
Exit Left
Markets and Mobility in Republican Thought
Robert S. Taylor(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 16. March 2017
Book
Hardback
144 pages
978-0-19-879873-6 (ISBN)
Description
How can citizens best protect themselves from the arbitrary power of abusive spouses, tyrannical bosses, and corrupt politicians? Exit Left makes the case that in each of these three spheres the answer is the same: exit.
By promoting open and competitive markets and providing the information and financial resources necessary to enable exit, the book argues that this can empower people's voices and offer them an escape from abuse and exploitation. This will advance a conception of freedom, viz. freedom as non-domination (FND), which is central to contemporary republican thought. Neo-republicans have typically promoted FND through constitutional means (separation of powers, judicial review, the rule of law, and federalism) and participatory ones (democratic elections and oversight), but this book focuses on economic means, ones that have been neglected by contemporary republicans but were commonly invoked in the older, commercial-republican tradition of Alexander Hamilton, Immanuel Kant, and Adam Smith. Just as Philip Pettit and other neo-republicans have revived and revised classical republicanism, so this book will do the same for commercial republicanism. This revival will enlarge republican practice by encouraging greater use of market mechanisms, even as it hews closely to existing republican theory.
By promoting open and competitive markets and providing the information and financial resources necessary to enable exit, the book argues that this can empower people's voices and offer them an escape from abuse and exploitation. This will advance a conception of freedom, viz. freedom as non-domination (FND), which is central to contemporary republican thought. Neo-republicans have typically promoted FND through constitutional means (separation of powers, judicial review, the rule of law, and federalism) and participatory ones (democratic elections and oversight), but this book focuses on economic means, ones that have been neglected by contemporary republicans but were commonly invoked in the older, commercial-republican tradition of Alexander Hamilton, Immanuel Kant, and Adam Smith. Just as Philip Pettit and other neo-republicans have revived and revised classical republicanism, so this book will do the same for commercial republicanism. This revival will enlarge republican practice by encouraging greater use of market mechanisms, even as it hews closely to existing republican theory.
Reviews / Votes
Exit Left provides an approach to enhancing personal liberty that is more nuanced that many liberal and libertarian theories...[a] concise and very readable book * John Safranek, Review of Metahysics * Taylor's book offers a careful and sophisticated argument, and in the process offers a new and refreshing take on the venerable tradition of republicanism. * 18/7/2018 *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 13 mm
Weight
388 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-879873-6 (9780198798736)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Person
Robert S. Taylor is Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Davis. He specializes in contemporary analytic political philosophy as well as the history of liberal political thought. He has written numerous articles on Kant, Mill, Rawls, autonomy, self-ownership, and commercial republicanism, and published his first book, Reconstructing Rawls: The Kantian Foundations of Justice as Fairness, in 2011.
Author
Professor of Political ScienceProfessor of Political Science, University of California, Davis
Content
Introduction
1: Exit, Voice, and Credibility
2: Family
3: Market
4: State
5: Republican Policy Pluralism
Conclusion
1: Exit, Voice, and Credibility
2: Family
3: Market
4: State
5: Republican Policy Pluralism
Conclusion

