Building the good society: the power and limits of markets, democracy and freedom in an increasingly polarized world /
Material type:
TextPublication details: Bingley, United Kingdom : Emerald Publishing, 2020.Description: 1 online resource (249 pages); 3250 pagesISBN: - 9781838676322
- REF.306.3 D89
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| REFERENCE BOOKS | LAPULAPU-CEBU INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE REFERENCE SECTION | REF.306.3 D89 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 001134 |
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| REF.306.K84 2019 Anthropology : appreciating human diversity / | REF.306.018 H183 2007 Ethnography: Principles in Practice / | REF.306.07 C89 2018 Cultural studies: theory and practice / | REF.306.3 D89 2020 Building the good society: the power and limits of markets, democracy and freedom in an increasingly polarized world / | REF.306.44 C86 2019 Critical inquiries in the sociolinguistics of globalization / | REF.306.44 D99 2020 The dynamics of language and inequality in education: social and symbolic boundaries in the global south / | REF.306.446 H67 2017 Linguanomics : what is the market potential of multilingualism? / |
In many countries, society seems to be going off the rails. Economies are mired in widening and deepening inequality while the polity has deteriorated into a state of permanent hyper-partisan confrontation. Compromise and pragmatism seem a thing of the past. The central value of fairness has been cast aside. An individual's freedom and prosperity increasingly appear to depend not on personal and social commitments to the fundamental institutions of market economy and political democracy, but rather on whether his or her side dominates in the struggle for power. Leading political economist Lloyd J. Dumas presents a pragmatic alternative view of a society that is capable of maximizing individual freedoms and producing sustained prosperity while preserving socially responsible behavior. In six interconnected essays, he investigates how to secure political freedom and sustainable democracy while avoiding the deliberate manipulation that produces less-than-democratic results; how to achieve equity and material abundance within the market system while avoiding the disadvantages of excessive income and wealth inequality; how to foster individual attitudes that promote progress rather than destroy the idea of individual dignity; how to shape the international organizations and institutions that will construct a solid and truly global social foundation; and how to sustain these foundations through democratic transitions. No blue sky utopian vision of idealists living in a perfect society, this book draws upon real examples from around the globe in order to outline an achievable future where ordinary, fallible human beings can overcome the most troubling limitations of democratic institutions and free market economics in order to harness their power to bring prosperity and maximize personal freedom. With chapters that collectively build a pragmatic conceptual foundation for envisioning an optimally ethical international politico-economic system, Building the Good Society is a must-read for political economists and policymakers interested in realistic, theoretically rigorous recommendations for social development. Because its chapters are digestible as standalone essays, this book is also of interest to anyone concerned with the most pressing political, economic, and social issues of the past ten years
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