en marge des notions d’inclusion et d’exclusion est de mettre en valeur certains types de différences et de différends auxquels les philosophes, les scientifiques, les sociologues, les linguistes, les traducteurs et les écrivains doivent faire face aujourd’hui dans un monde qui est toujours plus dialectique que dialogique. Notre tâche est topologique et typologique; et notre texte prend aussi en considération certains domaines critiques qui font que tout di…Read more