Renovating democracy : governing in the age of globalization and digital capitalism / Nathan Gardels and Nicolas Berggruen.
Publisher: Oakland, Calif. : University of California Press, 2019Description: xvii, 231 pages.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780520303607; 9780520972766.Note: Gift: Lord Giddens (Copy A)Subject(s): Democracy | Capitalism | Globalization | United States -- Politics and government -- 2017-2021DDC classification: 320.973090512Item type | Current library | Class number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey | 320.973090512 GAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Copy A | Available | Gift: Lord Giddens. | 018111 | ||
Book | House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey | 320.973090512 GAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Copy B | Available | 018110 |
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320.973 REI Supercapitalism : | 320.97309051 MAN It's even worse than it looks : how the American constitutional system collided with the new politics of extremism / | 320.973090512 GAR Renovating democracy : governing in the age of globalization and digital capitalism / | 320.973090512 GAR Renovating democracy : governing in the age of globalization and digital capitalism / | 320.9731 REI Supercapitalism : | 320.98 HEL Comparative politics of Latin America : | 320.98 LAT Latin American politics and development / |
Foreword : There is something wrong with the system -- Introduction : Rethinking democracy, the social contract and globalization -- Behind the populist surge -- Rethinking democracy -- Redrawing the social contract -- Harnessing globalization -- Epilogue : our image of the future shapes the present.
"The rise of populism in the West, the rise of China in the East and the spread of peer-driven social media everywhere are prompting a deep rethinking of how democracy works -- or doesn't. The creation of new classes of winners and losers as a result of globalization and digital capitalism are also challenging how we think about global interconnectivity and the social contract. If contemporary democracies are going to take back control and compete with autocratic systems on the world stage while avoiding their own suicide through polarization and paralysis fueled by untrustworthy information, they need a radical renovation that responds to the forces undermining them. Above all, such a renovation must engage the participatory power of social media and the increasing preference of publics for direct democracy by designing new, impartial institutions and practices that interpose a deliberative check against the false claims, misinformation, intolerance and magical thinking that come along with the immediate wash of networked popular sentiment. In short, participation without populism. A new social contract is also necessary that spreads the wealth through an equity share for all through "owning the robots" in a future where intelligent machines are on track to displace labor, depress income and transform the nature of work to an unprecedented degree. Harnessing globalization requires a partnership instead of rivalry with China, the new power of the 21st century." -- Provided by publisher.
Gift: Lord Giddens (Copy A)