This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0003331186 Reproduction Date:
Geoffrey Martin Hodgson (born 28 July 1946) is a Research Professor of Business Studies in the University of Hertfordshire, and also the editor-in-chief of the Journal of Institutional Economics.
Hodgson is recognised as one of the leading figures of modern critical The Other Canon, a center and network for heterodox economics research, with main founder and executive chairman Erik Reinert and others.[1] In 2013, Hodgson co-founded the World Interdisciplinary Network for Institutional Research (WINIR).[2]
According to Hodgson, institutions are the stuff of social life. He defines them in a 2006 article by saying that institutions are "the systems of established and prevalent social rules that structure social interaction". Examples of institutions may be language, money, law, systems of weights and measures, table manners and organisations (for example firms). Conventions, that may be included in law, can be regarded to be institutions as well (Hodgson, 2006, p. 2).
What Hodgson considers important about institutions is the way that they structure social life and frame our perceptions and preferences. They also create stable expectations. He argues that: “Generally, institutions enable ordered thought, expectation, and action by imposing form and consistency on human activities.” Consequently, institutions enable as well as constrain action.
Hodgson regards institutions as systems of rules. Broadly understood a rule is “a socially transmitted and customary normative injunction or immanently normative disposition, that in circumstances X do Y" (Hodgson, 2006, p. 3). This means that to be effective a rule has to be embedded in dispositions or habits. Mere decrees are not necessarily rules in this sense. Habits and customs help to give a normative status to a legal rule that can help a new law to become effective. In the process of social interaction norms are constantly changed (Hodgson, 2006, pp. 3–4)
Heterodox economics, New institutional economics, Neoclassical economics, New Deal, Thorstein Veblen
United Kingdom, University Alliance, Hertfordshire, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, BPP University
Economics, John Maynard Keynes, Great Depression, Adam Smith, John Locke
Institutional economics, Sociology, World War I, New York City, Socialism
Economics, Feminist economics, Neoclassical economics, Keynesian economics, History of economic thought
Economics, Evolutionary psychology, Macroeconomics, Heterodox economics, Utility
Karl Marx, Capital, Volume I, Das Kapital, Socialism, Marxism
John Maynard Keynes, Max Weber, Adam Smith, Heterodox economics, Neoclassical economics