It is to Tim Hayward's great credit that he paints so thorough and accurate a picture...
Steel City Scribblings
Can global justice be promoted by distributing money more equitably? Could even relatively small financial sacrifices by the affluent work, through benign leverage, to achieve that goal? Global Justice and Finance casts new light on such questions by considering what is presupposed about finance. Redistributive proposals assume money to be a reliable measure, store of value, and medium of exchange. Yet maintaining stable interest, inflation, and exchange rates in a dynamic capitalist economy is a considerable achievement involving a complex financial system. Such global coordination could, if so directed, contribute immensely to humanity's betterment, yet under the direction of a profit seeking elite it leaves a majority disempowered, impoverished, and indebted. To pay debts, ever more desperate measures to wrest value from the world's natural resources increase ecological pressures to harmful extremes, and those pressures do not stop short of driving wars. The profit seeking economy is held in place by the complex legal arrangements that constitute finance. Globally, there has developed, unannounced and unaccountably, what amounts to a privatised constitution - binding agreements that transcend sovereign jurisdictions. Hopes of redirecting the financial assets created within this system, by means of modest reforms, towards objectives of social justice and ecological sustainability may prove illusory. To achieve such objectives arguably requires the constitution of a global normative order guided by public and political decision-making. The achievement of a publicly accountable constitutional order that is superordinate to the financial system might be regarded as a revolutionary transformation.
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Can global justice be promoted by distributing money more equitably? This book casts new light on this question by considering what is presupposed about finance, and challenges the tradition of global justice theory that proposes modest reforms to the international institutional order as sufficient for achieving a more just world.
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1: Introduction
2: Money for Justice?
3: The Good of Finance and the Critique of Financialization
4: Financialization and the 'Real Economy': An Ecological Perspective
5: Can Giving Money End Severe Poverty?
6: Can Benign Leverage be Relied on to Make the World More Just?
7: Can Money Transfers Serve to Offset Ecological Harms?
8: What is the Good of Money?
9: The Monetary Constraints on Tax Justice
10: Constituting Finance as a Global Public Good: the scope of the challenge
11: Finance, War, and 'Humanitarian Intervention'
12: Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
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Tim Hayward is Professor of Environmental Political Theory at the University of Edinburgh. After completing a doctorate on human rights at the University of Sussex, he held positions in Italy and Wales before settling at the University of Edinburgh. Having written extensively on how environmental values might be integrated into social and political theory, his more recent work examines obstacles to political progress. The present
study of the challenges presented by financialized capitalism has led to exploratory research into how populations are manipulated by propaganda into accepting policies that are not in their own best interests or those of
justice, sustainability or peace.
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The first political theory book on global justice and finance
Introduces key innovative concepts such as 'benign leverage'
Challenges prevailing traditions of global justice theory
Identifies critical issues requiring closer attention from global justice theorists
Offers an integrated perspective by incorporating an ecological perspective and showing how understanding impediments to peace are inseparable parts of the challenge
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192862754
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
368 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
19 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
238
Forfatter