Economies of Advice
Journal
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Anthropology
Type
reference-entry
Date Issued
2020-04-30
Author(s)
Abstract
<p>Because of academic divisions of labor, anthropologists have come late to the study of the changing landscape of welfare and advice provisions in Euro-America (and beyond). However, this study is crucial to understanding contemporary economies. Attention to the increasing informalization, hybridization, plurality, and complexity of welfare-care-advice provisions in the context of 21st-century austerity in Europe challenges the widely held view of how state bureaucracies operate. The corollaries are the difficulties in accessing what help is available (hence the increasing need for advice) and an increase in grass-roots mutual aid and activism to supplement, and in some cases even supplant, state advice provisions.</p>
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Division(s)
Contact Email Address
insalee.koch@unisg.ch