The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections

This contribution considers the potential of critical realism to illuminate the nature of crises, crisis management, and crisis lessons. After reviewing key aspects of critical realism in general, the analysis notes the challenge of developing critical realism in particular by identifying appropriat...

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Published in:Journal of Critical Realism
Main Author: Jessop, Robert Douglas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/82297/
https://doi.org/10.1179/1572513815Y.0000000001
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spelling ftulancaster:oai:eprints.lancs.ac.uk:82297 2023-08-27T04:10:55+02:00 The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections Jessop, Robert Douglas 2015-07-01 https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/82297/ https://doi.org/10.1179/1572513815Y.0000000001 unknown Jessop, Robert Douglas (2015) The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections. Journal of Critical Realism, 14 (3). pp. 238-271. ISSN 1476-7430 Journal Article PeerReviewed 2015 ftulancaster https://doi.org/10.1179/1572513815Y.0000000001 2023-08-03T22:30:15Z This contribution considers the potential of critical realism to illuminate the nature of crises, crisis management, and crisis lessons. After reviewing key aspects of critical realism in general, the analysis notes the challenge of developing critical realism in particular by identifying appropriate entry-points and standpoints for the analysis of specific explananda. It then provides a general critical realist account of the nature of crises in the social world and of learning in, about, and from crisis. A key concept here is symptomatology — the exploration of the contingently necessary relation between actual symptoms and underlying causal mechanisms. This is related in turn to the crucial distinction between scientifically adequate explanations of crisis and conjuncturally ‘correct’ readings of the potential for transformative action in the face of crisis. This has important bearings on the emancipatory contribution of critical realism in the context of a continuing critique of ideology and domination. The article then provides particular critical realist accounts of (1) the abstract possibility of crisis in the capitalist mode of production and (2) its concrete actualization in the complex, overdetermined cases of the North Atlantic Financial Crisis and the Eurozone Crisis. It ends with some general remarks on the potential of crisis as an entry-point into the analysis of the contradictory nature of social structures. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints Journal of Critical Realism 14 3 238 271
institution Open Polar
collection Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints
op_collection_id ftulancaster
language unknown
description This contribution considers the potential of critical realism to illuminate the nature of crises, crisis management, and crisis lessons. After reviewing key aspects of critical realism in general, the analysis notes the challenge of developing critical realism in particular by identifying appropriate entry-points and standpoints for the analysis of specific explananda. It then provides a general critical realist account of the nature of crises in the social world and of learning in, about, and from crisis. A key concept here is symptomatology — the exploration of the contingently necessary relation between actual symptoms and underlying causal mechanisms. This is related in turn to the crucial distinction between scientifically adequate explanations of crisis and conjuncturally ‘correct’ readings of the potential for transformative action in the face of crisis. This has important bearings on the emancipatory contribution of critical realism in the context of a continuing critique of ideology and domination. The article then provides particular critical realist accounts of (1) the abstract possibility of crisis in the capitalist mode of production and (2) its concrete actualization in the complex, overdetermined cases of the North Atlantic Financial Crisis and the Eurozone Crisis. It ends with some general remarks on the potential of crisis as an entry-point into the analysis of the contradictory nature of social structures.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jessop, Robert Douglas
spellingShingle Jessop, Robert Douglas
The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections
author_facet Jessop, Robert Douglas
author_sort Jessop, Robert Douglas
title The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections
title_short The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections
title_full The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections
title_fullStr The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections
title_full_unstemmed The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections
title_sort symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections
publishDate 2015
url https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/82297/
https://doi.org/10.1179/1572513815Y.0000000001
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation Jessop, Robert Douglas (2015) The symptomatology of crises, reading crises and learning from them:some critical realist reflections. Journal of Critical Realism, 14 (3). pp. 238-271. ISSN 1476-7430
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1179/1572513815Y.0000000001
container_title Journal of Critical Realism
container_volume 14
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container_start_page 238
op_container_end_page 271
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