Community syndicalism for the United States: preliminary observations on law and globalization in democratic production

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dc.contributor.author Casebeer, Kenneth M.
dc.date.accessioned 2020-02-11T13:11:58Z
dc.date.available 2020-02-11T13:11:58Z
dc.date.issued 2012
dc.identifier.other 1693482304 de_De
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10900/97897
dc.identifier.uri http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:21-dspace-978976 de_DE
dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.15496/publikation-39280
dc.description.abstract two structural labor crises for developed economies: 1) The channeling of substantial investment into non-productive, paper commodities, reducing growth of production for use and therefore reducing available aggregate job creation; and 2) The continued exportation of industrial jobs to other lower cost jurisdictions, and outsourcing, automation, just-in-time production, and speed-ups associated with global supply chains. As a result, local communities and regional populations have destabilized and even collapsed with attendant social problems. One possible response is Community Syndicalism – local community finance and operating credit for industrial production combined with democratic worker ownership and control of production. The result would increase investment directly for production, retain jobs in existing population centers, promote job skilling, and retain tax bases for local services and income supporting local businesses, at the same time increasing support for authentic political democracy by rendering the exploitive ideology of the Public/Private distinction superfluous. Slowing job exportation may reduce the global race to the bottom of labor standards and differential wage rates reducing the return to producers of value and increasing the skew of income distribution undermining social wages and welfare worldwide. Community Syndicalism can serve as moral goal in an alternative production model focusing incentives on long term stability of jobs and community economic base. en
dc.language.iso en de_DE
dc.publisher Universität Tübingen de_DE
dc.subject.classification Gemeinde , Demokratie , Wirtschaft , Syndikalismus , USA de_DE
dc.subject.ddc 330 de_DE
dc.subject.ddc 340 de_DE
dc.subject.other Law en
dc.subject.other economics en
dc.subject.other sociology ethics en
dc.subject.other politics en
dc.subject.other cooperatives en
dc.subject.other democratic control en
dc.subject.other syndicalism en
dc.subject.other United States en
dc.title Community syndicalism for the United States: preliminary observations on law and globalization in democratic production en
dc.type Article de_DE
utue.publikation.fachbereich Kriminologie de_DE
utue.publikation.fakultaet Das kriminologische Repository des <a href="http://www.fidkrim.de">Fachinformationsdienstes Kriminologie</a> enthält forschungs- und fachrelevante Literatur mit dem Schwerpunkt auf "graue Literatur" (Berichte von Ministerien, amtliche Statistiken etc.). Alle Dokumente werden auch in der kriminologischen Literaturdatenbank <a href="https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de">KrimDok</a> nachgewiesen. de_DE
utue.opus.portal kdoku de_DE
utue.publikation.source Oñati Socio-Legal Series, 2-1, 2012 de_DE

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