ABSTRACT

The book provides a comprehensive, critical overview of philosophical, social-scientific, and humanistic arguments about the design and desirability of “post-work” society.  Its purpose is to clarify the concepts and theories that inform this debate by exploring the diversity of arguments from a wide range of perspectives about the meaning of a “post-work” future.

The book’s 12 chapters were written exclusively for the volume by an international team of researchers in philosophy, political science, gender studies, law, sociology, history, and engineering.  They are organized into four larger sections: 

I. Defining the “Post-Work” Debate

II. From Past to Future

III. The Value and Conditions of Work vs. Post-Work

IV. The Politics and Justice of Post-Work

After a general introduction and then an initial round-table discussion among four leading theorists, the book explores topics like work as an evolving social invention, the possible effects of a shorter work week and UBI, automation, climate change, and the roles of Marxism, capitalism, and democracy in a post-work future. 

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|32 pages

Defining the “Post-Work” Debate

chapter 81|30 pages

Envisioning the Post-Work World

A Roundtable Conversation*

part III|64 pages

The Value and Conditions of Work vs. Post-Work

part IV|109 pages

The Politics and Justice of Post-Work

chapter 9|23 pages

Post-Work as Post-Capitalist

Economic Democracy for a Post-Work Future

chapter 10|20 pages

Get a Democratic Life

Politicizing Post-Work Critiques and Democratic Theory

chapter 11|22 pages

Post-Work and the Problem of Recognition

A Defence of Working Time Reduction

chapter 12|22 pages

How to Pay for a Post-Work World

Automation and Collective Property