Ricardo Abramovay

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Ricardo Abramovay (1953) is a

university professor.[1][2][3]

Biography

Ricardo Abramovay was born in 1953. He graduated in

University of Campinas. Abramovay obtained the prize of Best Thesis by Brazilian Association of Graduate Programs and Research in Social Sciences (Anpocs) in 1991.[4]

During the 1990s, Abramovay completed his studies as

In 1995, Abramovay did a two-year study program at the Foundation Nationale des Sciences Politiques and worked with Ignacy Sachs in a research about the role of rural areas and agriculture for the process of development.[6]

He was

environmental preservation, and society.[7]

Peasantry and agrarian capitalism

Abramovay defended his PhD thesis ("Paradigms of agrarian capitalism in question") in 1991. The thesis received the "Best Doctoral Thesis" Award from the VII University Thesis and Scientific Works Competition in 1991, promoted by the National Association of Graduate Programs and Research in Social Sciences (Anpocs).[8] Abramovay maintains that it is around the family establishment that agriculture is socially structured in advanced countries. Both in economically developed nations of recent colonization (USA and Canada), and in others with secular peasant traditions (Continental Europe) an atomized sector operates in millions of productive agricultural units orchestrated by the planning, command and control of the State and professional organizations. Abramovay says: "Despite its individual base, it is difficult to imagine a more socialized economic activity". After realizing that there is no theory of the agrarian question in Karl Marx and questioning the stated Marxist paradigm, the author presents scholars who deal with the "functioning of this particular organism, which is the peasant unit". The existence of the "peasantry" presupposes a set of social ties given by tradition, by the community, by personalized relations of dependence and equality, and incomplete and partial integration in the market. Based on economic sociology, Abramovay argues that "where capitalism is implanted, where the market begins to dominate social life, where economic rationality takes over the behavior of individuals, community ties end up losing their aggregating power and peasants see the objective bases of their own social reproduction vanish".[9]

Sociology of markets

In the 1990s, Abramovay refined the field of

environmental responsibility discourse in the corporate environment and the need for a methodological break to understand the markets in their social dimension.[10]

According to Abramovay, the main feature of the new economic sociology is to study markets not as abstract mechanisms of balance, but as social constructions. For Abramovay, markets came to be seen as forms of social coordination characterized by conflicts, dependencies, structures and unpredictabilities that are very distant from the canonical image enshrined in Walras' general equilibrium theory. Contemporary economic sociology has the characteristic of conceiving markets as results of specific, rooted, socially determined forms of social interaction, and not as premises whose study can be done in a strictly deductive way. Departing from Stefano Zamagni, Abramovay argues that markets can be seen as real and living social relationships. Market relations assume the permanent attempt to seek recognition by the other and, therefore, involve, to some degree, reciprocity in that recognition.[11]

As professor of economic sociology at the University of São Paulo, Abramovay has been responsible for disseminating the works of Harrison White, Mark Granovetter, Richard Swedberg and thinkers in the tradition of Karl Polanyi.

Digital economy and data ethics

Since 2015, Ricardo Abramovay's publications have focused on the impacts of digital transformation for the economy and society. In "hybrid economy of the 21st century", Abramovay argues that the Internet economy provides a reinvention of productive arrangements, coupled with a knowledge economy, making specific configurations for these new markets.[12]

In 2018, Ricardo Abramovay founded the Center for Ethics, Technology and Digital Economies at the Institute of Energy and Environment of the University of São Paulo.[13] The Nucleus is composed of students from different disciplines.[14]

In 2019, Ricardo Abramovay published two essays with activist and lawyer Rafael Zanatta. In "Data, addictions and competition",[15] published in Advanced Studies, Abramovay analyzes the interrelationship between platform design, retaining users' attention and maximizing the extraction of value by their personal data. Abramovay and Zanatta argue that discussions about orchestrating economic behavior and discriminating prices by profiles can generate a renewed antitrust agenda. In "Open personal data",[16] Abramovay and Zanatta analyze the work of thinkers like Roberto Mangabeira Unger and Jaron Lanier and propose data sharing arrangements in digital markets, conceptualizing personal data as a common good and shared economic asset to promote economic democracy.

Selected works

  • Author of "Far Beyond the Green Economy" ("Muito Além da Economia Verde")(Ed. Sustainable Planet, SP, 2012) (English edition)
  • Co-author of "Zero Waste: Solid Waste Management for a More Prosperous Society" ("Lixo Zero: Gestão de Resíduos Sólidos para uma Sociedade Mais Próspera")
  • "Most widely held works by Ricardo Abramovay". WorldCat.

References

  1. ^ a b "CV: Ricardo Abramovay" (in Portuguese). CNPq. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  2. ^ Otavio Frias (April 21, 1997). "Economista defende produção familiar" (in Portuguese). Folha de S.Paulo. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  3. ^ "Provocações: Ricardo Abramovay" (in Portuguese). TV Cultura. September 5, 2014. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  4. OCLC 122352472.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link
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  5. OCLC 122352472.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link
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  6. OCLC 122352472.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link
    )
  7. ^ "Ricardo Abramovay" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  8. ^ Novaes, Regina (1993). "A empresa familiar no campo". Teoria e Debate. 21.
  9. OCLC 794506471
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  13. ^ "Grupo de estudos sobre ética e tecnologia seleciona novos membros – Jornal da USP". jornal.usp.br. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
  14. ^ "Seminários do Grupo de Estudos Ética Tecnologia e Economias Digitais | Instituto de Energia e Ambiente". www.iee.usp.br. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
  15. ISSN 0103-4014
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