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Book part
Publication date: 17 October 2017

The Autonomy of the Political within Political Economy

Ion Sterpan and Richard E. Wagner

Political economy is a term in wide use and has been for centuries. Yet standard economic theory reduces politics to ethics or economics. This reduction is enabled by the…

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Political economy is a term in wide use and has been for centuries. Yet standard economic theory reduces politics to ethics or economics. This reduction is enabled by the presumption of closed choice data or given utility and cost functions. In this conceptual framework, the political vanishes into an activity of preference satisfaction according to a welfare function (ethics) or into trade (economics). To bring the political back to life within a theory of political economy requires that closed schemes of thought be replaced by open schemes. The ways in which individuals react to the indeterminacy of their subjective choice data, in innocuous small-scale settings as well as in situations of dramatic exception to constitutional rules, separates them into leaders and followers. Followership creates an opportunity for political enterprise at the social level (enterprise in rules) and at the subjective level (enterprise in visions of options, and hence preferences). At both levels the political comes to the fore of political economy as an answer to the “challenge of exception.” Much of our inspiration for this argument traces to the work of Friedrich Wieser, Carl Schmitt, and Vincent Ostrom.

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The Austrian and Bloomington Schools of Political Economy
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-213420170000022008
ISBN: 978-1-78714-843-7

Keywords

  • Human association
  • open vs. closed systems
  • leadership
  • power
  • autonomy of the political
  • political entrepreneurship
  • liberalism and authority
  • governance
  • federalism and polycentricity
  • Friedrich Wieser
  • Carl Schmitt
  • Vincent Ostrom
  • B25
  • D23
  • D72
  • H77
  • L32

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Book part
Publication date: 3 August 2015

Transitions to Open Access Orders and Polycentricity: Exploring the Interface between Austrian Theory and Institutionalism

Ion Sterpan and Paul Dragos Aligica

This paper explores the interface between institutional theory and Austrian theory. We examine mainstream institutionalism as exemplified by D. C. North in his work with…

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This paper explores the interface between institutional theory and Austrian theory. We examine mainstream institutionalism as exemplified by D. C. North in his work with Wallis and Weingast on the elite compact theory of social order and of transitions to impersonal rights, and propose instead an Austrian process-oriented perspective. We argue that mainstream institutionalism does not fully account for the efficiency of impersonal rules. Their efficiency can be better explained by a market for rules, which in turn requires a stable plurality of governance providers. Since an equilibrium of plural providers requires stable power polycentricity, the implication goes against consolidating organized means for violence as a doorstep condition to successful transitions. The paper demonstrates how to employ Ostroms’ Bloomington School Institutionalism to shift, convert, and recalibrate mainstream institutionalism's themes into an Austrian process-oriented theory.

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New Thinking in Austrian Political Economy
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-213420150000019008
ISBN: 978-1-78560-137-8

Keywords

  • Institutionalism
  • market process
  • polycentricity
  • open access orders
  • impersonal exchange
  • B52
  • B53
  • D72
  • D74

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Book part
Publication date: 17 October 2017

Covenant and Moral Psychology in Polycentric Orders

Anas Malik

Both the Austrian and Bloomington Schools emphasize the dispersal of information to the level of individual agents. An underappreciated difference is the Bloomington…

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Both the Austrian and Bloomington Schools emphasize the dispersal of information to the level of individual agents. An underappreciated difference is the Bloomington emphasis on the moral psychology of agents and its relation to covenant. Covenant refers to a habit, a sense of obligation to consider the interests of the other in decision making, and a commitment to do so that is not easily or unilaterally broken. This chapter seeks to elaborate the lineage of covenant in constituting political order and its implications for the moral psychology of agents and artisanship. This exploration raises issues of metaphysical foundations as they relate to values and to the Hobbesian–Aristotelian divide in starting points. An application to the environmental crisis, with particular reference to vested interests promoting disinformation, obfuscation, and doubt about anthropogenic climate change, suggests value in emphasizing covenant.

