Beschreibung:
The book is action-oriented and empowering, presenting concrete proposals that could reduce the most deplorable global inequalities. It asks: how did we get here?; where do we want to go instead?; and how do we get there?
Today’s globalised world means offshore finance, airport boutiques and high-speed Internet for some people, against dollar-a-day wages, used t-shirts, and illiteracy for others. How do these highly skewed global distributions happen, and what can be done to counter them?
New Rules for Global Justice engages with widespread public disquiet around global inequality. It explores (mal)distributions in relation to country, class, gender and race, with international examples drawn from Australia to Zimbabwe. The book is action-oriented and empowering, presenting concrete proposals for ‘new rules’ in regard to climate change, corruption, finance, food, investment, the Internet, migration and more.
Acknowledgements / List of Abbreviations / 1. Why Global Redistribution Is Needed, Jan Aart Scholte / 2. Structural Redistribution through Global Social Democracy, Valentina Fedotova / 3. Rethinking Global Investment, Yash Tandon / 4. Engaging the Diasporas: An Alternative Paradigm from the Caribbean, Beverley Mullings and Alissa Trotz / 5. Corruption of Anti-Corruption: Deconstructing Neoliberal Good Governance, Pınar Bedirhanoğlu / 6.An Alternative Global Money: Special Drawing Rights or Bitcoin?, Liu Taoxiong with Huang Mendang / 7. Financing Global Public Goods: The Case for a Currency Transaction Levy, Nina Hall and Inge Kaul / 8. Copyfight: Global Redistribution in the Digital Age, Blayne Haggart / 9. From Land Grabs to Food Sovereignty, Heloise Weber / 10. Global Redistribution through Climate Justice, Dorothy Grace Guerrero / 11. Governance Innovation: Enabling Collective Action for Structural Redistribution, Lorenzo Fioramonti and Alfred Nhema / Index / Notes on Contributors