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Compromise, Conflict, Complicity
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Based on qualitative interviews with sustainability-oriented parents of young children, this book describes what happens when people make interventions into mundane and easy-to-overlook aspects of everyday life to bring the way they get things done into alignment with their environmental values. Because the ability to make changes is constrained by their culture and capitalist society, there are negative consequences and trade-offs involved in these household-level sustainability practices.

The households described in this book shed light on the full extent of the trade-offs involved in promoting sustainability at the household level as a solution to environmental problems.

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government expanded to include providing a minimum standard of living and mitigating the risk of poverty for citizens, with a particular focus on poverty in old age and childhood, due to the death of a working spouse or disability, and due to unemployment or underemployment. To attract workers, the role of employers expanded in the United States to include the provision of pensions and health insurance benefits. Over the course of the last forty years, these policies and benefits provided by the state and employers that reduced the risk to individuals of fluctuations in

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of 1918 (codifies the rights of federal employees to join labor unions and bargain collectively) 3. Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (deals with the minimum wage and mandatory overtime for employees who work more than 40 hours a week) 4. Americans ivith Disabilities Act of 1990 (prohibits workplace discrimination against disabled people) 5. Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1910 (sets safety regulations for workplaces) 6. Age Discrimination and Employment Act of 1961 (prohibits workplace discrimination against people ages 40 and over) 7. Worker

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familiari) or tax based (detrazioni) paid to workers for their spouse and children; - unemployment transfers, divided in 'special lay-off pay fund' (Cassa In- tegrazione Guadagni) called CIG, and mobility allowance, which may be requested by firms with more than 10 employees on behalf of their workers instead of laying workers off, and the ordinary individual un- employment benefit which is very low; - pensions, with the exception of the 'basic non contributory pensions', are strictly work-based. They are paid either to people who cannot work (disability pensions

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% or more persons with a disability. 2 Adam J. Hoffer and Russell S. Sobel 186 State Preference policy Empirical category Arizona Small Business preference: $1,000 – $25,000 0 Arkansas A 15% preference against out-of-state prison industry bids. 0 California 5% for small business (goods, services, construction and IT) and non-small business subcontractors. The maximum preference is $50,000 and when combined with other preferences, the preference total cannot exceed $100,000. Target Area Contract Preference Act (TACPA) (applies to goods and IT only): 5% of the

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. The subcommittee on social security has jurisdiction over retirement, survivors, and disability programs as well as employment taxes. Finally, there is also the subcommittee on trade, which has jurisdiction over tariff and import fee structure, including classification, valuation of, and special rules applying to imports and exports. In addition to these specific subcommittees, there are also two subcommittees that are more general. The subcommittee on select revenue matters has jurisdiction over things that the Chairman of the committee decides to give them

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- tract from behind a veil of ignorance, where people have no knowledge of their own characteristics, such as race, gender, wealth, intelligence, and other abilities (or disabilities). Buchanan envisions a hypothetical renegotiation of the social contract from a position of anarchy, with the idea that current in- 25 For a dissenting view, see Yeager [1985]. While the social contract theory suggests implicit rather than actual agreement with a social contract, Berman [1983] notes that when medieval towns were formed from around 1050-1150, it was common for all

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talents and disabilities (the so-called 'envy test', combined with a collective obliga- tion to compensate for natural inequalities, in Dworkin). Nevertheless, such conceptual refinements remain firmly entrenched inside the logical frame- work of a social justice conceived in terms of distributive equality. Egalitar- ian conceptions of social justice are in principle perfectly defensible both in logic and in practice. But this is not my point. My point is that to regard the problem of social justice conceived in terms of distributive equality, howev- er defined, as

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theories of other historical, political, and economic scientists. Even when they do mention alternative theories—as, for example, in their wise rejection of the ever-popular Eurocentrism of Europe’s “Judeo-Christian culture, its unique geography, its European values” (p 198)—they do not pause to weigh and consider it in detail. Their serial empiricist monologue has disabilities as science. It tends to ex cathedra pronouncements, evading the scientist’s responsibility to weigh and consider. In history, the charming books by the French historian Fernand Braudel were

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'social justice'. For detailed refutations of this non-concept, see in particular von Mises [(1949) 1998, pp. 849-850] and von Hayek [1984, pp. 62-113]. 48 Pierre Bessard charitable giving cannot be based on coercion; it must be voluntary and sub- sidiary, grounded on the principle of encouraging self-help, self-reliance, and independence. Moreover, current government monopolies all too often conceal that the market and the nonprofit social sector can provide real and affordable alternatives against the risks of illness, accidents, disability, and un- employment

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