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Tom Malleson

    Esta autora profundiza en las intersecciones de la teoría política contemporánea, la teoría feminista, la economía política, la filosofía y la sociología. Un tema central es la exploración de las 'utopías reales', instituciones concebidas para ser tanto normativamente emancipadoras como empíricamente fundadas. Otros intereses de investigación se centran en los debates contemporáneos sobre la justicia distributiva, examinando conceptos como el igualitarismo y la autonomía. Como dedicada activista por la justicia social durante más de una década, su compromiso práctico abarca iniciativas de justicia para migrantes, contra la pobreza y por la justicia global.

    Against Inequality
    Part-Time for All
    • Part-Time for All

      • 392 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      In Part-Time for All, Jennifer Nedelsky and Tom Malleson propose a plan to radically restructure both work and care and offer a solution to a fundamentally dysfunctional imbalance of work and care obligations. They argue that no competent adult should do paid work for more than 30 hours per week, and everyone should also contribute roughly 22 hours of unpaid care to family, friends, or their chosen community of care. While such a transformation would require radical changes to our cultural norms as well as to our workplace practices, this book carefully dissects the current crisis of care and offers a realistic plan forward.

      Part-Time for All
    • "Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla and the richest person in the world, currently possesses $270 billion dollars. An average American worker would have to work for seven-and-a-half million years to earn this much. To put the matter the other way round, the total amount of money that a typical American will earn in their whole life - after, say, forty years of work - is the same as would be earned by Musk in just fourteen minutes. During the first six months of the COVID-19 pandemic, 250,000 Americans died and 20 million lost their jobs in the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, yet the country's 614 billionaires saw their wealth actually increase by a third, from $2.95 trillion to almost $4 trillion (Manjoo, 2020). Across the world, the richest eight individuals possess the same amount of wealth as half the entire planet - three and a half billion people (Oxfam, 2017). Never across the entire expanse of human history has such a level of inequality been seen before"-- Provided by publisher

      Against Inequality