Details

The Austrian and Bloomington Schools of Political Economy
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-213420170000022007
ISBN: 978-1-78714-843-7

Keywords

  • Bloomington School
  • covenant
  • moral psychology
  • climate change
  • golden rule

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Book part
Publication date: 29 October 2020

The Wealth and Poverty of Self-governing Communities

Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili

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Philosophy, Politics, and Austrian Economics
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-213420200000025009
ISBN: 978-1-83867-405-2

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Book part
Publication date: 18 November 2020

Polycentric Security Governance and Sustainable Development in the Global South

Julie Berg and Clifford Shearing

Policing in much of the developing world has always been, in many respects, both dominated by the nonstate and pluralised. Yet, plurality and the nonstate are…

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Policing in much of the developing world has always been, in many respects, both dominated by the nonstate and pluralised. Yet, plurality and the nonstate are predominantly conceptualised, by scholars and practitioners alike, as problematic, noninclusive and/or undemocratic. Yet the reality is far more complex than this. In this chapter, we turn the tables on conventional wisdom by looking to the positive features of plural or polycentric forms of security governance by asking how these features might be utilised to provide for more inclusive forms of security governance in the Global South. Drawing on empirical research in South Africa on plural policing arrangements, this chapter considers how Sustainable Development Goal 16 which seeks to ‘promote peaceful and inclusive societies’ might be realised within plural governance systems. This chapter seeks to demonstrate that certain conditions need to be in place for plural or polycentric systems of security governance to coprovide effective and inclusive security for the collective good and, furthermore, that the positive features of the nonstate can be harnessed to give effect to the SDGs.

Details

The Emerald Handbook of Crime, Justice and Sustainable Development
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78769-355-520201011
ISBN: 978-1-78769-355-5

Keywords

  • Plural policing
  • nonstate
  • private security
  • polycentric
  • security governance
  • global south

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Book part
Publication date: 17 October 2017

The Ostroms and Hayek as Theorists of Complex Adaptive Systems: Commonality and Complementarity

Paul Lewis

This chapter uses the theory of complex systems as a conceptual lens through which to compare the work of Friedrich Hayek with that of Vincent and Elinor Ostrom. It is…

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This chapter uses the theory of complex systems as a conceptual lens through which to compare the work of Friedrich Hayek with that of Vincent and Elinor Ostrom. It is well known that, from the 1950s onwards, Hayek conceptualised the market as a complex adaptive system. It is argued in this chapter that, while the Ostroms began explicitly to describe polycentric systems as a class of complex adaptive system from the mid-to-late 1990s onwards, they had in fact developed an account of polycentricity as displaying most if not all of the hallmarks of organised complexity long before that time. The Ostromian and Hayekian approaches can thus be seen to share a good deal in common, with both portraying important aspects of society – the market economy in the case of Hayek, and public economies, legal and political systems, and environment resources in the case of the Ostroms – as complex rather than simple systems. Aside from helping to bring out this aspect of the Ostroms’ work, using the theory of complex systems as a framework for comparing the Hayekian and Ostromian approaches serves two other purposes. First, it can be used to show how one widely criticised aspect of Hayek’s theory of society as a complex system, namely his account of cultural evolution via group selection, can be strengthened by an appeal to the work of Elinor Ostrom. Second, it also helps to resolve a tension – ultimately acknowledged by the Ostroms themselves – between some of their explicit methodological pronouncements and the actual, substantive approach they adopted in their analysis of polycentric systems.

Details

The Austrian and Bloomington Schools of Political Economy
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-213420170000022003
ISBN: 978-1-78714-843-7

Keywords

  • Complexity
  • emergence
  • methodological individualism
  • systems theory JEL Classification: B2, B3, B4, B5, B25M B31, B41

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Book part
Publication date: 30 November 2016

Why Hayek Matters: The Epistemic Dimension of Comparative Institutional Analysis

Peter J. Boettke, Vlad Tarko and Paul Aligica

Hayek’s “Use of knowledge in society” is often misunderstood. Hayek’s point is not just that prices aggregate dispersed knowledge, but also that the knowledge embedded in…

