TY - BOOK AU - Panitch,Leo AU - Albo,Gregory TI - Beyond market dystopia: new ways of living T2 - Socialist register, SN - 0850367549 AV - HX73 .B488 2019 U1 - 335.00905 23 PY - 2019/// CY - London, [United States], [Canada] PB - The Merlin Press, Monthly Review Press, Fernwood Publishing KW - Socialism KW - Capitalism KW - Neoliberalism KW - Utopian socialism KW - Labor KW - Free enterprise KW - Social aspects KW - Political science KW - fast KW - Socialisme utopique KW - ram KW - Socialisme KW - Capitalisme N1 - Includes bibliographical references; Preface / Leo Panitch, Greg Albo -- Class politics, socialist policies, capitalist constraints / Stephen Maher, Sam Gindin, Leo Panitch -- Making the world a better place : restitution and restoration / Barbara Harriss-White -- Beyond the 'barbed-wire labyrinth' : migrant spaces of radical democracy / Amy Bartholomew, Hilary Wainwright -- Beyond the educational dystopia : new ways of learning through remembering / Katharyne Mitchell, Key MacFarlane -- The future of work in the era of 'digital capitalism' / Birgit Mahnkopf -- A new world of workers : confronting the gig economy / Michelle Chen -- All workers are precarious : the 'dangerous class' in China's labour regime / Yu Chunsen -- Social reproduction in twenty-first century capitalism / Ursula Huws -- Ways of making a living : revaluing the work of social and ecological reproduction / Alyssa Battistoni -- For a sustainable future : the centrality of public goods / Nancy Holmstrom -- The affordable housing crisis : its capitalist roots and the socialist alternative / Karl Beitel -- Communism in the suburbs? / Roger Keil -- The retroactive utopia of the socialist city / Owen Hatherley -- What should socialism mean in the twenty-first century? / Nancy Fraser N2 - How can we build a future with better health and homes, respecting people and the environment? The 2020 edition of the Socialist Register, Beyond Market Dystopia, contains a wealth of incisive essays that entice readers to do just that: to wake up to the cynical, implicitly market-driven concept of human society we have come to accept as everyday reality. Intellectuals and activists such as Michelle Chen, Nancy Fraser, and Roger Keil connect with and go beyond classical socialist themes, to combine an analysis of how we are living now with visions and plans for new strategic, programmatic, manifesto-oriented alternative ways of living. Crafted with purposeful hope in an age of despair, each essay in this volume aims to create a world of agency and justice ER -