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26 Bringing Political Economy Back In: A Comparative Institutionalist Perspective on Meaningful Work
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Discovering Meaningfulness in the City Discovering Meaningfulness in the City
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Limits to Techno-bureaucratic Visions of the City Limits to Techno-bureaucratic Visions of the City
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The Value of Meaningfulness The Value of Meaningfulness
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Alienation and Meaningfulness Alienation and Meaningfulness
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Caring and Meaningfulness Caring and Meaningfulness
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The Meaningful City The Meaningful City
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Justice in the City Justice in the City
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An Infrastructure of City-level Meaningfulness An Infrastructure of City-level Meaningfulness
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Public Meaningfulness Public Meaningfulness
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The Society of Meaning-makers The Society of Meaning-makers
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Agonistic Republicanism Agonistic Republicanism
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References References
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27 The Meaningful City: Toward a Theory of Public Meaningfulness, City Institutions, and Civic Work
Get accessRuth Yeoman is a Fellow of Kellogg College, University of Oxford. Her current research portfolio includes Ownership, Leadership, and Meaningful Work (British Academy/Leverhulme), Values to Shared Value Creation in Sustainable Supply Chains (John Fell), and the Meaningful City (Hermes Investment Management and the University of Tampere). She writes on the importance of meaningful work and researches the ethics and practice of mutuality in co-owned and conventionally owned enterprises. Her book, Meaningful Work and Workplace Democracy: A Philosophy of Work and a Politics of Meaningfulness (2014), was published by Palgrave. She is a member of the HM Treasury Council of Economic Advisers, an adviser for the Fabian Society’s Changing Work Centre, and a Fellow of the UK’s Big Innovation Centre. She is currently writing a monograph for the Routledge Business Ethics series called Ethical Organizing: Meaningfulness and Mutuality in Organization/System Design, to be published in 2019.
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Published:11 February 2019
Cite
Abstract
This chapter applies the value of meaningfulness to a philosophy of the city. It argues that philosophies of the city can supply smart and sustainable city initiatives with human values and attention to the common good which they currently lack. By bringing the value of meaningfulness into a description of city-making, the chapter shows how city people have responsibilities to make the city when the activities of social cooperation associated with discharging such responsibilities are constituted by freedom, autonomy, and dignity, and when the social interactions of meaning-making are just. The features of an ethico-normative architecture which is capable of promoting city-level meaningfulness are specified. These include three core elements: public meaningfulness; the society of meaning-makers; and agonistic republicanism. City-making organized to manifest these features will generate a rich diversity of meaning sources on which city people can draw to craft meaningfulness in life and in work.
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