The bestselling author of The End of History explains the social principles of economic life in the mid-1990s. Francis Fukuyama shows why he believes only those societies with a high degree of social trust will be a ble to creat the organizations needed to compete in the new global economy.
The bestselling author of The End of History explains the social principles of economic life in the mid-1990s. Francis Fukuyama shows why he believes only those societies with a high degree of social trust will be a ble to creat the organizations needed to compete in the new global economy.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Francis Fukuyama, a senior social scientist at the Rand Corporation, lives in McLean, Virginia.
Inhaltsangabe
CONTENTS Preface PART I The Idea of Trust: The Improbable Power of Culture in the Making of Economic Society 1. On the Human Situation at the End of History 2. The Twenty Percent Solution 3. Scale and Trust 4. Languages of Good and Evil 5. The Social Virtues 6. The Art of Association Around the World PART II Low-Trust Societies and the Paradox of Family Values 7. Paths and Detours to Sociability 8. A Loose Tray of Sand 9. The "Buddenbrooks" Phenomenon 10. Italian Confucianism 11. Face-to-Face in France 12. Korea: The Chinese Company Within PART III High-Trust Societies and the Challenge of Sustaining Sociability 13. Friction-Free Economies 14. A Block of Granite 15. Sons and Strangers 16. Job of a Lifetime 17. The Money Clique 18. German Giants 19. Weber and Taylor 20. Trust in Teams 21. Insiders and Outsiders 22. The High-Trust Workplace PART IV American Society and the Crisis of Trust 23. Eagles Don't Flock -- or Do They? 24. Rugged Conformists 25. Blacks and Asians in America 26. The Vanishing Middle PART V Enriching Trust: Combining Traditional Culture and Modern Institutions in the Twenty-first Century 27. Late Developers 28. Returns to Scale 29. Many Miracles 30. After the End of Social Engineering 31. The Spiritualization of Economic Life Notes Bibliography Index
CONTENTS Preface PART I The Idea of Trust: The Improbable Power of Culture in the Making of Economic Society 1. On the Human Situation at the End of History 2. The Twenty Percent Solution 3. Scale and Trust 4. Languages of Good and Evil 5. The Social Virtues 6. The Art of Association Around the World PART II Low-Trust Societies and the Paradox of Family Values 7. Paths and Detours to Sociability 8. A Loose Tray of Sand 9. The "Buddenbrooks" Phenomenon 10. Italian Confucianism 11. Face-to-Face in France 12. Korea: The Chinese Company Within PART III High-Trust Societies and the Challenge of Sustaining Sociability 13. Friction-Free Economies 14. A Block of Granite 15. Sons and Strangers 16. Job of a Lifetime 17. The Money Clique 18. German Giants 19. Weber and Taylor 20. Trust in Teams 21. Insiders and Outsiders 22. The High-Trust Workplace PART IV American Society and the Crisis of Trust 23. Eagles Don't Flock -- or Do They? 24. Rugged Conformists 25. Blacks and Asians in America 26. The Vanishing Middle PART V Enriching Trust: Combining Traditional Culture and Modern Institutions in the Twenty-first Century 27. Late Developers 28. Returns to Scale 29. Many Miracles 30. After the End of Social Engineering 31. The Spiritualization of Economic Life Notes Bibliography Index
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