Thursday , November 21 2024
Home / Post-Keynesian / How Would Socialism Work?

How Would Socialism Work?

Summary:
[embedded content]On Another Topic, with an Appearance by Rutger Bregman. This post does not answer the question, but merely provides a bibliography. I have not read everything below. I suppose this is something of a hodge podge. I include a book from Peter Kropotkin, even though it is much older than the remaining non-fiction works, since I am currently one third, maybe, through it. Novels (Ken Macleod, in The Cassini Division has a more complete list as chapter titles.) Edward Bellamy. 1888. Looking Backward. Ursula K. Leguin. 1974 The Dispossessed. William Morris. 1890. News from Nowhere. Charlotte Perkins Gilman. 1915. Herland. Apparently this is one of a genre of feminist utopias. Francis Spufford. 2010. Red Plenty. Analyses and detailed proposals. Michael

Topics:
Robert Vienneau considers the following as important:

This could be interesting, too:

Robert Vienneau writes Elsewhere: Data On Capitalism And Other Systems

Robert Vienneau writes Problems With The Economic Calculation Problem

Robert Vienneau writes Aims And Tasks Of Democratic Socialism

Robert Vienneau writes Elsewhere

On Another Topic, with an Appearance by Rutger Bregman.

This post does not answer the question, but merely provides a bibliography. I have not read everything below. I suppose this is something of a hodge podge. I include a book from Peter Kropotkin, even though it is much older than the remaining non-fiction works, since I am currently one third, maybe, through it.

  • Novels (Ken Macleod, in The Cassini Division has a more complete list as chapter titles.)
    • Edward Bellamy. 1888. Looking Backward.
    • Ursula K. Leguin. 1974 The Dispossessed.
    • William Morris. 1890. News from Nowhere.
    • Charlotte Perkins Gilman. 1915. Herland. Apparently this is one of a genre of feminist utopias.
    • Francis Spufford. 2010. Red Plenty.
  • Analyses and detailed proposals.
    • Michael Albert. 2003. Parecon: Life After Capitalism.
    • Rutger Bregman. 2017. Utopia for Realists: The Case for a Universal Basic Income.
    • Gerald Cohen. 2009. Why Not Socialism?
    • Theodore Burczak. 2006. Socialism after Hayek.
    • Paul Cockshott and Allin Cottrell. 1993. Towards a New Socialism.
    • David Ellerman. 2021. Neo-Abolitionism: Abolishing Human Rentals in Favor of Workplace Democracy.
    • Geoffrey Hodgson. 2019. Is Socialism Feasible? Torwards an Alternative Future.
    • Bruno Jossa. 2020. Managing the Cooperative Enterprise: The Rise of Worker-Controlled Firms.
    • Janos Kornai. 1992. The Socialist System: The Political Economy of Communism.
    • Peter Kropotkin. 1892. The Conquest of Bread.
    • Guinevere Liberty Nell. 2010. Rediscovering Fire: Basic Economic Lessons from the Soviet Experiment to Eliminate the Market.
    • Alex Nove. 1983. The Economics of Feasible Socialism.
    • David Schweickart. 2002. After Capitalism.
    • Joseph Stiglitz. 1996. Whither Socialism.
    • Philippe Van Parijs. 2019. Basic Income: A Radical Proposal for a Free Society and a Sane Economy.

There is no scarcity of informed ideas on how a better society might function.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *