Worktime reductions are often invoked by the anti-capitalist and post-growth literature. And yet, there’s nothing anti-capitalist about a shorter workweek. Over the past 200 years, since the Industrial Revolution sparked an unprecedented acceleration in economic growth, working hours have been on a steep decline. Alessio Terzi writes that today’s conversations about a three-day weekend are not a shift in paradigm but rather a continuation of the paradigm we have seen for over two centuries
In Woke Capitalism: How Corporate Morality is Sabotaging Democracy, Carl Rhodes explores how the cor...
n Shaping Cities in an Urban Age, editors Ricky Burdett and Philipp Rode offer a richly illustrated ...
MSc Environmental Policy and Regulation candidate Flora Parkin reviews Mathew Lawrence and Laurie La...
In Reimagining Sustainable Cities: Strategies for Designing Greener, Healthier, More Equitable Commu...
Worktime reductions are often invoked by the anti-capitalist and post-growth literature. And yet, th...
In a forthcoming book, Branko Milanović identifies four ‘troublesome features’ in ‘meritocratic libe...
This article describes the status of development economics within the broader field of the economics...
In The SAGE Handbook of the 21st Century City, Suzanne Hall and Ricky Burdett bring together contrib...
In Accounting for Capitalism: The World the Clerk Made, Michael Zakim examines how an emergent class...
Despite the massive state interventions into financial markets following the crash of 2007, the acad...
In The Long Crisis: New York City and the Path to Neoliberalism, Benjamin Holtzman makes an in-depth...
LSE MSc Environmental Policy and Regulation candidate, Flora Parkin, reviews Mariana Mazzucato’s new...
This chapter starts from the claim that green growth, or raising eco-efficiency, will not suffice to...
In Nihilism and Technology, Nolen Gertz aims to circumvent the binary discussions that characterise ...
This article explores different ways to interpret the extent to which (capitalist) critique influenc...
In Woke Capitalism: How Corporate Morality is Sabotaging Democracy, Carl Rhodes explores how the cor...
n Shaping Cities in an Urban Age, editors Ricky Burdett and Philipp Rode offer a richly illustrated ...
MSc Environmental Policy and Regulation candidate Flora Parkin reviews Mathew Lawrence and Laurie La...
In Reimagining Sustainable Cities: Strategies for Designing Greener, Healthier, More Equitable Commu...
Worktime reductions are often invoked by the anti-capitalist and post-growth literature. And yet, th...
In a forthcoming book, Branko Milanović identifies four ‘troublesome features’ in ‘meritocratic libe...
This article describes the status of development economics within the broader field of the economics...
In The SAGE Handbook of the 21st Century City, Suzanne Hall and Ricky Burdett bring together contrib...
In Accounting for Capitalism: The World the Clerk Made, Michael Zakim examines how an emergent class...
Despite the massive state interventions into financial markets following the crash of 2007, the acad...
In The Long Crisis: New York City and the Path to Neoliberalism, Benjamin Holtzman makes an in-depth...
LSE MSc Environmental Policy and Regulation candidate, Flora Parkin, reviews Mariana Mazzucato’s new...
This chapter starts from the claim that green growth, or raising eco-efficiency, will not suffice to...
In Nihilism and Technology, Nolen Gertz aims to circumvent the binary discussions that characterise ...
This article explores different ways to interpret the extent to which (capitalist) critique influenc...
In Woke Capitalism: How Corporate Morality is Sabotaging Democracy, Carl Rhodes explores how the cor...
n Shaping Cities in an Urban Age, editors Ricky Burdett and Philipp Rode offer a richly illustrated ...
MSc Environmental Policy and Regulation candidate Flora Parkin reviews Mathew Lawrence and Laurie La...