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The Impact of Economic Financialization on Human Rights: Some Concepts and New Socio-economic Practices in Order to Build a Universal Economic Socialization

In: Economic Systems and Human Rights

Author

Listed:
  • Francesco Vigliarolo

    (National University of La Plata
    Catholic University of La Plata
    University of Buenos Aires)

Abstract

Starting from the definition and a brief analysis of the process of economic financialization, which began in the seventies in the United States and spread throughout the world with economic globalization, the dominant economic systems are defined. Subsequently, it is analyzed how these systems, driven by individual interests and by a utilitarian reason also resulting from economic positivism, are creating inequalities throughout the world even in rich countries, thus generating a negative impact on human rights. To do this, concepts are introduced such as the demand for people's rights as opposed to that of consumption, the ontological reason of the economy as opposed to the utilitarian reason, the process of economic socialization as opposed to that of financialization. In this scenario, through a historical analysis, the responses that emerge when the financialization process of the economy takes hold, the practices are analyzed and the main categories in response to financial capitalism are highlighted. Subsequently, it is highlighted how this generates a process of economic socialization, as the construction of a core of economic values ​​necessary for universal society to sustain itself in the long term and how this can be universalized when it is based on human rights. Finally, it is proposed how this is generated at three levels—territorial, national, international—and how institutions other than those of the IMF or the World Bank are needed at the international level.

Suggested Citation

  • Francesco Vigliarolo, 2024. "The Impact of Economic Financialization on Human Rights: Some Concepts and New Socio-economic Practices in Order to Build a Universal Economic Socialization," Springer Books, in: Francesco Vigliarolo (ed.), Economic Systems and Human Rights, chapter 0, pages 353-378, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-031-72866-2_20
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-72866-2_20
    as

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