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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Anders SandströmPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.260kg ISBN: 9780367477035ISBN 10: 0367477033 Pages: 128 Publication Date: 30 November 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsMany people might assume that accounting is a capitalist tool, but it can be made radically democratic. We need to build businesses and societies that are fairer and greener, and this beautiful book explains how we might use anarchist practices to get there. - Professor Martin Parker, Lead for the Bristol Inclusive Economy initiative, Department of Management, Bristol University, UK. Anarchist Accounting? Is this some kind of joke? In his provocative book Anders Sandstroemexplains that it is no joke, but something anarchists need to take seriously if they want to advance their cause. Anarchism preaches that when freed from perverse institutional incentives which make acting in the social interest contrary to one's personal self-interest, most people will choose to act in solidarity with others. What Sandstroemadds to this traditional anarchist wisdom is the observation that in order to do so people need the information necessary to determine what behavior on their part would actually advance the social interest. Sandstroem, a life-long professional accountant turned anarchist, applies accounting principles to a post-capitalist economic model known as a participatory economy to demonstrate how to give people the information they need to act in solidarity with one another. Anarchist Accounting is a must read for anyone interested in making libertarian socialism more than a faith based initiative. - Robin Hahnel, Professor Emeritus, The American University, Washington DC, Visiting Professor, Department of Economics, Portland State University, Portland Oregon, Co-Director, Economics for Equity and the Environment and author of Economic Justice and Democracy: From Competition to Cooperation. Many people might assume that accounting is a capitalist tool, but it can be made radically democratic. We need to build businesses and societies that are fairer and greener, and this beautiful book explains how we might use anarchist practices to get there. - Professor Martin Parker, Lead for the Bristol Inclusive Economy initiative, Department of Management, Bristol University, UK. Anarchist Accounting? Is this some kind of joke? In his provocative book Anders Sandstroemexplains that it is no joke, but something anarchists need to take seriously if they want to advance their cause. Anarchism preaches that when freed from perverse institutional incentives which make acting in the social interest contrary to one's personal self-interest, most people will choose to act in solidarity with others. What Sandstroemadds to this traditional anarchist wisdom is the observation that in order to do so people need the information necessary to determine what behavior on their part would actually advance the social interest. Sandstroem, a life-long professional accountant turned anarchist, applies accounting principles to a post-capitalist economic model known as a participatory economy to demonstrate how to give people the information they need to act in solidarity with one another. Anarchist Accounting is a must read for anyone interested in making libertarian socialism more than a faith based initiative. - Robin Hahnel, Professor Emeritus, The American University, Washington DC, Visiting Professor, Department of Economics, Portland State University, Portland Oregon, Co-Director, Economics for Equity and the Environment and author of Economic Justice and Democracy: From Competition to Cooperation. Author InformationAnders Sandström is a trained accountant with a degree from Uppsala University. He lives in Stockholm, Sweden, where he works as the treasurer at Sveriges Arbetares Arbetslöshetskassa (SAAK), an unemployment office historically connected to the Swedish syndicalist trade union, Sveriges Arbetares Centralorganisation (SAC). Before his sabbatical and political turnaround in 2000, Anders worked as an audit junior at the international audit firm KPMG and later as Head of Accounting and Group Financial Controller in different companies. In 2010 Anders co-founded Parecon Sverige, an advocacy group for participatory economy, which is an economic system developed as a viable alternative to capitalism. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |