CHF59.90
Download est disponible immédiatement
Contributors discuss the Alaska Permanent Fund (APF) and Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) as a model both for resource policy and for social policy. This book explores whether other states, nations, or regions would benefit from an Alaskan-style dividend. The book also looks at possible ways that the model might be altered and improved.
Auteur
Karl Widerquist is Associate Professor at the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in Qatar. He holds two doctoratesone in Political Theory from Oxford University (2006) and one in Economics from the City University of New York (1996). He is coauthor of Economics for Social Workers, coeditor of The Ethics and Economics of the Basic Income Guarantee, coeditor of Alaska's Permanent Fund Dividend: Assessing its Suitability as a Model (Palgrave Macmillan), and coeditor of Exporting the Alaska Model: Adapting the Permanent Fund Dividend for Reform around the World (Palgrave Macmillan). He is a founding editor of the journal Basic Income Studies and has published scholarly articles on economics, politics, and philosophy in journals such as Political Studies, Utilitas, Eastern Economic Journal, Politics and Society, and Politics, Philosophy, and Economics.
Contenu
Introduction Chapter 1: Introduction: Success in Alaska Karl Widerquist and Michael W. Howard Part One: The History, Economics, and Politics of the Alaska Model Chapter 2: The Improbable but True Story of How the Alaska Permanent Fund and the Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend Came to Be Cliff Groh and Gregg Erickson Chapter 3: How the APF and the PFD Operate: the Peculiar Mechanics of Alaska's State Finances Cliff Groh and Gregg Erickson Chapter 4: The Economic and Social Impacts of the Permanent Fund Dividend on Alaska Scott Goldsmith Chapter 5: Politics, Preservation of Natural Resource Wealth, and the Funding of a Basic Income Guarantee James B. Bryan and Sarah Lamarche Castillo Chapter 6: Risk and the Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend Michael A. Lewis Chapter 7: Permanent Perhaps: Challenges to the Model in Alaska in its First 30 Years Gregg Erickson and Cliff Groh Chapter 8: Critical Reflections on the Future of Alaska's Permanent Fund and Dividend Karl Widerquist and Michael W. HowardPart Two: the ethics of the Alaska model Chapter 9: Left-libertarianism and the Resource Dividend Ian Carter Chapter 10: Basic Income and the Alaska Model: Limits of the Resource Dividend Model for the Implementation of an Unconditional Basic Income Almaz Zelleke Chapter 11: Stakeholding Through the Permanent Fund Dividend: Fitting Practice to Theory Christopher L. Griffin, Jr. Chapter 12: The Alaska Model: A Republican Perspective David Casassas and Jurgen De Wispelaere Chapter 13: Climate Change, Complicity & Compensation Stephen Winter Chapter 14: Why Link Basic Income to Resource Taxation? Karl Widerquist and Michael W. Howard Conclusion Chapter 15: Conclusion: Lessons from the Alaska Model Karl Widerquist and Michael W. Howard Bibliography