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This Palgrave Pivot contextualizes Henry George as an important and uniquely American figure in the fields of economics and political economy, with special emphasis on the frontier and innovation. This book discusses George’s concept of rent as the result of economic progress, explains George’s argument that the rise in rents caused by economic progress in turn generates inequality and poverty, and examines the relevance of these ideas in today’s financialized global economy. This book adds to the very necessary discussion of whether our current financial industry is a benefit or a drain on human economic well-being.
George, Henry, --- Schools of economics. --- Economic policy. --- Economic history. --- Heterodox Economics. --- Economic Policy. --- History of Economic Thought/Methodology. --- Economic conditions --- History, Economic --- Economics --- Economic nationalism --- Economic planning --- National planning --- State planning --- Planning --- National security --- Social policy --- Economics schools of thought --- Schools of economic thought --- Chʻiao-chih, Heng-li, --- Dzhordzh, Genri, --- Джордж, Генри, --- George, Henryk, --- גורג, הנרי --- דזשארדזש, הענרי --- זשארזש, ה., --- جورج، هنرى،
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George, Henry --- Economists --- 08 --- 92 --- US / United States of America - USA - Verenigde Staten - Etats Unis --- Geschiedenis. --- Histoire. --- History. --- 92 Geschiedenis. --- 92 Histoire. --- 92 History. --- Biography --- Biografieën en memoires --- Geschiedenis --- George, Henry, --- Chʻiao-chih, Heng-li, --- Dzhordzh, Genri, --- Джордж, Генри, --- George, Henryk, --- גורג, הנרי --- דזשארדזש, הענרי --- זשארזש, ה., --- جورج، هنرى،
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The American political economist Henry George devoted his life to the single tax. Virtually forgotten today, his best seller Progress and Poverty influenced numerous people in the English-speaking world. His fame and fall were due to a temporary alliance with the American Irish Catholics who were agitating for the land war in Ireland and social change in their new homeland. So significant was this tidal wave of support that it swamped the American consciousness in the late 1870s and early 1880s including prelates of the Roman Catholic Church, some of whom were conservatively inclined. George astutely navigated the waters by working with the radical editor of The Irish World, Patrick Ford. But then George made a politically awkward friendship with Father Edward McGlynn, an ardent supporter of modernism and the single tax, who was a constant irritant to the church hierarchy and subsequently excommunicated. The issues that McGlynn raised rocked the American Catholic Church and the Vatican itself. The counter-campaign waged by the church and devout Irish Catholics blocked McGlynn and put an end to George's fleeting success.
Economists -- United States. --- George, Henry, -- 1839-1897. --- Irish Americans -- Public opinion -- History -- 19th century. --- Land value taxation. --- Single tax. --- Economists --- Irish Americans --- Public opinion --- History --- George, Henry, --- Bodenreform --- Land tax --- Land use --- Taxation of land values --- Taxation --- Chʻiao-chih, Heng-li, --- Dzhordzh, Genri, --- George, Henryk, --- גורג, הנרי --- דזשארדזש, הענרי --- זשארזש, ה., --- جورج، هنرى، --- Джордж, Генри, --- Real property tax --- Land value taxation --- Single tax --- Ethnology --- Irish --- Business & Economics --- Economic history. --- Economic History. --- Economic conditions. --- Irishmen (Irish people)
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Irish land in the 1880s was a site of ideological conflict, with resonances for liberal politics far beyond Ireland itself. The Irish Land War, internationalised partly through the influence of Henry George, the American social reformer and political economist, came at a decisive juncture in Anglo-American political thought, and provided many radicals across the North Atlantic with a vision of a more just and morally coherent political economy. Looking at the discourses and practices of these agrarian radicals, alongside developments in liberal political thought, Andrew Phemister shows how they utilised the land question to articulate a natural and universal right to life that highlighted the contradictions between liberty and property. In response to this popular agrarian movement, liberal thinkers discarded many older individualistic assumptions, and their radical democratic implications, in the name of protecting social order, property, and economic progress. Land and Liberalism thus vividly demonstrates the centrality of Henry George and the Irish Land War to the transformation of liberal thought.
Land tenure --- Land use --- Land reform --- History --- George, Henry, --- Agrarian reform --- Economic policy --- Land use, Rural --- Social policy --- Agriculture and state --- Land --- Land utilization --- Use of land --- Utilization of land --- Economics --- Land cover --- Landscape assessment --- NIMBY syndrome --- Agrarian tenure --- Feudal tenure --- Freehold --- Land ownership --- Land question --- Landownership --- Tenure of land --- Real property --- Land, Nationalization of --- Landowners --- Serfdom --- George, Henry --- Chʻiao-chih, Heng-li, --- Dzhordzh, Genri, --- Джордж, Генри, --- George, Henryk, --- גורג, הנרי --- דזשארדזש, הענרי --- זשארזש, ה., --- جورج، هنرى،
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