A Sustainable Economy for the 21st Century
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- Nombre de pages64
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-1-60980-309-4
- EAN9781609803094
- Date de parution04/01/2011
- Protection num.Adobe DRM
- Taille2 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurSeven Stories Press
Résumé
In this groundbreaking pamphlet, Juliet Schor, author of The Overworked American, examines how Americans can begin making the shift away from a resource-destructive society to one that values the environment, community, and quality of life above business and profit. She a traces back how after W. W. II, Americans had hoped that technology and social investment would yield shorter work weeks, more pay, and complete healthcare.
Instead, we work more, get paid less, and maintain an indecent adult minimum wage. Where did we go wrong?Schor's pamphlet charts an economic vision based that aims to reduce work hours, increase leisure, create new work schedules that are not operating on a "male" model of employment, create green quotas and industry-wide environmental standards, alternative housing and transportation, raise minimum wage, restructure labor relations, change corporate culture, and promote social accountability.
The pamphlet "sets the guideposts, " writes Noam Chomsky, "for constructive thinking and action to save our country from becoming a plaything for investors and transnational corporations, and to place its fate in the hands of its citizens."
Instead, we work more, get paid less, and maintain an indecent adult minimum wage. Where did we go wrong?Schor's pamphlet charts an economic vision based that aims to reduce work hours, increase leisure, create new work schedules that are not operating on a "male" model of employment, create green quotas and industry-wide environmental standards, alternative housing and transportation, raise minimum wage, restructure labor relations, change corporate culture, and promote social accountability.
The pamphlet "sets the guideposts, " writes Noam Chomsky, "for constructive thinking and action to save our country from becoming a plaything for investors and transnational corporations, and to place its fate in the hands of its citizens."
In this groundbreaking pamphlet, Juliet Schor, author of The Overworked American, examines how Americans can begin making the shift away from a resource-destructive society to one that values the environment, community, and quality of life above business and profit. She a traces back how after W. W. II, Americans had hoped that technology and social investment would yield shorter work weeks, more pay, and complete healthcare.
Instead, we work more, get paid less, and maintain an indecent adult minimum wage. Where did we go wrong?Schor's pamphlet charts an economic vision based that aims to reduce work hours, increase leisure, create new work schedules that are not operating on a "male" model of employment, create green quotas and industry-wide environmental standards, alternative housing and transportation, raise minimum wage, restructure labor relations, change corporate culture, and promote social accountability.
The pamphlet "sets the guideposts, " writes Noam Chomsky, "for constructive thinking and action to save our country from becoming a plaything for investors and transnational corporations, and to place its fate in the hands of its citizens."
Instead, we work more, get paid less, and maintain an indecent adult minimum wage. Where did we go wrong?Schor's pamphlet charts an economic vision based that aims to reduce work hours, increase leisure, create new work schedules that are not operating on a "male" model of employment, create green quotas and industry-wide environmental standards, alternative housing and transportation, raise minimum wage, restructure labor relations, change corporate culture, and promote social accountability.
The pamphlet "sets the guideposts, " writes Noam Chomsky, "for constructive thinking and action to save our country from becoming a plaything for investors and transnational corporations, and to place its fate in the hands of its citizens."