After Occupy scrutinizes power structures in workplaces, markets and investment institutions to boldly argue that democracy shouldn't just be a feature of political institutions but of economic institutions as well.
After Occupy scrutinizes power structures in workplaces, markets and investment institutions to boldly argue that democracy shouldn't just be a feature of political institutions but of economic institutions as well.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Tom Malleson is a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Postdoctoral Research Fellow at York University, Canada. He is the co-editor of Whose Streets? The Toronto G20 and the Challenges of Summit Protest (Between the Lines, 2011) and the author of Stand Up Against Capitalism (Between the Lines and New Internationalist, 2014).
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Part One: Introduction 1. Introduction 2. Economic Democracy: Beginning Orientations Part Two: Workplaces 3. Should Workplaces be Democratized? 4. Worker Cooperatives in Practice Part Three: The Market System 5. Democracy and the Market System 6. Democratizing the Market System Part Four: Finance and Investment 7. Should Finance and Investment be Democratized? 8. Finance and Investment Democracy in Practice: Capital Controls, Public Banks, and Participatory Budgeting Part Five: Conclusion 9. Towards a Feasible Socialism for the 21st Century Bibliography
Acknowledgements Part One: Introduction 1. Introduction 2. Economic Democracy: Beginning Orientations Part Two: Workplaces 3. Should Workplaces be Democratized? 4. Worker Cooperatives in Practice Part Three: The Market System 5. Democracy and the Market System 6. Democratizing the Market System Part Four: Finance and Investment 7. Should Finance and Investment be Democratized? 8. Finance and Investment Democracy in Practice: Capital Controls, Public Banks, and Participatory Budgeting Part Five: Conclusion 9. Towards a Feasible Socialism for the 21st Century Bibliography
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