Year | Author | Title | Description | Type | URL |
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1964 | Ad hoc Committee on the Triple Revolution | The Triple Revolution | "The Triple Revolution" was an open memorandum sent to U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson and other government figures on March 22, 1964. |
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1963 | Theobald, Robert | "Free Men and Free Markets" | Since the first publication in 1963 of this bold, original analysis of the American economy and society, it has been labeled both liberal and conservative, both left wing and reactionary, both utopian and down to earth. In fact, this book strongly suggests that the traditional labels-- and the traditional economic thinking behind them-- are not only outmoded but that they seriously impede progress in overcoming the enormous social and economic problems we face. Taking a fresh and clear-eyed view of today's technological society and its massive problems of abundance, automation, and falling demand, Mr. Theobald makes an audacious, controversial, and perhaps historical proposal: a guaranteed income for all as a constitutional right. Paperback, 178 pages. Anchor books |
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1962 | Friedman, Milton and Rose | "1962 Capitalism and Freedom" | University of Chicago Press, (This book has only one chapter on the Negative Income Tax, but it was highly influential.) |
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1962 | Macpherson, C.B. | "Democracy in Alberta" | University of Toronto Press, Toronto, ONT. |
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1961 | Theobald, Robert | "The Challenge of Abundance." | New York, NY: Clarkson N. Potter |
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1958 | Rezsohazy, Rudolf | "Origines et formation du catholicisme social en Belgique - 1842-1909" | Publications Universitaires de Louvain. |
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1955 | Duboin, Jacques. | "Les Yeux Ouverts" | Thuir (France): M.L. Duboin, 1982, 129p. |
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1952 | Meade, James E. | "A Geometry of International Trade" | (London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd.) |
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1949 | Marshall, T.H. | "Citizenship and Social Class; in: Alfred Marshall lectures;" | In: Class, Citizenship, and Social Development, Westport, Conn., Greenwood Press, 1963/73. |
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1948 | Meade, James E. | "Planning and the price mechanism, the liberal-socialist solution." | First published in 1948, this book outlines a solution to contemporary economic problems in the post-war years. This solution aims to make the best use of our price mechanism, free initiative and competition, but also involves the socialization of certain monopolistic concerns and the state control of the price mechanism in such a way as to maintain full employment, to achieve an equitable distribution of income and property, and to restore equilibrium to our balance of payments. It is an outline of that middle way which the author calls the Liberal-Socialist solution. London: George Allen & Unwin. |
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