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Not TINA (There Is No Alternative) but TAPAS: THERE ARE PLENTY OF ALTERNATIVES
Curated by jean lievens
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The European Pillar of Social Rights – no ‘social triple A’ for Europe

The European Pillar of Social Rights – no ‘social triple A’ for Europe | real utopias | Scoop.it
Daniel Seikel Shortly after his appointment, the new President of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, promised to strengthen the social dimension
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A Targeted Approach: India's Expanding Social Safety Net - World Politics Review

A Targeted Approach: India's Expanding Social Safety Net - World Politics Review | real utopias | Scoop.it
India’s sheer size and poverty have meant that addressing the needs of its hundreds of millions of poor and vulnerable citizens has preoccupied Indian policymakers since independence. Unsurprisingly, the mix of strategies, the resulting policy instruments to undergird them and their relative effectiveness have been a matter of contentious debate. 
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A New Contract: Brazil's Dual Social Protection System - World Politics Review

A New Contract: Brazil's Dual Social Protection System - World Politics Review | real utopias | Scoop.it
Among developing countries, Brazil is increasingly seen as a model for social development. Its achievements over the past two decades are impressive. The share of the population living in extreme poverty fell from 16.4 percent in 1995 to 4.7 percent in 2009. Inequality as measured by the Gini coefficient fell more than 10 percent in the same period, to 0.53, where 0 represents perfect equality of income distribution and 1.0 perfect inequality. Growth has been an important driver for these trends, particularly because over the past decade Brazil’s growth has been distinctly pro-poor: Personal income among the poorest 10 percent of the population has grown more than twice as fast as that of the wealthiest 10 percent. It is not surprising that low- and middle-income countries look to Brazil for inspiration.
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Columbia University Press » Blog Archive » Excerpt: Preface from The Ethical Economy

Columbia University Press » Blog Archive » Excerpt: Preface from The Ethical Economy | real utopias | Scoop.it

This week our featured book isThe Ethical Economy: Rebuilding Value After the Crisis, by Adam Arvidsson and Nicolai Peitersen. Today, we have an excerpt from the preface to The Ethical Economy, in which the authors discuss the central question of their book: “can the ethical turn that we are presently witnessing among corporations, consumers, investors, employees, activists, and other stakeholders – their desire to address a number of concerns beyond the profit motive – become a basis for a new “social contract” in which the interests of business and the interests of society can coincide? In other words, can there be such a thing as an ethical economy?”

 
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Curated by jean lievens
Economist, specialized in political economy and peer-to-peer dynamics; core member of the P2P Foundation