On Another Topic, with an Appearance by Rutger Bregman. |
This post does not answer the question, but merely provides a bibliography. I have not read everything below. I suppose this is something of a hodge podge. I include a book from Peter Kropotkin, even though it is much older than the remaining non-fiction works, since I am currently one third, maybe, through it.
- Novels (Ken Macleod, in The Cassini Division has a more complete list as chapter titles.)
- Edward Bellamy. 1888. Looking Backward.
- Ursula K. Leguin. 1974 The Dispossessed.
- William Morris. 1890. News from Nowhere.
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman. 1915. Herland. Apparently this is one of a genre of feminist utopias.
- Francis Spufford. 2010. Red Plenty.
- Analyses and detailed proposals.
- Michael Albert. 2003. Parecon: Life After Capitalism.
- Rutger Bregman. 2017. Utopia for Realists: The Case for a Universal Basic Income.
- Gerald Cohen. 2009. Why Not Socialism?
- Theodore Burczak. 2006. Socialism after Hayek.
- Paul Cockshott and Allin Cottrell. 1993. Towards a New Socialism.
- David Ellerman. 2021. Neo-Abolitionism: Abolishing Human Rentals in Favor of Workplace Democracy.
- Geoffrey Hodgson. 2019. Is Socialism Feasible? Torwards an Alternative Future.
- Bruno Jossa. 2020. Managing the Cooperative Enterprise: The Rise of Worker-Controlled Firms.
- Janos Kornai. 1992. The Socialist System: The Political Economy of Communism.
- Peter Kropotkin. 1892. The Conquest of Bread.
- Guinevere Liberty Nell. 2010. Rediscovering Fire: Basic Economic Lessons from the Soviet Experiment to Eliminate the Market.
- Alex Nove. 1983. The Economics of Feasible Socialism.
- David Schweickart. 2002. After Capitalism.
- Joseph Stiglitz. 1996. Whither Socialism.
- Philippe Van Parijs. 2019. Basic Income: A Radical Proposal for a Free Society and a Sane Economy.
There is no scarcity of informed ideas on how a better society might function.
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