Beyond capital? The challenge for sociology in Britain.
Br J Sociol
; 65(4): 607-18, 2014 Dec.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-25516341
This article offers a 'local', British, reading of Piketty's landmark book, Capital in the Twenty-Firstâ
Century, suggesting that the challenge it offers to sociological approaches to inequality is more fundamental than hitherto recognized. The variations in 'national trajectories' exposed by Piketty reveal Britain to be anomalous in terms of standard approaches to the path dependencies embedded in different welfare regimes. Using the recent work of Monica Prasad on 'settler capitalism' in the USA and the tax and debt-finance regime associated with it, the article suggests that colonialism and empire and its postwar unravelling has had deep consequences for British social stratification, albeit largely neglected by British sociologists. Finally, it points to the fact that the form of tax and debt-finance regime that has become reinforced in Britain is at the heart of recent radical reforms to higher education. These are the currently unexplicated conditions of our future practice as sociologists and, therefore, an obstacle to building a critical sociology on the foundations laid out by Piketty.
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Politics
/
Sociology
Aspects:
Equity_inequality
Limits:
Humans
Country/Region as subject:
Europa
Language:
En
Journal:
Br J Sociol
Year:
2014
Document type:
Article
Country of publication:
United kingdom