9781595588098-1595588094-Any Way You Slice It: The Past, Present, and Future of Rationing

Any Way You Slice It: The Past, Present, and Future of Rationing

ISBN-13: 9781595588098
ISBN-10: 1595588094
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Stan Cox
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: The New Press
Format: Hardcover 320 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781595588098
ISBN-10: 1595588094
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Stan Cox
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: The New Press
Format: Hardcover 320 pages

Summary

Any Way You Slice It: The Past, Present, and Future of Rationing (ISBN-13: 9781595588098 and ISBN-10: 1595588094), written by authors Stan Cox, was published by The New Press in 2013. With an overall rating of 4.5 stars, it's a notable title among other Macroeconomics (Economics, Environmental Economics, Environment, Nature & Ecology, Sociology) books. You can easily purchase or rent Any Way You Slice It: The Past, Present, and Future of Rationing (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Macroeconomics books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Rationing: it’s a wordand ideathat people often loathe and fear. Health care expert Henry Aaron has compared mentioning the possibility of rationing to shouting an obscenity in church.” Yet societies in fact ration food, water, medical care, and fuel all the time, with those who can pay the most getting the most. As Nobel Prizewinning economist Amartya Sen has said, the results can be thoroughly unequal and nasty.”

In Any Way You Slice It, Stan Cox shows that rationing is not just a quaint practice restricted to World War II memoirs and 1970s gas station lines. Instead, he persuasively argues that rationing is a vital concept for our fragile present, an era of dwindling resources and environmental crises. Any Way You Slice It takes us on a fascinating search for alternative ways of apportioning life’s necessities, from the goal of fair shares for all” during wartime in the 1940s to present-day water rationing in a Mumbai slum, from the bread shops of Cairo to the struggle for fairness in American medicine and carbon rationing on Norfolk Island in the Pacific. Cox’s question: can we limit consumption while assuring everyone a fair share?

The author of Losing Our Cool, the much debated and widely acclaimed examination of air-conditioning’s many impacts, here turns his attention to the politically explosive topic of how we share our planet’s resources.

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