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Small is Powerful - The Future as if People Really Mattered (Hardcover, New): John Papworth Small is Powerful - The Future as if People Really Mattered (Hardcover, New)
John Papworth
R2,787 Discovery Miles 27 870 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The author has found the true villain of the 20th century, and it is a concept--bigness. The answer to such disparate questions as why do we experience global wars, mass dictatorships, economic tornadoes, a population explosion and a mounting resource environment crisis lie, according to Papworth, far back in history. They are the direct result, he attempts to show, of the forces unleashed by the collapse in the 16th century of the laws against usury. Having diagnosed this problem as stemming from this destruction of the power of people to control their work, Papworth goes on to propound a new politics which is the politics of Small is Powerful--a new and hopeful approach to the problems of modern politics which merits the careful consideration of every person with any claim to political literacy.

The author asserts that the way forward is not bigger units of government or, indeed, in any other units, but rather that all units which represent power in whatever form should be reduced to a size which makes them susceptible to genuine democratic citizen control. Mass society must be dismantled, local communities must be rebuilt in their stead, but above all people must take the power back that they have lost to the Giant State. Giant States have failed their inhabitants, Papworth contends, with records on human rights, economic well-being, and on general stability inferior to the records of the smaller nations of Europe. The way forward, according to Small is Powerful, is to restore localized community life, the extended family, the nuclear family, and thereby civilization itself through deliberately empowering people through neighborhood communities.

Small is Powerful - The Future as if People Really Mattered (Paperback, New): John Papworth Small is Powerful - The Future as if People Really Mattered (Paperback, New)
John Papworth
R1,388 Discovery Miles 13 880 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The author has found the true villain of the 20th century, and it is a concept--bigness. The answer to such disparate questions as why do we experience global wars, mass dictatorships, economic tornadoes, a population explosion and a mounting resource environment crisis lie, according to Papworth, far back in history. They are the direct result, he attempts to show, of the forces unleashed by the collapse in the 16th century of the laws against usury. Having diagnosed this problem as stemming from this destruction of the power of people to control their work, Papworth goes on to propound a new politics which is the politics of Small is Powerful--a new and hopeful approach to the problems of modern politics which merits the careful consideration of every person with any claim to political literacy.

The author asserts that the way forward is not bigger units of government or, indeed, in any other units, but rather that all units which represent power in whatever form should be reduced to a size which makes them susceptible to genuine democratic citizen control. Mass society must be dismantled, local communities must be rebuilt in their stead, but above all people must take the power back that they have lost to the Giant State. Giant States have failed their inhabitants, Papworth contends, with records on human rights, economic well-being, and on general stability inferior to the records of the smaller nations of Europe. The way forward, according to Small is Powerful, is to restore localized community life, the extended family, the nuclear family, and thereby civilization itself through deliberately empowering people through neighborhood communities.

A Pair of Cranks (Paperback): Leopold Kohr, E.F. Shumacher A Pair of Cranks (Paperback)
Leopold Kohr, E.F. Shumacher; Edited by John Papworth
R354 Discovery Miles 3 540 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

These were the early articles of E.F. Schumacher and Leopold Kohr, which were published in 'Resurgence and Fourth World Review' during the editorship of John Papworth. The two men were profound friends and were united in their belief about the size of societies being too big.

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