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Hayek’s “Use of knowledge in society” is often misunderstood. Hayek’s point is not just that prices aggregate dispersed knowledge, but also that the knowledge embedded in prices would not exist absent the market process. Later, in The Constitution of Liberty, he argues that this same idea can also be applied to the study of political and collective choice phenomena. Democracy is not just about aggregating preferences. Absent the democratic process, the knowledge necessary to solve collective problems is not generated. We compare this perspective on democracy to Bryan Caplan’s and Helen Landemore’s theories, and we argue that Hayek’s account focused on “opinion falsification” is richer. Unlike Caplan or Landemore, who adopt a static perspective, Hayek is more interested in the long-term tendencies and feed-back mechanisms. For example, why do Western democracies seem to have gradually moved away from the most deleterious types of economic policies (such as price controls)? Hayek’s conjecture is that the democratic process itself is responsible for this. We connect Hayek’s conjecture about democracy to the broader argument made by Vincent Ostrom, who has claimed that public choice should study not just incentive structures, but also collective learning processes. We believe that this line of research, that is, comparative institutional analysis based on the collective learning capacities embedded in alternative institutional arrangements, merits a lot more attention than it has received so far. The question “Which collective choice arrangements have the best epistemic properties?” is one of the most important neglected questions in political economy.

Details

Revisiting Hayek’s Political Economy
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-213420160000021006
ISBN: 978-1-78560-988-6

Keywords

  • Hayek
  • use of knowledge
  • epistemic turn
  • public choice
  • democracy

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Book part
Publication date: 3 August 2015

Rivalry, Polycentricism, and Institutional Evolution

Peter J. Boettke and Rosolino A. Candela

We argue that the future of Austrian political economy rests on the study of how institutional entrepreneurs discover and implement alternative institutional arrangements…

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We argue that the future of Austrian political economy rests on the study of how institutional entrepreneurs discover and implement alternative institutional arrangements conducive to economic growth. This requires a dual level of analysis in spontaneous order studies. How such institutional arrangements manifest themselves is ultimately an empirical question. As a progressive research program, Austrian political economy will entail cross-fertilization with other empirical branches of political economy that illustrate its own central theoretical contributions to political economy, namely economic calculation, entrepreneurship, and spontaneous order. Accordingly, we argue that such cross-fertilization with the work of Ronald Coase and Elinor Ostrom will further expound the institutional counterpart of “rivalry” in the market process, namely polycentricism and its empirical manifestation. Understanding the distinct relationship between rivalry and polycentricism will provide the central theoretical underpinning of institutional evolution.

Details

New Thinking in Austrian Political Economy
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-213420150000019001
ISBN: 978-1-78560-137-8

Keywords

  • Legal institutions
  • James Buchanan
  • Ronald Coase
  • Elinor Ostrom
  • F.A Hayek
  • Austrian pfolitical economy
  • K4
  • B3
  • B53
  • P51

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Book part
Publication date: 19 August 2019

Freedom of Association and Its Discontents: The Calculus of Consent and the Civil Rights Movement

Vlad Tarko and Santiago José Gangotena

Does the classical liberal emphasis on freedom of association provide an intellectual cover for bigotry? We formulate this question in economic terms using James…

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Does the classical liberal emphasis on freedom of association provide an intellectual cover for bigotry? We formulate this question in economic terms using James Buchanan’s economic approach to ethics, according to which moral values can be understood as preferences about other people’s behaviors. We discuss two possible market failures associated with freedom of association: inter-group externalities and Schelling-type emergent segregation. We show that the classical liberal position about freedom of association, as elaborated in Buchanan and Tullock’s Calculus of Consent, is fully equipped to deal with the first one, but not with the second. The progressive view that some preferences are so offensive that they should be dismissed rather than engaged or negotiated with can be reframed as an attempt to solve the emergent segregation problem, but it is vulnerable to political economy problems of its own, in particular to an inherent tendency to over-expand the meaning of “bigotry.”

Details

Including a Symposium on Ludwig Lachmann
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S0743-41542019000037B021
ISBN: 978-1-78769-862-8

Keywords

  • Calculus of consent
  • Schelling segregation
  • social justice
  • educational vouchers
  • moral preferences
  • freedom of association

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Book part
Publication date: 11 November 2020

References

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Government and Public Policy in the Pacific Islands
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S2053-769720200000033006
ISBN: 978-1-78973-616-8

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