Stateless Social Democracy
Prijzen vanaf
VERGELIJK ALLE AANBIEDERS
(2)
Bol
Stateless Social Democracy offers a bold new vision for a world beyond the state-where liberty and equality are not in conflict, but in harmony. Bridging classical liberalism, anarchism, and social democracy, W. J. Whitman introduces "liberal-anarchism": a philosophy rooted in voluntary cooperation, decentralized governance, and mutual aid. Drawing from history, theory, and real-world experiments, this provocative book explores how universal basic income, land value tax, and community-based justice can emerge without coercive institutions. For readers disillusioned with both capitalism and authoritarian socialism, this is a practical and hopeful roadmap toward a truly free and just society.
Lees meer
13,00
Uitgelicht
|
13,00 |
Naar shop
|
|
22,76 |
Naar shop
|
Beschrijving
Bol
Stateless Social Democracy offers a bold new vision for a world beyond the state-where liberty and equality are not in conflict, but in harmony. Bridging classical liberalism, anarchism, and social democracy, W. J. Whitman introduces "liberal-anarchism": a philosophy rooted in voluntary cooperation, decentralized governance, and mutual aid. Drawing from history, theory, and real-world experiments, this provocative book explores how universal basic income, land value tax, and community-based justice can emerge without coercive institutions. For readers disillusioned with both capitalism and authoritarian socialism, this is a practical and hopeful roadmap toward a truly free and just society.
Stateless Social Democracy offers a bold new vision for a world beyond the state-where liberty and equality are not in conflict, but in harmony. Bridging classical liberalism, anarchism, and social democracy, W. J. Whitman introduces "liberal-anarchism": a philosophy rooted in voluntary cooperation, decentralized governance, and mutual aid. Drawing from history, theory, and real-world experiments, this provocative book explores how universal basic income, land value tax, and community-based justice can emerge without coercive institutions. For readers disillusioned with both capitalism and authoritarian socialism, this is a practical and hopeful roadmap toward a truly free and just society.