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  1.  4
    Beyond Neoliberalism: Social Analysis after 1989.Marian Burchardt & Gal Kirn (eds.) - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book explores how changes that occurred around 1989 shaped the study of the social sciences, and scrutinizes the impact of the paradigm of neoliberalism in different disciplinary fields. The contributors examine the ways in which capitalism has transmuted into a seemingly unquestionable, triumphant framework that globally articulates economics with epistemology and social ontology. The volume also investigates how new narratives of capitalism are being developed by social scientists in order to better understand capitalism's ramifications in various domains of knowledge. (...)
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  2.  7
    Does Religion need Rehabilitation? Charles Taylor and the Critique of Secularism.Marian Burchardt - 2016 - In Guido Vanheeswijck, Colin Jager & Florian Zemmin (eds.), Working with a Secular Age: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Charles Taylor's Master Narrative. De Gruyter. pp. 137-158.
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  3.  9
    Transplanting institutional innovation: comparing the success of NGOs and missionary Protestantism in sub-Saharan Africa.Marian Burchardt & Ann Swidler - 2020 - Theory and Society 49 (3):335-364.
    Viewing missionary Protestantism and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) as carriers of transnational institutional innovation, this article compares their successes and failures at creating self-sustaining institutions in distant societies. Missionary Protestantism and NGOs are similar in that they attempt to establish formal organizations outside kinship, lineage, and ethnic forms of solidarity. Focusing on institutions as ways to create collective capacities that organize social life, we trace the route whereby Protestant missionaries established congregational religion in Africa and identify social practices that made this (...)
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