Literature DB >> 19569397

The transformation of morals in markets: death, benefits, and the exchange of life insurance policies.

Sarah Quinn1.   

Abstract

This article adopts an institutional approach to describe the changing secondary market for life insurance in the United States. Since the 1990s, this market, in which investors buy strangers' life insurance policies, has grown in the face of considerable moral ambivalence. The author uses news reports and interviews to identify and describe three conceptions of this market: sacred revulsion, consumerist consolation, and rationalized reconciliation. Differences among the conceptions are considered in view of the institutional legacy of life insurance and its success in organizing practices, perceptions, and understandings about markets and death. From this case, the author draws implications for analyses of morals in markets, an important and emergent topic within economic sociology.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19569397     DOI: 10.1086/592861

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJS        ISSN: 0002-9602


  2 in total

Review 1.  Opening Constructive Dialogues Between Business Ethics Research and the Sociology of Morality: Introduction to the Thematic Symposium.

Authors:  Masoud Shadnam; Andrey Bykov; Ajnesh Prasad
Journal:  J Bus Ethics       Date:  2020-10-27

2.  Toward a sociology of finitude: life, death, and the question of limits.

Authors:  Roi Livne
Journal:  Theory Soc       Date:  2021-05-15
  2 in total

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