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Legal Duty and Upper Limits
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27 November 2020

This book proposes a radical new way of thinking about our democratic future, our ecological survival, and our ways to keep economies fair. It shows that adopting upper limits to wealth and income; replacing elections with local direct democracy and legal duty involving randomly selected citizens; and replacing welfare and redistribution policies with pre-distribution and reparations promises new solutions to political apathy, discontent, manipulation, economic inequality, unfairness, unequal opportunities, and looming ecological disaster.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Democracy, Political structures / systems: democracy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Economy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Policy, Political economy, Central / national / federal government policies, Society and culture: general
“This is undoubtedly an original and crucial book containing a courageous, informed and plausible argument which deals with the major crises of our time. Reiter sharply analyses the problems of our economic and political system and does not shy away from proposing radical and constructive solutions.” — Professor Dr. Aram Ziai, Heisenberg-Professor of Development and Postcolonial Studies, Executive Director Global Partnership Network, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Kassel
Preface; Chapter 1: Out of Crisis; Chapter 2: Direct Local Democracy and Legal Duty; Chapter 3: Predistribution and Upper Limits; Chapter 4: Reparations; Chapter 5: Conclusions and Implications; Final Considerations; Notes; References and Further Readings; Index.