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De-commodification as a concept comes from the idea that in a market economy, citizens (and their labor) are commodified. Given that labor is a citizen's primary commodity in the market, de-commodification refers to activities and efforts (generally by the government) that reduces citizen's reliance on the market (and their labor) for their well-being. In general, unemployment, sickness insurance and pensions are used to measure de-commodification for comparisons of the welfare state[1]. Decommodification is the process of viewing utilities as an entitlement, rather than as a commodity that must be paid or traded for. In effect, a decommodified product removes itself from the market, and can be associated with welfarism. An example of decommodification would be the removal of tolls from a toll road. [edit] Other SourcesDecommodification of Labor Theory (DLT) Is a criminological theory that focuses on the intersection of homicide and the free-market capitalist system. It argues that there is an inverse relationship between the commodification of the social being and the propensity to engage in a major anti-social act (i.e. homicide) Theory DLT is a synthesis of Esping-Andersen’s (1990) economic theory of commodification and the macrosocial institutional-anomie theory of crime, first proposed by Messner and Rosenfeld in Crime and the American Dream (1992) DLT hypothesizes that decommodification of labor is negatively related to homicide rates, an inverse relationship that argues for social services to mitigate antisocial behavior through: (1) ease of access, (2) income-replacement value and (3) the range of social statuses and conditions covered DLT argues that decommodification of labor lowers economic dominance and reduces "anomic pressure" (i.e. loss of values/morals) resulting in a reduction antisocial behavior. [edit] Sources Esping-Andersen, Gosta. 1990. The Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism. Princeton University Press. Messner, Steven F., and Richard Rosenfeld. 1997. Crime and the American Dream. 2d ed. Wadsworth Messner, Steven F., and Richard Rosenfeld. 1997. Political Restraint of the Market and Levels of Criminal Homicide. Social Forces 75(4) 1393-1416 More on decommodification of information can be found at this World Social Forum page. [edit] Notes
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