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Re: EMPOWERMENT: Recommended Reading
Thanks to our moderator for noting our suggested recomended
readings.
Dan, through Chris Cooper ,has already posted the only article in my
recommended list that was not available on the web. The article:
'Transforming Society', Perspectives, World Business Academy, San
Francisco, Winter, 1992 is now available at:
http://cog.kent.edu/lib/Turnbull-TransformingSociety.htm
Other additional articles also posted were:
'Land Leases Without Landlords', presented to the United Nations
Habitat Forum, Vancouver, Canada, June 8, 1976.
http://cog.kent.edu/lib/Turnbull-LandLeasesWithoutLandlords.htm
(I am still waiting for the formating of Appendix 4 to be
corrected) This article explains in detail the Land Bank concept in
Democratising the Wealth of Nations. Its Appendix 2 on
"Financial Synergy" explains and provides examples from
advanced economies The Mystery of Capitalism as discussed by De
Soto a couple of decades later.
‘Reforming capitalism with worker owners’ Capital Ownership Group virtual
library,
http://cog.kent.edu/lib/Turnbull-ReformingCapitalismWithWorkerOwners.htm
This articles explains why democracy is degraded by holding shares in
trusts.
Selecting a Local Currency, Australian Adam Smith Club, June 1983.
Republished as 'Selecting a Local Currency', Native Self-Sufficiency,
Seventh Generation Fund Tribal Sovereignty Program, Vol 7 #1 Spring, USA,
1984.
'Creating a Community Currency', World Citizen News, Washington, D.C.,
6:7, pp. 5-7, September,
1992.http://cog.kent.edu/lib/TurnbullSelectingACommunityCurrency.htm
Regards
Shann
At 11:28 PM 11/10/2001, Richard Stutsman wrote:
Fellow Participants in the
Economics of Empowerment group ...
and Dan Bell and Michael Kreyche:
I have been remiss in soliciting and posting recommended readings for
this group. I received recommendations from Norm and Shann at the
initiation of this group but never got around to asking that they be
copied to the COG library or included in the introductory letter or home
page.
I'm going to go ahead and post Norm's and Shann's lists of 5 recommended
readings herein. Other participants are welcome and encouraged to make
their own suggestions. Suggestions should be pertinent to the charter of
this discussion, which is to come up with ways to promote and achieve the
goals of the "Statement of Shared Vision" found at
http://www.cesj.org/about/programs/declarations/sharedvision.htm.
Mr. Kreyche, please take steps to include these readings in the COG
library if they are not already included. Or, at your discretion, you may
simply want to provide links to the original sources, some of which might
require special permission to copy to another Web site.
As for how to include these and other lists in the introductory material,
let me entertain suggestions as to whether the list should be included
inline or should be referenced as a link to a separate Web page, and
whether each item should annotated with more or less information than
appears below.
Norman Kurland sent me the following list of recommended readings on
September 6, 2001:
At 11:16 PM -0400 9/6/01, Norman Kurland wrote:
1. Chaper 5 ("Economic Rights and Economic Justice") of
"The Capitalist Manifesto" by Kelso and Adler, which can be
downloaded from the web site of the Kelso Institute for the Study of
Economic Systems at
<http://www.kelsoinstitute.org>http://www.kelsoinstitute.org.
2. Kelso's critique of "Das Capital", entitled "Karl
Marx: The Almost Capitalist", retrievable by clicking on
<http://www.cesj.org/thirdway/almostcapitalist.htm>KARL
MARX: The Almost Capitalist By Louis O. Kelso.
<http://www.cesj.org/thirdway/almostcapitalist.htm>http://www.cesj.org/thirdway/almostcapitalist.htm
3. CESJ Paper on "The Third Way",
<http://www.cesj.org/thirdway/paradigmpapers/pressclub-nkmgdb-ppr.htm>http://www.cesj.org/thirdway/paradigmpapers/pressclub-nkmgdb-ppr.htm
4.
<http://www.cesj.org/homestead/summary-cha.htm>Capital
Homestead Act Summary.
<http://www.cesj.org/homestead/summary-cha.htm>http://www.cesj.org/homestead/summary-cha.htm
5.
<http://www.cesj.org/thirdway/history3rd/personaljourney-nk.html>A
Personal Journey to the Third Way.
<http://www.cesj.org/thirdway/history3rd/personaljourney-nk.html>http://www.cesj.org/thirdway/history3rd/personaljourney-nk.html
In addition to these briefer pieces, we should recommend that all
participants (1) visit the CESJ web site at
<http://www.cesj.org>http://www.cesj.org
for papers of many binary proponents, including some by Robert Ashford
and Rodney Shakespeare, and (2) read the books "Binary Economics:
The New Paradigm" by A&S and Kelso's first book with philosopher
Mortimer J. Adler, "The Capitalist Manifesto."
Shann Turnbull submitted the following list on September 9,
2001:
At 3:22 PM +1000 9/9/01, Shann Turnbull wrote:
Earlier on Norm suggested five reference articles so here are
mine:
Democratising the Wealth of Nations, The Company Directors' Association
of Australia, Sydney, 1975. Republished electronically by COG 2000 at:
http://cog.kent.edu/lib/TurnbullBook/TurnbullBook.htm
'New Strategies for Structuring Society From a Cashflow Paradigm',
presented to the Fourth Annual Conference of the Society for the
Advancement of Socio-Economics held at the Graduate School of Management,
University of California, Irvine, California, U.S.A. in a
"track" on the Third Way, Friday, March 27, 1992.
http://cog.kent.edu/lib/turnbull1/turnbull1.html
'Stakeholder Governance: A cybernetic and property rights analysis',
Corporate Governance: An International Review, Blackwell, 5:1. pp. 11-23,
January, 1997.
http://cog.kent.edu/lib/turnbull6/turnbull6.html.
Re-published in Corporate Governance: The history of management thought,
Ed. R. I. Tricker, pp. 40113, Ashgate Publishing, 2000, London.
'Should Ownership Last Forever?', Journal of Socio-Economics, 27:3, pp.
341-363, 1998.
http://papers.ssrn.com/paper.taf?abstract_id=137382
'Transforming Society', Perspectives, World Business Academy, San
Francisco, Winter, 1992.
The last article is attached but is not available on a web page.
Perhaps Dan might like to add it the COG library?
--
Richard A. Stutsman, Director
WorldWorks Symposium: An inquiry into how the world works
URL
<http://www.worldworks.org>
Shann Turnbull Ph.D.
P.O. Box 266 Woollahra, Sydney, Australia, 1350
Ph: +612 9328 7466 office; +612 9327 8487 home; Fax: +612 9327 1497;
Life long E-mail: sturnbull@mba1963.hbs.edu
Alternate:sturnbull@optusnet.com.au
with other papers & book at
http://cog.kent.edu/library.html
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