Magic Kingdom : Property, Monarchy, and the Maximum Republic, Paperback by Hi...

$ 10.88

Number of Pages: 153 Pages Item Length: 9 in Publication Year: 2014 Genre: Political Science Format: Trade Paperback Item Height: 0.5 in Item Width: 6 in Illustrator: Yes Author: Dan Hind Language: English Book Title: Magic Kingdom : Property, Monarchy, and the Maximum Republic gtin13: 9781782794035 Topic: Political Economy, History & Theory, Constitutions, World / European, Civics & Citizenship Item Weight: 16 Oz ISBN: 9781782794035 Publisher: Hunt Publishing The Limited, John

Description

Magic Kingdom : Property, Monarchy, and the Maximum Republic, Paperback by Hind, Dan, ISBN 1782794034, ISBN-13 9781782794035, Like New Used, Free shipping in the US Anyone who knows anything about Britain knows that it is a democracy and a constitutional monarchy. The trouble is, it is neither. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is one of the most exotic nations on earth. In the republican form of government a defined public exercise sovereign power. Most modern states describe themselves as democratic republics. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is an anomaly, in that formal sovereignty is still denied to its people. In The Magic Kingdom Dan Hind explores what the republican tradition has to offer the British at a time of deep political, social and economic dislocation. He considers what innovations are necessary if liberty is to be secured in current conditions. His argument will surprise many who consider themselves republicans. It will upset those who benefit from the current arrangements. It offers a way forward for those who can no longer tolerate steepening inequality and its associated ills. Existing republican institutions have not been able to deliver public control of the state. If substantive democracy is to be possible in large and complex societies, the systems of communication, subsidy and credit must be made subject to popular oversight and control. In a disarmingly calm manner, Hind shows how this can be done, by minor adjustments to the existing institutions. Perhaps, unlikely as it sounds, Britain will provide the venue for the world's first truly republican society.