![]() ![]() Youth Movements, Trauma and Alternative Space in Contemporary Japan. “Integration durch Arbeit oder sozialstaatlich alimentierte Exklusion.” Berliner Debatte Initial 18 (2): 4–16.Ĭassegard, Carl. The Temporary Autonomous Zone, Ontological Anarchy, Poetic Terrorism. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.Īndo, Takemasa. These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. While I do not intend to discuss the validity of this perspective in detail, it provides me with a framework for analyzing the activities and lifestyle of a contemporary activist network in Tokyo, whose members, in fact, share Gorz’s vision and have found their own particular way to answer the question of how to create a “better” society, and how this idea of “living beyond the wage-based society” can be put into practice. More precisely, I will draw upon the theories formulated by French philosopher and UBI proponent André Gorz, who imagined the introduction of a UBI as a chance to create societies with “(…) less employment and less selling of labor and services, but with growth in collective facilities and services, in nonmonetary exchange and self-providing” (Gorz 2013 : 299). Rather, I will focus on one singular aspect of the UBI proposal, namely, the underlying vision for a profound social transformation. It is essential to discuss feasibility, theoretical background, and contexts for the possible adoption of a UBI scheme yet, these issues lie beyond the scope of this chapter. Unconditional basic income (UBI) is a concept intended to tackle the problem of redistributing wealth within a welfare state setting, providing citizens (or residents) of a nation a regular basic monetary transfer without preconditions on an equal basis.
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