Year | Author | Title | Description | Type | URL |
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1997 | VAN PARIJS, Philippe | "Social Justice as Real Freedom for All. A Reply to Arneson, Fleurbaey, Melnyk and Selznick" | In The Good Society (PEGS, University of Maryland, Dept of Government, College Park, MD 20742, USA, E-mail: v-cmorgan@bss2.umd.edu) 7 (1), Winter 1997, pp. 42-48. |
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1997 | Van Parijs, Philippe | "Reciprocity and the Justification of an Unconditional Basic Income." | Reply to Stuart White; in: Political Studies, XLV, 1997, pp. 327-330. |
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1997 | Van Parijs, Philippe | "Arbeid, vrijheid, basisinkomen" | In Tijdschrift voor filosofie (Leuven) 59 (4), December 1997, pp. 698-701). |
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1997 | VAN PARIJS, Philippe | "Interview: The Need for Basic Income" | Imprints (9 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1TB, England, C.Bertram@bristol.ac.uk) 1 (3), March 1997, pp. 5-22. |
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1997 | Vobruba, Georg | " Autonomiegewinn" | Sozialstaatsdynamik, Moralfreiheit, Transnationalisierung, Wien Passagen Verlag S. 254. |
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1997 | Vobruba, Georg | "Autonomiegewinne." | Sozialstaatsdynamik, Moralfreiheit, Transnationalisierung, Wien: Passagen Verlag, 1997, 254 p. |
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1997 | WHITE, Stuart | "Liberal Equality, Exploitation, and the Case for an Unconditional Basic Income" | Political Studies (Oxford) 45 (2), June 1997, pp. 312-326. |
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1997 | Widerquist, Karl | "An Efficiency Argument for the Guaranteed Income" | In: The Jerome Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 212 |
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1997 | Wolman, W. / Colamosca, A. | "The Judas-Economy" | In this compelling and impassioned book, Business Week chief economist Bill Wolman and Anne Colamosca say what our business and government leaders are unwilling to admit, but most Americans know in their gut: in the brave new global economy, big money holds all the cards while workers - including white-collar professionals - are increasingly expendable. |
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1997 | Van Parijs, Philippe | "Real Freedom for all: what (if anything) can justify capitalism?" | Capitalist societies are full of unacceptable inequalities. Freedom is of paramount importance. These two convictions are widely shared across the world, yet they seem to be completely contradictory with each other. Fighting inequality jeopardizes freedom, and taking freedom seriously boosts inequality. Can this conflict be resolved? In this ground-breaking book, Philippe Van Parijs sets out a new and compelling case for a just society. Assessing and rejecting the claims of both socialism and conventional capitalism, he presents a clear and compelling alternative vision of the just society: a capitalist society offering a substantial and unconditional basic income to all its members. Oxford, Clarendon Press; Paperback 1997 Oxford University Press. |
Book | Link |