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Republic of Equals: Predistribution and Property-Owning Democracy

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The first book length study of property-owning democracy, Republic of Equals argues that a society in which capital is universally accessible to all citizens is uniquely placed to meet the demands of justice. Arguing from a basis in liberal-republican principles, this expanded conception of the economic structure of society contextualizes the market to make its transactions fair. The author shows that a property-owning democracy structures economic incentives such that the domination of one agent by another in the market is structurally impossible. The result is a renovated form of capitalism in which the free market is no longer a threat to social democratic values, but is potentially convergent with them. It is argued that a property-owning democracy has advantages that give it priority over rival forms of social organization such as welfare state capitalism and market socialist institutions. The book also addresses the currently high levels of inequality in the societies of the developed West to suggest a range of policies that target the "New Inequality" of our times. For this reason, the work engages not only with political philosophers such as John Rawls, Philip Pettit and John Tomasi, but also with the work of economists and historians such as Anthony B. Atkinson, François Bourguignon, Jacob S. Hacker, Lane Kenworthy, and Thomas Piketty.

Author: Thomas Alan
Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 472
ISBN: 9780190929541
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2019

Introduction

Chapter One: Rawls, Republicanism and Liberal-republicanism

Chapter Two: Justice, Pareto and Equality.

Chapter Three: G. A. Cohen's neo-Marxist Critique of Rawls

Chapter Five: Three Forms of Republican Egalitarianism.

Chapter Six: A Liberal-republican Economic System

Chapter Seven: Rawls's Critique of Welfare State Capitalism.

Chapter Eight: Property-owning Democracy Versus Market Socialism

Chapter Nine: Towards a Pluralistic Commonwealth

Chapter Ten: Classical Liberalism and Property-owning Democracy

Chapter Eleven: A Realistic Utopianism?

Chapter Twelve: Inequality and Globalization

Conclusion: Nothing is Obvious

Bibliography

Notes

Index

Alan Thomas is currently Professor of Ethics at the University of York. Educated at Cambridge, Harvard (as a Kennedy Scholar), and Oxford Universities he has held visiting appointments at the University of British Columbia, Tulane University, St. Louis University and the Australian National University. His interests in philosophy include moral and political philosophy, epistemology and the philosophy of mind

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