Bültmann & Gerriets
Reclaiming Public Ownership
Making Space for Economic Democracy
von Andrew Cumbers
Verlag: Bloomsbury UK
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ISBN: 978-1-78032-370-1
Auflage: 1. Auflage
Erschienen am 13.09.2012
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 264 Seiten

Preis: 30,99 €

30,99 €
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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

*** Winner of the Myrdal Prize for Evolutionary Political Economy ***
The last few years have seen the spectacular failure of market fundamentalism in Europe and the US, with a seemingly never-ending spate of corporate scandals and financial crises. As the environmental limits and socially destructive tendencies of the current profit-driven economic model become daily more self-evident, there is a growing demand for a fairer economic alternative, as evidenced by the mounting campaigns against global finance and the politics of austerity. Reclaiming Public Ownership tackles these issues head on, going beyond traditional leftist arguments about the relative merits of free markets and central planning to present a radical new conception of public ownership, framed around economic democracy and public participation in economic decision-making. Cumbers argues that a reconstituted public ownership is central to the creation of a more just and sustainable society.
This book is a timely reconsideration of a long-standing but essential topic.



Andrew Cumbers is professor of geographical political economy at the University of Glasgow. He has written extensively on the problems of uneven development in capitalist societies, responses on the left and the prospects for a more democratic and egalitarian politics. Recent publications include Alternatives to Market Fundamentalism in Scotland and Beyond, co-edited with Geoff Whittam, and Global Justice Networks: Geographies of Transnational Solidarity with Paul Routledge.



Introduction: an unexpected guest - the return of public ownership
PART ONE Public ownership and its discontents
1. Public ownership as state ownership: the post-1945 legacy
2. The neoliberal onslaught and the politics of privatization
3. Coming to terms with Hayek: markets, planning and economic democracy
PART TWO The return of public ownership
4. Financial crisis and the rediscovery of the state in the neoliberal heartland
5. Public ownership and an alternative political economy in Latin America
6. Alternative globalizations and the discourse of the commons
PART THREE Remaking public ownership
7. Remaking and rescaling public ownership
8. State ownership, deliberative democracy and elite interests in Norway's oil bonanza
9. Decentred public ownership and the Danish wind power revolution
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index