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A Socialism for the Twenty-First Century

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More than twenty years after the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the disappearance of Marxism as a (supposed) state ideology, this peer-reviewed book series attempts to meet the need for a serious ...
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  • 14 July 2026
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Domination, ecological crises and many other pathologies are intrinsic features of capitalism, not bugs that can be corrected. But is a better way of organizing society possible?


Marx called for a society where the ruling principle is “the full and free development of every individual”. Capitalism neither is nor can be such a society. But if we can imagine one, can we be confident it could be put into practice? The answer to both questions is an emphatic ‘Yes!’ This book makes the case for a workable model of republican socialism, a vision of socialism worth fighting for.

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Price: $40.00
Pages: 496
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Imprint: Haymarket Books
Series: Historical Materialism
Publication Date: 14 July 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9798888908051
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Economy, Political economy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Communism, Post-Communism & Socialism, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economics / Theory, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Radicalism
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Preface
List of Figures


Introduction
1 Nine Claims
2 Summary of the Book


Capitalism (and Capital)
1 The ‘Standard View’
2 Capital: A Macro-monetary Totality
3 The Case against Capitalism: Essential Determinations and Systematic Tendencies
4 Conclusion


The Present Moment of World History
1 Technological Change and Valorisation in Contemporary Capitalism
2 From a ‘Golden Age’ to a Global Slump
3 Neoliberalism
4 Conclusion


A Socialist Constitution
1 Marx’s Ruling Principle
2 ‘Free Development’ (1): Self-Governance without Domination
3 ‘Free Development’ (2): The Freedom of Particular Social Individuals
4 ‘Full Development’: Universal and Particular Needs
5 Two Solidarity Constraints
6 Further Principles
7 Conclusion


The Local Level (1): The Democratic Determination of Social Needs and Production Proposals
1 The Social Determination of Social Needs
2 Two Notes
3 The Investment Requests of Production Collectives
4 The Estimation of Costs
5 Retained Earnings and Market Socialism
6 Conclusion


The Local Level (2): Social Investment, Social Production, and Social Exchange
1 The Allocation of Social Investment
2 The Process of Production
3 The Acquisition of Consumption Goods
4 Conclusion


The Role of ‘Money’ in Socialist Accounting
1 Some Questions
2 A Note on Money in Capitalism
3 Some Relevant Determinations of the Socialist Alternative
4 Conclusion


Regional Networks of Production and Exchange
1 Some general remarks on regional production
2 Regional production for social needs and the solidarity constraints
3 Regional production networks and the coordination of social investments
4 The regional innovation system
5 Conclusion


Socialism on the National and International Levels
1 The transition to the national and international levels
2 Production for social needs on the national and international levels
3 The Social Transaction Centre
4 A note on the implications of the first solidarity constraint on the international level
5 National and international Democratic Assemblies
6 National and international Agencies
7 The national and international innovation systems
8 The fraught relationship with the remnants of capitalism
9 Conclusion


10 Incentives and Efficiency in the Socialist Model
1 Incentive objections
2 Efficiency objections
3 Conclusion


11 Socialism and the ‘Realm of freedom’
1 The realm of freedom in capitalism and socialism: some contrasts
2 Commons-based peer production in contemporary capitalism
3 The realm of necessity and the realm of freedom: a dialectical unity-in-difference
4 An emancipatory promise fulfilled: commons-based peer production and the socialist project
5 Conclusion


12 Conclusion
1 Why socialism is needed
2 The republican socialist model: a summary
3 How do we get there from here?


Appendix
Bibliography
Index