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Democracy and prosperity: reinventing capitalism through a turbulent century

Daniele Archibugi
- 01 Jan 2020 - 
- Vol. 96, Iss: 1, pp 242-243
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This article is published in International Affairs.The article was published on 2020-01-01. It has received 41 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Prosperity & Democracy.

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Citations
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From 'having' to 'being': self-worth and the current crisis of American society.

TL;DR: One possible way forward is broadening cultural membership by promoting new narratives of hope centered on a plurality of criteria of worth, 'ordinary universalism' and destigmatizing stigmatized groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

How “Us” and “Them” Relates to Voting Behavior—Social Structure, Social Identities, and Electoral Choice:

TL;DR: The results strongly suggest that the universalism-particularism “cleavage” not only bundles issues, but shapes how people think about who they are and where they stand in a group conflict that meshes economics and culture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shrinking and shouting : the political revolt of the declining middle in times of employment polarization

TL;DR: In this paper, the share of routine jobs is constantly shrinking while non-routine jobs are a growing fraction of the total number of jobs in a post-industrial society. But, the shift to automation, digitalization, and smart software fundamentally reshapes the employment structure of postindustrial societies.

Representing the rich: Economic and political inequality in established democracies

TL;DR: This article investigated whether and why government policy in established democracies is biased towards the preferences of the rich and showed that the political system is an important pathway through which economic inequality reproduces and potentially magnifies itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crime and Punishment in the US: Political Systems and Technology Regime Change

TL;DR: The authors argue that the American exceptionalism in crime and punishment is generated institutionally by the exceptional local democratic autonomy over key relevant policy areas, and hence, the domination of the preferences of "homevoters".
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

From 'having' to 'being': self-worth and the current crisis of American society.

TL;DR: One possible way forward is broadening cultural membership by promoting new narratives of hope centered on a plurality of criteria of worth, 'ordinary universalism' and destigmatizing stigmatized groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

How “Us” and “Them” Relates to Voting Behavior—Social Structure, Social Identities, and Electoral Choice:

TL;DR: The results strongly suggest that the universalism-particularism “cleavage” not only bundles issues, but shapes how people think about who they are and where they stand in a group conflict that meshes economics and culture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shrinking and shouting : the political revolt of the declining middle in times of employment polarization

TL;DR: In this paper, the share of routine jobs is constantly shrinking while non-routine jobs are a growing fraction of the total number of jobs in a post-industrial society. But, the shift to automation, digitalization, and smart software fundamentally reshapes the employment structure of postindustrial societies.

Representing the rich: Economic and political inequality in established democracies

TL;DR: This article investigated whether and why government policy in established democracies is biased towards the preferences of the rich and showed that the political system is an important pathway through which economic inequality reproduces and potentially magnifies itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crime and Punishment in the US: Political Systems and Technology Regime Change

TL;DR: The authors argue that the American exceptionalism in crime and punishment is generated institutionally by the exceptional local democratic autonomy over key relevant policy areas, and hence, the domination of the preferences of "homevoters".