Study with Greenwich  | Student Information  | About Us  | Research  | Contact Us

About GALA

Browse Contents

Guide to Depositing in GALA

For Greenwich Depositing Authors

Quick Search on GALA

Advanced Search

Search the University website

Morality and institutions: an exploration

Morton, John F. (2008) Morality and institutions: an exploration. Discussion Paper. Research Programme Consortium on Improving Institutions for Pro-Poor Growth (IPPG), Manchester, UK.

[img]
Preview
PDF - Published Version
Download (183kB) | Preview
    Official URL: http://www.ippg.org.uk/abs22.html

    Abstract

    This paper explores the question of how culturally varying views of ‘morality’, ‘fairness’ and ‘justice’, particularly those held by the rural poor in developing countries, influence the way people evaluate,work within, use and (sometimes) resist, economic institutions – especially the institutions that emerge or are actively promoted during ‘development’ (market-oriented or otherwise)? It reviews the way this and related questions have been dealt with in a wide range of subjects, including social anthropology,
    institutional economics, economic sociology, experimental economics, and the study of rural protest. It then discusses how insights about morality and its interactions with institutions could be incorporated more widely into our understanding of the relationship between institutions and development and, in particular, whether we should begin to understand moralities as part of the wider domain of informal institutions which interact with formal institutions to shape behaviours.

    Item Type: Monograph (Discussion Paper)
    Additional Information: This paper forms part of the IPPG Discussion Paper Series (Discussion Paper 22).
    Uncontrolled Keywords: institutions, development, rural protest
    Subjects: H Social Sciences > HD Industries. Land use. Labor
    H Social Sciences > HM Sociology
    School / Department / Research Groups: Natural Resources Institute > Livelihoods & Institutions
    Natural Resources Institute > Development Studies Research Group
    Natural Resources Institute
    Related URLs:
    Last Modified: 11 Nov 2011 12:06
    URI: http://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/2134

    Actions (login required)

    View Item

    Document Downloads

    More statistics for this item...