<p>This article provides a critique of the self-validating public responses to the international crisis of legitimacy facing the banking industry and professional politicians since the economic crisis of 2009. It compares the failure of economic conscience within Establishment institutions with the public culture of intrinsic economic conscience found in some developing economies and similar embryonic developments in Western economies. It highlights the way this alternative economic conscience might contribute to public discourse about economic and political governance, and thereby to democratic renewal in more supposedly advanced societies. © 2010, SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- Lincoln School of Design (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Capital & ClassVolume
35Issue
1Pages/Article Number
107-124Publisher
SAGEExternal DOI
ISSN
0309-8168Date Submitted
2019-03-07Date Accepted
2011-01-01Date of First Publication
2011-01-01Date of Final Publication
2011-01-01ePrints ID
35307Usage metrics
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