The book argues for a genuine decolonization of the social sciences and humanities, emphasizing the need to break free from the elite culture perpetuated by Western civilization. Bernd Reiter explores the implications of this liberation, contributing to the broader discourse on decolonization and challenging established norms within these academic fields.
Offers insights into the Global Justice Movement - an influential
transnational movement and predecessor of the recent struggles for economic
and social justice and against austerity.
This book proposes a radical new way of thinking about our democratic future, our ecological survival, and our ways to keep economies fair. It shows that adopting upper limits to wealth and income; replacing elections with local direct democracy and legal duty involving randomly selected citizens; and replacing welfare and redistribution policies with pre-distribution and reparations promises new solutions to political apathy, discontent, manipulation, economic inequality, unfairness, unequal opportunities, and looming ecological disaster.Most public debates today focus on the poor, on minorities, and on immigrants when discussing the problems of our democracies. The poor, minorities and immigrants, however, are not our problem. They had no say in designing the kinds of systems that threaten our planet, our wellbeing, and our social and communal lives. They consume very little and thus have a minimal ecological footprint. It is the super-rich who threaten justice, fairness, equal opportunity, and ecological sustainability.