File spoon-archives/marxism-thaxis.archive/marxism-thaxis_1997/marxism-thaxis.9710, message 1


Date: Wed, 1 Oct 1997 16:21:56 +1000
From: Rob Schaap <rws-AT-comserver.canberra.edu.au>
Subject: Re: M-TH: Regulationist readings regularized


G'day Hugh, Gerry and Bill,

Am I to infer that you know a bit about reg.school thinking, Hugh?  Me, I'd
love to open a thread on the application of basic reg school concepts (mode
of regulation; regime of accumulation, differential crises etc) to issues
du juour (eg 'the information age', 'globalism', 'cartelisation', 'the
decline of the nanny state' etc etc).  'Trouble is, I'm up to contributing,
but not quite up to an opening salvo.  I know this is unfair on Bill, whose
confessed religious zealotry on this must even now be culminating in an
e-treatise of Austinian proportions (and if you're out there, Andy, I'd
read 'em all, and like to think I've not read my last), but I guess I'm
hoping he kicks us off.

If there is no response, I shall cram all your mailboxes with Habermas
posts until you succumb.

Yours hopefully,
Rob.

>Yo Thaxalites!
>
>Here's Bill C's regulationist reading list in alphabetical order, and
>here's the French web site to kick it off:
>
>http://melpomene.upmf-grenoble.fr/irepd/docregul.htm
>
>
>Amin, A. (Ed.). (1994). Post-Fordism: A Reader. Oxford: Blackwells.
>
>Bagguley, P. (1991). Post-Fordism and Enterprise Culture. In R. Keats & N.
>Abercrombie (Eds.), Enterprise Culture, . London: Routledge.
>
>Boyer, R. (1990). The Regulation School: A Critical Introduction. New York:
>St Martin's Press.
>
>Boyer, R. (1991). The Eighties:  The Search for Alternatives to Fordism. In
>Jessop (Ed.), The Politics of Flexibility, .
>
>Boyer, R. (1993). Labour Institutions and Economic Growth:   A Survey and
>a"Regulationist" Approach. Labour, 7(l), 25-72.
>
>Boyer, R. O., Andre. (1990). The Transformations of Wage Systems, between
>Economic Theory and History: From Henry Ford to American Fordism. CEPREMAP
>Discussion Paper(December 1990), pp. 66.
>
>Corbridge, S. (1994). Bretton Woods Revisited, Hegemony, Stability, and
>Territory. Environment and Planning A, 26, 1829-1859.
>
>Coriat, B. (1993). The Revitalisation of Mass Production in the Computer
>Age. In A. Storper & Scott (Eds.), Pathways to Industrialisation and
>Regional Development, . ?: ?
>
>Dabscheck, B. (1993). Regulation down under: The case of Australian
>industrial relations. Journal of Economic Issues,   27(1), 41-68.
>
>Dunford, M. (1990). Theories of Regulation. Environment and Planning:
>Society and Space, 8, (p. 297-322).
>
>Elam , M. (1994). Puzzling out the Post-Fordist Debate: Technology, Markets
>and Institutions. In A. Amin (Ed.), Post Fordism: A Reader, . Oxford:
>Blackwells.
>
>Elam, M. (1994). Puzzling Out the Post-Fordist Debate: Technology, Markets
>and Institutions. In A. Amin (Ed.), Post-Fordism: A Reader, (pp. 43-70).
>Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
>
>Esser, J., & Hirsch, J. (1994). The crisis of Fordism and the Dimensions of
>a 'Post-Fordist' regional and urban structure. In A. Amin (Ed.),
>Post-Fordism: A Reader, . Oxford: Blackwells.
>
>Esser, J., & Hirsch, J. (1994). The Crisis of Fordism and the Post-Fordist
>Regional and Urban Structure. In A. Amin (Ed.), Post-Fordism: A Reader,
>(pp. 71-97). Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
>
>Fagan , R., & Leheron , R. (1994). Reinterpreting the Geography of
>Accumulation  : The Global Shift and Local Restructuring. Enviroment and
>Planning D : Society and Space, 12, 265-285.
>
>Gilbert , N., Burrows , R., & Pollert , A. (1992). Fordism and Flexibility.
>New York: St Martin's Press.
>
>Gilbert, N. (Ed.). (1991). Fordism and Flexibility: divisions and change.
>
>Glyn, A. (1990). Productivity and the Crisis of Fordism. International
>Review of Applied Economics, 4(1), 28-44.
>
>Graham, J. (1991). Fordism/Post-Fordism, Marxism/Post Marxism: The Second
>Cultural Divide. Rethinking MARXISM, 4(1 Spring), (pp.39-58).
>
>Graham, J. (1992). Post-Fordism as politics: the political consequences of
>narratives of the left. Environment and Planning: Society and Space, 10(4),
>393-410.
>
>Haughton, G., & Browett, J. (1995). Flexible Theory and Flexible
>Regulation: Collaboration and Competition in the Mclaren Vale Wine Industry
>in South Australia. Environment and Planning A, 27(1), 41-61.
>
>Jessop, B. (1990). Regulation theories in retrospect and prospect. Economy
>and Society, 19(2), (pp.153-216).
>
>Jessop, B. (1991). Thatcherism and Flexibility: The White Heat of a
>Post-Fordist Revolution. In B. Jessop & ? (Eds.), The Politics of
>Flexibility, . ?: ?
>
