Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Off the Fence: Morality, Politics and Society-serien

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  • - Moral Cosmopolitanism and Global Poverty
    av Ms. Alejandra Mancilla
    503 - 1 256,-

    What does the basic right to subsistence allow its holders to do for themselves when it goes unfulfilled? This book guides the reader through the morality of infringing property rights for subsistence, in a global context.

  • av Jeff Noonan
    503 - 1 256,-

    Providing a new philosophical foundation for thinking about old problems such as class inequality, this concise and accessible book explores the concept of and problems associated with democracy. Ideal for students in politics and philosophy, the book informs new structural and institutional responses to these problems.

  • - Identity and Identities
    av Maren Behrensen
    440 - 1 268,-

    What makes a person the same person over time? This book provides an 'externalist' metaphysical account of personal identity and its ethical implications.

  • - Criticism Between Collaboration and Commitment
    av Thomas Docherty
    511 - 1 491,-

    Thomas Docherty advances the invention and development of a new critical theory. This book offers a broad historical sweep, ranging from an exploration of wartime collaboration through tocontemporary surveillance society.

  • - Why the World Needs Free Movement of People
    av Alex Sager
    401,99 - 1 080,-

    This book carefully engages philosophical arguments for and against open borders, bringing together major approaches to open borders across disciplines and establishing the feasibility of open borders against the charge of utopianism.

  • av Tim Christiaens
    443 - 1 142,-

    Recent innovations in digital technologies are fundamentally transforming the world of work. A digital gig economy is emerging that threatens to displace traditional labour relations based on legally regulated labour contracts. Companies like Uber, Deliveroo, or Amazon Mechanical Turk rely increasingly on ';independent contractors' who earn piece-rate wages by completing tasks sent to them via their smartphones. This development understandably pushes workers to desire more autonomy, but what would workers' autonomy mean in the digital age? This book argues that the digital gig economy undermines workers' autonomy by putting digital technology in charge of workers' surveillance, leading to exploitation, alienation, and exhaustion. To secure a more sustainable future of work, digital technologies should instead be transformed into tools that support human development instead of subordinating it to algorithmic control. The best guarantee for human autonomy is a politics that transforms digital platforms into convivial tools that obey the rhythm of human life.

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