Available Formats
New Rules for Global Justice: Structural Redistribution in the Global Economy
By (Author) Jan Aart Scholte
Edited by Lorenzo Fioramonti
Edited by Alfred G. Nhema
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield International
12th April 2016
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Globalization
Poverty and precarity
330.9
Paperback
198
Width 149mm, Height 231mm, Spine 14mm
299g
Todays 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.
To solve the urgent interlocking problems of climate change, world poverty, corruption, migration, food insecurity, intellectual property, international finance and money itself, New Rules for Global Justice are desperately needed. This book, produced by eminent researchers from four continents, gives us a brilliant, insightful and timely start. -- Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, bestselling authors of The Spirit Level: Why Equality Is Better for Everyone
Over the last decades corporate globalization has imposedan economic system that has produced a world for the 1%, increased global injustice, andpushed the planet and societies to the brink. The ideas and proposals presented in New Rules for Global Justice have become an ecological and political imperative. -- Vandana Shiva, recipient of the Alternative Nobel Prize Right Livelihood Award
In the current darkness of global injustice, a glimmer of light and hope comes from a renewed globalized discussion of pathways to justice. In its global distribution of authors as well as in its wide range of topics and strategies, this book is an extraordinary contribution to the worldwide discussion of change. -- Gran Therborn, Professor of Sociology, University of Cambridge
Global redistribution should be an urgent priority. By showing us how it can be accomplished, this much-needed book should hasten that day. A compelling roadmap to a just future. -- James Gustave Speth, founder, National Resources Defense Council; former dean, Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies
Jan Aart Scholte is Faculty Professor in Peace and Development in the School of Global Studies at the University of Gothenburg. Lorenzo Fioramonti is Professor of Political Economy at the University of Pretoria, South Africa, and Director of the Centre for the Study of Governance Innovation.. Alfred G. Nhema is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Political and Administrative Studies at the University of Zimbabwe.