Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Economic Forces of Oppression
View through CrossRef
AbstractThis chapter discusses three main forces of economic oppression: oppressive economic systems (capitalism and socialism), direct forces of economic oppression, and indirect forces of economic oppression. It is argued that while capitalism and socialism are not intrinsically oppressive, both systems lend themselves to oppression in characteristic ways, and therefore each sort of system must take certain steps to guard against their respective characteristic oppressions. Direct forces of economic oppression are restrictions on opportunities that are applied from the outside on the oppressed, including enslavement, segregation, employment discrimination, group-based harassment, opportunity inequality, neocolonialism, and governmental corruption. Direct forces may not always be clearly visible, either because they happen far from the reach of legal authorities or from the view of consumers, or because they are diffused in a large society, and only apparent from a statistical analysis and comparison among social groups. In indirect forces, or oppression by choice, the oppressed are co-opted into making individual choices that add to their own oppression. When this force is at work the oppressed are faced with options that rationally induce them to choose against the collective good of their social group, and in the long run, against their own good as well. But choosing otherwise requires choosing against their own immediate interests, and changing their beliefs or preferences in ways that they may resent.
Title: Economic Forces of Oppression
Description:
AbstractThis chapter discusses three main forces of economic oppression: oppressive economic systems (capitalism and socialism), direct forces of economic oppression, and indirect forces of economic oppression.
It is argued that while capitalism and socialism are not intrinsically oppressive, both systems lend themselves to oppression in characteristic ways, and therefore each sort of system must take certain steps to guard against their respective characteristic oppressions.
Direct forces of economic oppression are restrictions on opportunities that are applied from the outside on the oppressed, including enslavement, segregation, employment discrimination, group-based harassment, opportunity inequality, neocolonialism, and governmental corruption.
Direct forces may not always be clearly visible, either because they happen far from the reach of legal authorities or from the view of consumers, or because they are diffused in a large society, and only apparent from a statistical analysis and comparison among social groups.
In indirect forces, or oppression by choice, the oppressed are co-opted into making individual choices that add to their own oppression.
When this force is at work the oppressed are faced with options that rationally induce them to choose against the collective good of their social group, and in the long run, against their own good as well.
But choosing otherwise requires choosing against their own immediate interests, and changing their beliefs or preferences in ways that they may resent.
Related Results
Understanding multi-fin swimming and maneuvering to develop highly capable swimming robots
Understanding multi-fin swimming and maneuvering to develop highly capable swimming robots
Fish swim underwater with levels of agility and maneuverability that far exceed those of contemporary unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs). While UUVs primarily rely on rectilinear ...
PHYSICO‐MATHEMATICAL METHODS IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
PHYSICO‐MATHEMATICAL METHODS IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Summary1. The fundamental method of exact physico‐mathematical sciences, that of abstraction and of a systematic study of abstract, idealised cases, is outlined and the timeliness ...
Ekonomika bosanskih velikaša u 14. i 15. stoljeću
Ekonomika bosanskih velikaša u 14. i 15. stoljeću
The role and significance of the Bosnian nobility in the historical currents of medieval Bosnia can be reliably traced in the 14th and 15th centuries when various socio-political f...
Psychological Mechanisms of Oppression
Psychological Mechanisms of Oppression
AbstractThis chapter is concerned with explaining how our cognitive psychology equips us for oppression, that is, what psychological mechanisms we have that allow and motivate us t...
Beauvoir and Belle
Beauvoir and Belle
Abstract
Beauvoir and Belle: A Black Feminist Critique of The Second Sex examines feminist frameworks, discourses, and vocabularies of Black women and other Women of...
Oppression and Violent Resistance of David Martinez and Its Impact in Cyberpunk: Edgerunners Towards Arasaka
Oppression and Violent Resistance of David Martinez and Its Impact in Cyberpunk: Edgerunners Towards Arasaka
This thesis explores how oppression and violent resistance are portrayed in the anime Cyberpunk: Edgerunners through the character of David Martinez. Using Iris Marion Young's "Fiv...
Neuro-queering feminism: Creating space within feminism to address autistic experiences of gender oppression
Neuro-queering feminism: Creating space within feminism to address autistic experiences of gender oppression
The emerging recognition of autistic women and gender-diverse people has highlighted the need for an intersectional approach to understanding their experiences of oppression. Howev...
The Optimal Public Expenditure in Developing Countries
The Optimal Public Expenditure in Developing Countries
Many researchers believe that government expenditures promote economic growth at the first development stage. However, as public expenditure becomes too large, countries will suffe...

