S.O.S. : alternatives to capitalism /
By: Swift, Richard
Material type: BookPublisher: Oxford : New internationalist, 2014.Description: 172 p. ; 22 cm.ISBN: 9781780261706; 1780261705Subject(s): Capitalism | Socialism | AnarchismDDC classification: 330.12/2 Online resources: Location Map
Summary:
With capitalism vulnerable and out-of-step in the wake of financial crises this book investigates the alternatives that are on offer#151;including socialism, anarchism, and deep ecology. It picks its way through the pockets of resistant thinking and emerges with paths to changing the world that rest less on rigid ideology imposed from above than on practical transformation from below. Richard Swift is former editor of New Internationalist magazine and author of the No-Nonsense Guide to Democracy . In 2011, he won the Daniel Singer Millennium Prize for an original essay which helps further socialist ideas.
Item type | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
REGULAR | University of Wollongong in Dubai Main Collection | 330.122 SW SO (Browse shelf) | Available | T0016242 |
Total holds: 0
, Shelving location: Main Collection Close shelf browser
330.122 SO MY The mystery of capital : | 330.122 SO MY The mystery of capital : | 330.122 ST EC Economics for everyone : | 330.122 SW SO S.O.S. : | 330.122 UN DE Understanding capitalism : | 330.122 WO HO How will capitalism end? : | 330.122 WU GL Globalization against democracy : |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
With capitalism vulnerable and out-of-step in the wake of financial crises this book investigates the alternatives that are on offer#151;including socialism, anarchism, and deep ecology. It picks its way through the pockets of resistant thinking and emerges with paths to changing the world that rest less on rigid ideology imposed from above than on practical transformation from below. Richard Swift is former editor of New Internationalist magazine and author of the No-Nonsense Guide to Democracy . In 2011, he won the Daniel Singer Millennium Prize for an original essay which helps further socialist ideas.