Social Sciences, asked by poojagaba, 9 months ago

define economic equality in brief

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

economic equality is about a level playing field where everyone has the same access to the same wealth. ... Lots of women's groups, including YWCA Canada, believe there should be economic equality between men and women.

Answered by ItzShinyQueen13
3

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The importance of food quality issues in the contemporary global context iswell established. Since the early 1990s we have seen developments in nutrition,life sciences and biotech programmes; the setting up of food quality standardsin Europe as well as in other OECD countries; the heightened focus of the media on food issues and a series of food safety crises. On the market sidethese trends have included a reconsideration of business strategy on the part of firms and their implementation of quality standards, which, as a result, areprofoundly renewing and extending food differentiation. Moreover, two com-plementary tendencies are emerging from the 1990s, which can be viewed asdisorganising food markets and as a manifestation of postmodern reflexivity:•an increase in public concern regarding health and environment, includ-ing animal welfare and•the questioning of the legitimacy of the ‘institutions’ which provideknowledge about food: mothers as the experts, public agencies and even‘science’, which together functioned in a way that guaranteed the pro-ductivist model of industrialisation and the safety of food during the so-called modern period.The approach developed in this chapter is for food quality to be viewed interms of emergent cognitive paradigms sustained within food product net-works that encompass a wide range of social actors, from farm to fork, with awide variety of intermediaries, professional and governmental. There has beena new and historical problematising of the quality of food, partly in relation to food crises, partly in relation to the globalisation of food networks. But toarrive at this theoretical approach, a critique of orthodox economic accountsof quality is advanced, and in particular their failure to explore deeply enoughissues of consumption. Quality issues, in various guises, have been central toeconomic approaches and their understanding of markets and competition.Mainstream approaches offer a normative view to consumption to cope withthe differentiation of goods. The general underlying critique is that they findit difficult to accommodate the increasing complexity of quality,

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