
In the twenty-first century, acting in the economic sphere in order to avoid or reduce harm to others is widely acknowledged as an ethical imperative. Ethical investment and fair trade, the politics of boycott, and corporate 'greenwashing' are well established in the repertoire of corporate and individual action and public debate. This repertoire has a history; neither moral indifference nor ethical engagement is 'natural' or self-evident. How and when do (and did) people come to see themselves as answerable for the well-being of distant others, and in particular to see that their commercial activity - as consumers, investors, or managers in global businesses - endows them with both power and responsibility to take moral action? The essays in this volume examine some key cases in the evolution of this kind of economic conscience in Europe, from the emergence of the modern global system, based on the growth of joint-stock maritime trading companies, the financial revolution, and transatlantic slavery, to the age of high imperialism and industrial capitalism. From a range of disciplinary perspectives, they consider how changing structures of sentiment and knowledge made possible new articulations between moral obligation, locality, the spaces of humanity, and the 'economic', but also the ways in which colonialism and imperialism re-framed and channelled impulses to ethical and humanitarian action. Ten essays, focusing mainly on British and German actors at home and overseas, are framed by a wide-ranging introduction and a reflection on the historical dimensions of current debates on slavery in business supply chains.
This volume investigates the historical origins of the modern economic conscience, specifically questioning how individuals began to perceive themselves as morally responsible for the well-being of distant populations through their commercial activities. Edited by Eve Rosenhaft, the collection synthesizes research from various disciplinary perspectives to analyze how structures of sentiment and knowledge evolved alongside the rise of global capitalism, joint-stock trading, and imperial expansion. The contributors argue that moral engagement in economic spheres is not a static or natural phenomenon but a historically contingent development shaped by the interplay of commerce, colonialism, and humanitarian discourse.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of how moral frameworks intersect with the development of global market systems. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is well-suited for researchers and students of economic history and ethics.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192867857
ISBN-13:
9780192867858
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