ABSTRACT
In Economic Justice and Democracy Robin Hahnel argues that progressives need to go back to the drawing board and rethink how they conceive of economic justice and economic democracy. He presents a coherent set of economic institutions and procedures that can deliver economic justice and democracy through a "participatory economy." But this is a long-run goal; he also explores how to promote the economics of equitable cooperation in the here and now by emphasizing ways to broaden the base of existing economic reform movements while deepening their commitment to more far reaching change.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |12 pages
Introduction
part |60 pages
Economic Justice and Democracy
chapter |29 pages
Economic Justice
chapter |11 pages
Economic Democracy
chapter |16 pages
Debilitating Myths
part |89 pages
Rethinking Our Past
part |88 pages
What Do We Want?
chapter |22 pages
postcapitalist Visions
chapter |28 pages
Participatory Economics
chapter |36 pages
Legitimate Concerns
part |135 pages
From Competition and Greed to Equitable Cooperation