附註:Includes bibliographical references (pages 331-351) and index.
Global economic warfare versus sustainable human development: flash points, trends, and transitions -- Juggernaut globalism and the bankruptcy of economics -- The technology trap -- The jobless productivity trap -- Government by mediocracy and the attention economy -- Grassroots globalism -- Rethinking human development and the time of our lives -- Cultural DNA codes and biodiversity: the real wealth of nations -- Information: the world's real currency isn't scarce -- Redefining wealth and progress: the new indicators -- Perfecting democracy's tools -- New markets and new commons: the cooperative advantage -- Agreeing on rules and social innovations for our common future.
摘要:In Building a Win-Win World, world-renowned futurist Hazel Henderson extends her twenty-five years of work in economics to examine the havoc the current economic system is creating at the global level. Markets are now spreading worldwide-a spread which is often equated with the hope of democracy spreading along with it. But markets still run on old textbook models that ignore social and environmental costs-leading to a new kind of warfare: global economic warfare. Building a Win-Win World demonstrates how the global economy is unsustainable because of its negative effects on employees, families, communities, and the ecosystem. Henderson shows that win-win strategies can become the norm at every level when people see the true current and future costs of short-sighted, narrow economic policies. Henderson shows how humans are encountering the endgames of the competition/conflict paradigm, and identifies the signs of transition. Using warfare as a metaphor for the dark side of today's world economic system, she shows how both are destructive, inhumane, wasteful, irrational, inefficient, competitive, and crisis-driven. Both create more new problems than they solve. She describes how the globalization of the war system, technology, and industrialization brought the Cold War to a dead end. By the mid-1980s the global warfare paradigm had given ground to a global economic warfare which many economists, politicians, and business leaders hailed as a victory of capitalism and competitive free markets. Yet this new type of warfare proved little better than the military warfare it was advertised to replace. By the mid-1990s global economic warfare had already reached crisis points of its own. Building a Win-Win World examines how jobs, education, health care, human rights, democratic participation, socially responsible business, and environmental protection are all sacrificed to global competitiveness. Henderson shows many ways out of the dilemmas faced by all countries. New