Has politics reached breaking point? Rather than defending liberalism or abandoning it, how can a socially just and ecological alternative be built? Peadar Kirby investigates the causes of our current multifaceted global crisis by drawing on the work of Karl Polanyi. This book explores Polanyi's theory that social disruptions result from the attempt to run society according to the rules of the market. Drawing on these ideas, it outlines pathways towards an alternative future that overcome weaknesses in Marxism. Linking the ecological, political and socio-economic crises, Kirby identifies that an alternative socio-ecological model is emerging, consistent with the insights of Polanyi. Karl Polanyi and the Contemporary Political Crisis is an urgent intervention into key debates on the future of politics, on the low-carbon transition, on automation and on the emerging world order.
Author(s): Peadar Kirby
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Year: 2020
Cover
Contents
List of figures and tables
Foreword by President Michael D. Higgins
Part 1 Loss of hope
1 A world in transition
2 Understanding the crisis
Part 2 An alternative future?
3 Beyond capitalism
4 Mapping an eco-social future
Part 3 From commodification to decommodification
Introduction to Part Three
5 Fictitious commodities: Land
6 Fictitious commodities: Labour
7 Fictitious commodities: Money
Conclusion to Part Three
Part 4 Whither and how?
8 Towards a new public philosophy
9 Beyond market society
6.1 Declining taxes, 1970–2012
6.2 Inequality and carbon emissions
1.1 Share of global growth captured by income groups, 1980–2016
2.1 Strength of ultra-right parties in Europe, 2019
6.1 Decommodification index
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index