Waubonsee Community College

Financial citizenship, experts, publics, and the politics of central banking, Annelise Riles

Label
Financial citizenship, experts, publics, and the politics of central banking, Annelise Riles
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Financial citizenship
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1038031458
Responsibility statement
Annelise Riles
Series statement
Cornell global perspectives
Sub title
experts, publics, and the politics of central banking
Summary
"Government bailouts. Negative interest rates and markets that do not behave as economic models tell us they should. New populist and nationalist movements that target central banks and central bankers as a source of popular malaise. New regional organizations and geopolitical alignments laying claim to authority over the global economy. Households, consumers, and workers facing increasingly intolerable levels of inequality. These dramatic conditions seem to cry out for new ways of understanding the purposes, roles and challenges of central banks and financial governance more generally. Financial Citizenship reveals that the conflicts about who gets to decide how central banks do all these things, and about whether central banks are acting in everyone's interest when they do them are in large part the product of a culture clash between experts and the various global publics that have a stake in what central banks do"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
The legitimacy of central banking -- The challenge to the technocracy -- The culture of central banking -- Experts and the public -- Towards financial citizenship and a new legitimacy narrative -- A program for action -- Between the last financial crisis and the next one
Classification
Content
Mapped to

Incoming Resources

Outgoing Resources