Spreading it around: a new look at redistribution and tax

广为传播:重新审视再分配与税收

LSE: Public lectures and events

2025-11-13

1 小时 26 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Contributor(s): Professor Deborah James FBA, Dr Miranda Sheild Johansson, Dr Johanna Mugler, Dr Robin Smith | In this panel discussion, anthropologists working on redistribution and tax will present the findings of—and interrogate each other on—two recent books: Clawing Back: redistribution in precarious times, and Anthropology and Tax: ethnographies of fiscal relations. Anthropologists view redistribution in unusual ways. In exploring how people pay for what they need and want, we consider how allocative processes operate beyond those tried and tested in the heyday of the welfare state. Typically, incomes are earned through wage work, or people revert to benefits. Yet austerity has reduced welfare systems in the North, while those in the South are under-developed. To make ends meet, people use both ‘formal’ and ‘informal’ resources, payments and economic relationships, creating larger networks of redistribution. They seek new ways to supplement meagre incomes, combining work, welfare and debt. But, as Deborah James shows, combining these three income sources is not straightforward: it requires canny intervention by local advisers on the one hand and householders on the other. Meanwhile, contributions, tributes and tithes, as shown by Miranda Sheild Johansson, Robin Mugler and Robin Smith, enable taxation beyond the exchequer. Their focus on fiscal systems looks at how the sharing, extraction, and flow of resources not only produce economic realities but also shape relations of belonging, dependence, and exclusion, as well as social and philosophical categories regarding work, and value.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • Welcome to the LSE Events podcast by the London School of Economics and Political Science.

  • Get ready to hear from some of the most influential international figures in the social sciences.

  • Welcome to everybody.

  • I'm Mukulika Banerjee.

  • I'm at the Department of Anthropology and it's my great pleasure to welcome you here.

  • If you're students, welcome.

  • If you're alumni, welcome back to colleagues, friends, members of the public who are here.

  • It is a public event.

  • And as you all know,

  • LSE public events are one of the best and most special aspects of life on campus.

  • Today we're here really, as you know,

  • to launch and celebrate two very important books that have just been published.

  • We put up copies for you to get a good view of them.

  • Deborah's book, Clowing Back, is on sale outside at the end when the drinks reception is on.

  • And the anthropology of tax volume has a QR code that you can scan and order, but it is open access.

  • So anyone can read it.

  • Please do engage with the contents, it's fantastic.

  • You guys pull that off, it's so helpful.

  • And you can download large parts of it and read it, and I hope you will.

  • And I hope that the discussion we've curated and planned for this evening will give you a sense of both the books.