John Vail is currently a Visiting Professor in the School of Geography, Politics and Sociology at Newcastle University where he was previously a Senior Lecturer of Sociology until his retirement. His research interests are in egalitarian political economy. He has edited volumes on insecurity and alternative approaches to full employment and has written several articles on decommodification and egalitarian political economy. With Professor Robert Hollands, he has written a series of papers on the transformative cultural activism of the Newcastle based film and photography collective, Amber Films.
"""As social scientists re-read their classics, the worthwhile question is: What insights could they offer if they were writing today? John Vail's volume on Karl Polanyi provides the most up-to-date and most inspired answer to that question he addresses to the author of The Great Transformation (1944). Applying the famous ""double movement"" model to capitalism ending its neoliberal stage, Vail demonstrates the value of Polanyian conceptual keys to the understanding of today’s political economy. One of these keys is the multi-faceted idea of ""decommodification"", a widely employed concept that was first coined fifty years ago in the spirit of Polanyi."" Prof. Claus Offe, Hertie School of Governance, Germany ""This superb book is a masterful reconstruction and critical discussion of Polanyi's fundamental work and its afterlife in the work of Thomas Piketty and others in the twenty-first century."" Prof. William Outhwaite, Newcastle University, UK ""This is a magnificent book. Written beautifully, concisely and with depth, Karl Polanyi and the Paradoxes of the Double Movement could also not be timelier. John Vail sheds new light on the continuing significance of Polanyi’s understanding of the contradictions between capitalist markets and democracy as it evolves from the nineteenth century to the post-World War II era and the present. Vail’s erudite explanation of the tension between insecurity and inequality, on the one hand, and the rise of right-wing populism, on the other, leads to a unique exploration of Polanyi’s double movement and its possible transcendence — providing a compass for potential transformation, decommodification, and social justice. This highly accessible book is a must for anyone who wishes to gain a thorough understanding of current crises and future possibilities."" Prof. Micheline Ishay, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver, USA ""John Vail’s book deserves a wide readership. Vail avoids polemics against other scholars as well as an overly reverential treatment of Polanyi’s text. Instead, he explores both the strengths and weaknesses of Polanyi’s analysis and mobilizes the most relevant historical scholarship to evaluate Polanyi’s interpretations. He leaves the reader with concepts that brilliantly illuminate our own era of market fundamentalism."" Fred Block, Research Professor of Sociology, University of California, Davis, USA"