- The Accumulation of Capital
Resource Type: Book Rosa Luxemburg's analysis of the inherent contradictions of capitalist accumulation.
- Bringing the Economy Home from the Market
Resource Type: Book
- The Business Page
How To Read It and Understand the Economy Resource Type: Book
- Canada's Great Divide
The politics of the growing gap between rich and poor in the 1990s Resource Type: Book Published: 2000
- Das Capital, Volume 2
The Process of Circulation of Capital Resource Type: Book Published: 1956
- Das Capital, Volume 3
The Process of Capitalist Production as a Whole Resource Type: Book Published: 1971
- For the Common Good
Redirecting the Economy Toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future Resource Type: Book Published: 1989 The authors argue that America's growth-oriented, industrial economy has led to environmental problems and propose an alternative economic paradigm.
- Highrise and Superprofits
An Analysis of the Development Industry in Canada Resource Type: Book Published: 1973
- The Modern Crisis
Resource Type: Book
- Networks of Centres of Excellence of Canada
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- The No-Nonsense Guide to the Arms Trade
Resource Type: Book Published: 2002 A review of the increasingly prolific global arms trade and its economic, political and social impact on exploited and vulnerable nations.
- Profit over People
Neoliberalism and Global Order Resource Type: Book Published: 1999
- Rosa Luxemburg, Women's Liberation, and Marx's Philosophy of Revolution
Resource Type: Book Published: 1982 Part I - Rosa Luxemburg as Theoretician, as Activist, as Internationalist. Part II - The Women's Liberation Movement as Revolutionary Force and Reason. Part III - Karl Marx: From Critic of Hegel to Author of Capital and Theorist of "Revolution in Permanence."
- Unequal Freedoms
The Global Market as an Ethical System Resource Type: Book Published: 1998 McMurtry's central argument in this work is the global market can be an ethical thing if a civil commons is put into place. The civil commons is a economic system in which individuals, not a handful of corporations, take part in a equal opporutinity framework of supply and demand.
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