AANA18140U Alternative Economies and New Forms of Work

Volume 2024/2025
Education

BOA specialization

 

Full-degree students enrolled at the Faculty of Social Science, UCPH 

 

- Bachelor and Master Programmes in Anthropology

- Bachelor and Master Programmes in Political Science

- Bachelor and Master Programmes in Psychology 

- Bachelor and Master Programmes in Economics

- Master Programme in Social Data Science

- Master Programe in Global Development 

Content

As life conditions become increasingly uncertain across species and regions of the world, Growth no longer seems to be the answer to the betterment of human conditions. In fact, “The Market” itself is no longer a given, and faith in the invisible hand is withering. As a result, governments, corporations, activists, and organizations worldwide are increasingly looking for new ways of imagining, representing, and enacting economic relations and forms of work.

 

What are the specific conditions that have led to these critiques? What do these critiques share and how do they differ? And what are the challenges and potentials inherent in the economic alternatives and new forms of work that are being proposed across the world?

 

This course addresses contemporary critiques and alternatives to the so-called “Economy”: the self-regulating, all-encompassing market force that has ruled – and many would say damaged – the world for the past 200 years. It explores a diversity of markets, forms of work and distribution, production and consumption, trade and currencies that exist, and have long existed, throughout the world, but that are today being championed as better and more sustainable paths for the thriving of life on earth. In other words, it explores visions for how to do economy and work differently.

 

The course begins by addressing the construction of the Economy in the 19th and 20th centuries in Europe and the United States. It then moves on to explore contemporary critiques of this specific economic worldview, taking inspiration from corporate and public examples, the global South and North, and majority as well as minority subjects. Most of the course thereby consists in in-depth empirical explorations of the numerous ways in which dominant economic constructions and forms of work are being challenged in practice and theory. The focus will lie on the different challenges and opportunities that these economic visions and visionaries face, including their aspirations and hope for better economic futures.

 

Specific examples include feminist economies, corporate social responsibility, fairtrade movements, wellbeing economies, community economies, green economies, degrowth economies, Black economies, pirate economies, and regenerative business and leadership, as well as models such as doughnuts, icebergs, and circular visions of design, production, and consumption.

 

The course is particularly relevant for students specializing in business and organizational anthropology, but also for any student who is interested in heterodox approaches to economies and how these relate to contemporary discourses and tendencies such as sustainability, resilience, diversity, buen vivir, slow living, quiet quitting, wellbeing, etc.

Learning Outcome

Knowledge:

At the end of the course, the students will be able to:

 

  • demonstrate an understanding of classical contributions, contemporary critiques, and key debates on the themes of alternative economies and forms of work.
  • reflect on how these contemporary critiques relate to different academic fields of study that focus on economic matters.

 

Skills:

At the end of the course, the students will be able to:

 

  • apply analytical concepts from economic anthropology and heterodox approaches to economics in the analysis of current economic and work-related issues.
  • compare economic systems, visions, cosmologies, and forms of work and organization across time and space.
  • assess some of the practical challenges and opportunities inherent in visions for alternative economies and new forms of work.

 

Competences:

At the end of the course, the students will be able to:

 

  • choose, apply, and transfer relevant theoretical concepts and ideas from economic anthropology and heterodox economics in the analysis of economic issues, conflicts, and phenomena in other contexts.
  • base normative claims on descriptive and analytical arguments drawn from the fields of economic anthropology and diverse economies.
  • plan and manage a written portfolio.
  • independently and collectively initiate and manage feedback processes that facilitates self-assessment.

BSc students and MSc students: 500 pages obligatory literature. The teachers
will publish 200-300 pages of supplementary literature.

It is recommended (but not required) that students taking this course have followed the course in Economic and Business Anthropology.
The course activities will consist of a combination of lectures and interactive seminars where students contribute actively through readings, discussions, group work, oral and written presentations, and peer-feedback.
  • Category
  • Hours
  • Class Instruction
  • 42
  • Total
  • 42
Oral
Continuous feedback during the course of the semester
Peer feedback (Students give each other feedback)
Credit
7,5 ECTS
Type of assessment
Portfolio
Type of assessment details
Længde: Portfolioeksamen kan laves individuelt eller i grupper på max. 4 studerende. Portfolioeksamen udgøres af 2-7 delafleveringer. For KA-studerende er der en delaflevering mere end for BA-studerende, dvs. hvis BA-studerende skal aflevere 5 delafleveringer skal KA-studerende aflevere 6 delafleveringer . Antallet af delafleveringer fastsættes af underviseren. Samlet længde for alle delafleveringerne må max. være 30.000 anslag for 1 BA studerende og 37.500 anslag for 1 KA studerende. Ved grupper af 2 studerende max. 40.000 anslag for BA studerende og 47.500 anslag for KA studerende. Ved grupper af 3 studerende max. 45.000 anslag for BA studerende og 52.500 anslag for KA studerende. Ved grupper af 4 studerende max. 50.000 anslag for BA studerende og 57.500 anslag for KA studerende. Ved gruppeopgave skal den enkelte studerendes bidrag være tydeligt markeret i opgaven. Ved grupper med både BA- og KA-studerende afleveres det samme antal delafleveringer som for KA-studerende. Opgaverne bedømmes samlet med én samlet karakter.
Aid

Alle hjælpemidler tilladt

Politik for brug af generativ AI-software og Large Language Models i eksamener

Institut for Antropologi tillader brugen af generativ AI software og Large Language Models (AI/LLMs), såsom ChatGPT, i skriftlige eksaminer forudsat, at brugen af AI/LLMs fremlægges og specificeres (dvs. hvordan det er blevet anvendt og til hvilke(t) formål) i et bilag, der ikke tæller med i den pågældende eksamens omfang.

 

Hvis AI/LLMs anvendes som en kilde, gælder de samme krav om brug af citationstegn og kildehenvisning som ved alle andre kilder, da der ellers vil være tale om plagiat.

Marking scale
7-point grading scale
Censorship form
No external censorship
Criteria for exam assesment

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