>Jessop, B. (1991). The Welfare State in the Transition from Fordism to
>Post-Fordism. In B. Jessop (Ed.), The Politics of Flexibility, . ?: ?
>
>Jessop, B. (1992). Fordism and Post Fordism: A critical reformulation. In
>Storper & Scott (Eds.), Pathways to Industrialisation and Regional
>Development, .
>
>Jessop, B. (1994). Post-Fordism and the State. In A. Amin (Ed.),
>Post-Fordism: A Reader, (pp. 251-279). Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
>
>Kiely , R. (1994). Development Theory and Industrialization: Beyond the
>Impasse. Journal of Contemporary Asia, 24(2), 133-160.
>
>Leborgne, D., & Lipietz, A. (1993). Conceptual Fallacies and Open Questions
>on Post-Fordism. In A. Storper & Scott (Eds.), . ?: ?
>
>Levidow, L. (1993). Foreclosing the Future. Science as Culture, 8, (pp.59-79).
>
>Lipietz , A. (1993). The Local and the Global: Regional Individuality or
>Interregionalism. Transactions, 18, 8-18.
>
>Lipietz, A. (1992). Towards a New Economic Order: Post-Fordism, Ecology and
>Democracy. London: Verso.
>
>Lipietz, A. (1993). From Althusserianism to "Regulation Theory". In M.
>Sprinker & E. A. Kaplan (Eds.), The Althusserian Legacy, (pp. 99-138):
>Verso.
>
>Marden, P. (1992). `Real' Regulation Reconsidered. Environment and Planning
>A, 24(5), 751-67.
>
>Mcdowell, L. (1991). Life Without father and Ford: the new gender order of
>post-Fordism. ??
>
>O'Hara, P. (1994). An Institutionalist Review of Long Wave Theories:
>Schumpeterian Innovation, Modes of Regulation, and Social Structures of
>Accumulation. Journal of Economic Issues, 28(2 June).
>
>Peck, J., & Tickell, A. (1994). Searching for a New Institutional Fix , The
>After-Fordist Crisis and Global Disorder. In A. Amin (Ed.), Post-Fordism: A
>Reader, . Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
>
>Phelps , N., A . (1992). External economies , Agglomeration and Flexible
>Accumulation . Transactions, 17(1), 35-46.
>
>Robles, A. C., Jr. (1994).  French theories of regulation and conceptions
>of the international division of labour. New York  London:  St.Martin's
>Press & Macmillan.
>
>Teague, P. (1990). The Political Economy of the Regulation School and the
>Flexible Specialisation Scenario. Journal of Economic Studies,  17( 5),
>32-54.
>
>Theret , B. (1994). To have or to be: on the interaction between State and
>economy in its 'solidarist' mode of regulation. Economy and Society, 23(1
>February), (pp.1-46).
>
>Tickell, J., & Peck, A. (1995). The Social Regulation of Uneven
>Development: Regulatory Deficit, Englands South East, and the Collapse of
>Thatcherism. Environment and Planning A, 27(1), 15-40.
>
>Tomaney, J. (1994). A New Paradigm of work Organization and Technology. In
>A. Amin (Ed.), Post-Fordism: A Reader, (pp. 157-194). Oxford: Basil
>Blackwell.
>
>Trigilia , C. (1991). The paradox of the region , economic regulation and
>the representation of interests. Economy and Society, 20(3), 306-327.
>
>Warskett, G. (1991). The Regulation of Unstable Growth: L'ecole de
>Regulation and the Social Structure of Accumulation. International Review
>of Applied Economics, 5(3), 358-370.
>
>Warskett, G. (1991). The regulation of unstable growth: l'ecole de
>regulation and the social structure of accumulation. International Review
>of Applied Economics, 5(3).
>Webber, M. (1991). The contemporary transition. Environment and Planning:
>Society and Space, 9(2), 165-182.
>
>Witherford, N. (1994). Autonomist Marxism and the Information Society.
>Capital & Class(52).
>
>Wood, S. (1993). The Japanization of Fordism. Economic and Industrial
>Democracy, 14, 535-555.
>
>
>Technological fetishism rules?
>
>ciao4now,
>
>Hugh
>
>PS As for prole sports, pigeon racing is far less tainted with the lure of
>lucre than any kind of ball-chasing. Still a very male thing though. Female
>prole sports? Dancing? Shopping?
>
>
>
>
>
>     --- from list marxism-thaxis-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu ---



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Rob Schaap, Lecturer in Communication, University of Canberra, Australia.

Phone:  02-6201 2194  (BH)
Fax:    02-6201 5119

************************************************************************

'It is questionable if all the mechanical inventions yet made have
lightened the day's toil of any human being.'    (John Stuart Mill)

"The separation of public works from the state, and their migration
into the domain of the works undertaken by capital itself, indicates
the degree to which the real community has constituted itself in
the form of capital."                                    (Karl Marx)

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