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Description
Neoliberalism has pushed capitalism to its limits, hollowing out global economies and lives in the process, while people are left with no voice. Asimakopoulos addresses this problem with a theory to practice model that attempts to reconcile Marxism with democratic theory, and offers a vision of an egalitarian society.
Author Bios John Asimakopoulos, Ph.D., is Full Professor of Sociology at the City University of New York and executive director of the Transformative Studies Institute (TSI), an educational think tank. He has advanced degrees in and has taught sociology, political science, and economics resulting in a unique interdisciplinary perspective. Asimakopoulos is author of Revolt! and The Accumulation of Freedom.
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Publication date: March 1, 2016

Table of Contents
Foreword by Mark Zepezauer
Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. Theory, Praxis, and Change
The Ragged Edge of Anarchy: Direct Democracy
Mutualism
Collectivism
Communist Anarchism
Conflict Theory
Why Capitalism Must Always Collapse
The Relationship between Change and Radicalism
Structural Limitations to Change
Insurrection versus Revolution
Does Direct Democracy Require Small-scale Societies
McDonald’s Iron Cage

2. Relations of Authority
The Fraud of Representative Democracy
The Best Democracy Money Can Buy
Stealing Democracy Old School
Political Parties
A Path to Direct Democracy
Economic Authority
Political Authority
Constitution

3. Material Relations
Economic Utilities of Direct Democracy
Relations of Consumption
Resource Use
What to Produce
How to Produce
Can the System Adapt?

4. Social Structure
Culture and Social Integration
Organizing Principles of Social Structure
Institutions and Socialization
Compulsion and Discipline
Journalism
The Social Network: The Future that Can be Now

Conclusion: No Islands of Egalitarianism in a Sea of Inequality
Afterword by Richard Gilman-Opalsky: What Can Grow in the Graveyard for Orthodoxies?
Bibliography
Index

Reviews

Series

Part of the Studies in Critical Social Sciences series.

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