With contributions from innovative social and policy analysts including Colin Crouch, Anna Coote, Grahame Thompson and Ted Benton, this collection provides a revised framework for social democracy.
Introduction: The Neo-Liberal society and its opponents ~ Bryn Jones and Mike O'Donnell;
PART I: Alternative Paradigms and Perspectives;
Editors' Overview;
Modes of anti-neoliberalism: Moralism, Marxism and twenty-First Century Socialism ~ Jeremy Gilbert;
People, planet, power: Toward a new social settlement ~ Anna Coote;
Beyond neo-Liberalism, or life after capitalism? A red-green debate ~ Ted Benton;
The Democratic deficit: Institutional democracy ~ Mike O'Donnell;
PART II: Reform within Economic and Governance Restraints: Pushing the Boundaries;
Editors' Overview;
The Limits of neo-Liberalism? Austerity vs social policy in comparative perspective ~ Kevin Farnsworth and Zoë Irving;
The European Union and the UK: Neo-Liberalism, nationalist populism, or a cry for democracy? ~ Bryn Jones and Mike O'Donnell;
Reform from within: Central banks and the reconfiguration of neo-liberal monetary policy? ~ Grahame Thompson;
The Corporate cuckoo in the neo-liberal nest: Governance reforms for social accountability ~ Bryn Jones;
Reform of the foundational economy: An alternative to 'back to the future' policies ~ Sukhdev Johal, Michael Moran and Karel Williams;
PART III: Economic and Political Democracy: Restoring the Market-Civil Society Balance;
Editors' Overview;
Neo-Liberalism and social democracy ~ Colin Crouch;
Rethinking public ownership as economic democracy ~ Andrew Cumbers;
Democratic alternatives: Ideas and models from social movements ~ Bryn Jones and Mike O'Donnell;
Conclusion: A Brexit from neo-liberalism? Towards democratic equality ~ Bryn Jones and Mike O'Donnell.
Bryn Jones, author of Corporate Power and Responsible Capitalism, has taught, researched and published on economic and political change in European, Asian and North American societies; Mike O'Donnell has taught widely in Britain and the United States, including at Bath Spa University before moving to Westminster University, retiring as Professor of Sociology in 2014. He has published in the areas of social theory, social movements and identity and difference