25 Nov 2003
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£65.00
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Hardback
 In Stock
 
9781403905802
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Description

The Ethics of Stakeholding brings together leading academics in the fields of political philosophy and social policy to engage with one of the most exciting new paradigms in social policy. Stakeholder policies have been hailed by academics and policy-makers as one of the most promising tools for combating poverty, unemployment and inequality in modern welfare states. This collection offers a comprehensive overview of stakeholding and critically explores the ethical foundations of the stakeholder society. Keith Dowding, Jurgen De Wispelaere and Stuart White offer a comprehensive introduction to the ideas underlying stakeholding and explaining the modern debates. The contributors, including some of the leading worldwide proponents in the field, provide arguments for and against the specific types of stakeholding - capital grants versus universal basic income - and critically explore the ethical foundations of the stakeholder society.


Reviews

'Which way forward for our welfare states? No promising answer can be given to this question without a resolute broadening of the narrow limits of what looks politically possible. But no sensible answer can be given to this question without our reflecting both on underlying principles and specific designs, as in this lucid, demanding, multi-faceted dialogue on basic income versus basic endowment.' - Philippe Van Parijs, Professor of Economic and Social Ethics, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium Secretary of the Basic Income European Network

'The past twenty years have seen a massive increase in the inequality of incomes and, even more, in the inequality of wealth. Governments have responded by increasing the number of means-tested benefits, which are both degrading and (partly for this reason) not taken up by many who are eligible. The obvious solution is to distribute wealth and income unconditionally, at the expense of those who have so much as to threaten the foundations of human solidarity and democracy. This book contains the best available discussion of alternative ways of realizing freedom and social justice in this way. The editors are to be congratulated on having cunningly included one mean-spirited and misguided contribution which serves as a foil to the others.' - Brian Barry, Lieber Professor in Political Philosophy, Columbia University, USA, and Emeritus Professor of Political Science, London School of Economics and Political Science


Contents

Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Contributors
Stakeholding - Towards a New Social Paradigm?; K.Dowding; J.De Wispelaere & S.White
A Capital Idea: Helping the Young Help Themselves; J.Le Grand & D.Nissan
Stakeholding and Individual Ownership Accounts; G.Kelly, A.Gamble & W.Paxton
Sneaking up on Stakeholding; R.E.Goodin
Freedom, Reciprocity, and Time-Limited Citizen's Income; S.White
The Stake and Exploitation; G.Van Donselaar
The Stake: An Egalitarian Proposal?; C.Fabre
Freedom and Democratization: Why Basic Income is to be Preferred over Basic Capital; C.Pateman
Assessing the Unconditional Stake; R.Van der Veen
Radical Liberalism; B.Ackerman
Bibliography
Index


Authors

KEITH DOWDING is Professor of Political Science at the London School of Economics and Political Science. His books include Rational Choice and Political Power (1991), The Civil Service (1995), Preferences, Institutions and Rational Choice (co-editor, 1995), Power (1996) and Challenges to Democracy (co-editor, 2001). He is co-editor of the Journal of Theoretical Politics and has written numerous articles in the fields of political philosophy, political theory, social choice, urban politics, public administration and British politics.

JURGEN DE WISPELAERE is completing a doctorate in political theory at the London School of Economics and Political Science. A former health care worker, his current research is in social and political philosophy and he has published articles on ethical aspects of employment regulation, welfare reform and basic income.

STUART WHITE is Tutorial Fellow in Politics at Jesus College, Oxford. His research interests concern the philosophy and politics of egalitarianism. He is the editor of New Labour: The Progressive Future (Palgrave Macmillan 2001) and author of The Civic Minimum: On the Rights and Obligations of Economic Citizenship (2003).


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