Nonviolent Political Economy (eBook, PDF)
Theory and Applications
Redaktion: Cante, Freddy; Torres, Wanda Tatiana
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Nonviolent Political Economy (eBook, PDF)
Theory and Applications
Redaktion: Cante, Freddy; Torres, Wanda Tatiana
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Nonviolent Political Economy offers a set of theoretical solutions and practical guidelines to build an economy of nonviolence which implies a social state of peacefulness, involving minimal violence and minimal destruction of nature.
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Nonviolent Political Economy offers a set of theoretical solutions and practical guidelines to build an economy of nonviolence which implies a social state of peacefulness, involving minimal violence and minimal destruction of nature.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 260
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351383677
- Artikelnr.: 57098180
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 260
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351383677
- Artikelnr.: 57098180
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Freddy Cante is a Full Professor at the School of Political Science, Government and International Relations, at Universidad del Rosario, Colombia. He is a founding member of the International Consortium for Research on Violence and of the interdisciplinary group JANUS, for the study of peace and conflicts. His research focuses on welfare economics, public choice, social choice, collective action, nonviolent political action, and in the political economy of nonviolence Wanda Tatiana Torres is a Political Scientist and Internationalist from Universidad del Rosario, Colombia. As a Chevening scholar, she is a current candidate for a Masters of Science in Global Politics at The London School of Economics and Political Science. She is also a former researcher at the Regional Center for Strategic Security Studies (CREES), at the National War College in Bogota, Republic of Colombia and an International Advisor to the Command of the National Colombian Army
Introductory Chapter: Nonviolent Political Economy: A Research and Teaching
Agenda. PART I A critique of conventional and violent economy. 1. Money,
credit and interest in light of unconventional perspective. 2. The economic
nature of man disputed - Anthropology and the "homo oeconomicus". PART II
Self-organized collective action and preservation of commons. 3. Emergent
collective action: complexifying the world. 4. Self-Organized Collective
Action in the Floating Island Project. 5. Buds in the capitalist desert.
Emerging socio-economic forms that are changing the world. PART III
Ecological economy, political ecology and degrowth. 6. Sustainable
consumption and ecological sufficiency: discourses and power relations. 7.
Holistic peace: A new paradigm for business. PART IV Gandhian and Buddhist
political economy. 8. Gandhi, economics and the new story. 9. Buddhist
principles for a nonviolent economy. PART V Disarmament, post-military
systems of defense and transition towards a nonviolent social order. 10.
Civilian-based defense systems: leveraging economic power to fulfill
security treaty obligations. 11. Systemic Violence in Syria and the
Usefulness of Political Economy. 12. How to break the spell? Sources of
violence and conflict in an oil-rent based economy. A case study of Iraq
and the autonomous region of Kurdistan
Agenda. PART I A critique of conventional and violent economy. 1. Money,
credit and interest in light of unconventional perspective. 2. The economic
nature of man disputed - Anthropology and the "homo oeconomicus". PART II
Self-organized collective action and preservation of commons. 3. Emergent
collective action: complexifying the world. 4. Self-Organized Collective
Action in the Floating Island Project. 5. Buds in the capitalist desert.
Emerging socio-economic forms that are changing the world. PART III
Ecological economy, political ecology and degrowth. 6. Sustainable
consumption and ecological sufficiency: discourses and power relations. 7.
Holistic peace: A new paradigm for business. PART IV Gandhian and Buddhist
political economy. 8. Gandhi, economics and the new story. 9. Buddhist
principles for a nonviolent economy. PART V Disarmament, post-military
systems of defense and transition towards a nonviolent social order. 10.
Civilian-based defense systems: leveraging economic power to fulfill
security treaty obligations. 11. Systemic Violence in Syria and the
Usefulness of Political Economy. 12. How to break the spell? Sources of
violence and conflict in an oil-rent based economy. A case study of Iraq
and the autonomous region of Kurdistan
Introductory Chapter: Nonviolent Political Economy: A Research and Teaching
Agenda. PART I A critique of conventional and violent economy. 1. Money,
credit and interest in light of unconventional perspective. 2. The economic
nature of man disputed - Anthropology and the "homo oeconomicus". PART II
Self-organized collective action and preservation of commons. 3. Emergent
collective action: complexifying the world. 4. Self-Organized Collective
Action in the Floating Island Project. 5. Buds in the capitalist desert.
Emerging socio-economic forms that are changing the world. PART III
Ecological economy, political ecology and degrowth. 6. Sustainable
consumption and ecological sufficiency: discourses and power relations. 7.
Holistic peace: A new paradigm for business. PART IV Gandhian and Buddhist
political economy. 8. Gandhi, economics and the new story. 9. Buddhist
principles for a nonviolent economy. PART V Disarmament, post-military
systems of defense and transition towards a nonviolent social order. 10.
Civilian-based defense systems: leveraging economic power to fulfill
security treaty obligations. 11. Systemic Violence in Syria and the
Usefulness of Political Economy. 12. How to break the spell? Sources of
violence and conflict in an oil-rent based economy. A case study of Iraq
and the autonomous region of Kurdistan
Agenda. PART I A critique of conventional and violent economy. 1. Money,
credit and interest in light of unconventional perspective. 2. The economic
nature of man disputed - Anthropology and the "homo oeconomicus". PART II
Self-organized collective action and preservation of commons. 3. Emergent
collective action: complexifying the world. 4. Self-Organized Collective
Action in the Floating Island Project. 5. Buds in the capitalist desert.
Emerging socio-economic forms that are changing the world. PART III
Ecological economy, political ecology and degrowth. 6. Sustainable
consumption and ecological sufficiency: discourses and power relations. 7.
Holistic peace: A new paradigm for business. PART IV Gandhian and Buddhist
political economy. 8. Gandhi, economics and the new story. 9. Buddhist
principles for a nonviolent economy. PART V Disarmament, post-military
systems of defense and transition towards a nonviolent social order. 10.
Civilian-based defense systems: leveraging economic power to fulfill
security treaty obligations. 11. Systemic Violence in Syria and the
Usefulness of Political Economy. 12. How to break the spell? Sources of
violence and conflict in an oil-rent based economy. A case study of Iraq
and the autonomous region of Kurdistan