This volume addresses the fraught relationship between market and
society in times of social and economic crisis, exploring how they
interact in key social, cultural, and political arenas on a global
scale. The contributors examine the neoliberal market in anthropological
and ethnographic terms to question whether "market logic" has won out
against social aspects of human existence in a framework of minimal
state protection and the devaluation of human labor. Fruitfully
combining empirical data and theoretical approaches, the volume
investigates the extent to which ordinary people accept unequal
allocations of resources and examines their sense of belonging in an
expansive neoliberal economy.