SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT
TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER HEADINGS 1 A World Economic Program
THE NEXT STEP
I. THE NEW ECONOMIC LIFE
II. THE ECONOMIC MUDDLE
III. ECONOMIC FOUNDATIONS
IV. ECONOMIC SELF-GOVERNMENT
V. A WORLD PRODUCERS' FEDERATION
VI. WORLD ADMINISTRATION
VII. TRIAL AND ERROR IN ECONOMIC ORGANIZATION
VIII. ECONOMIC LIBERATION
WHAT TO READ
INDEX
Title: The Next Step
A Plan for Economic World Federation
Author: Scott Nearing
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
THE NEXT STEP
A Plan for Economic World Federation
By
SCOTT NEARING
Author of
"The American Empire"
Ridgewood, New Jersey
NELLIE SEEDS NEARING
1922
By the same author
Wages in the United States.
Financing the Wage Earner Family.
Reducing the Cost of Living.
Anthracite.
Poverty and Riches.
Social Adjustment.
Social Religion.
Women and Social Progress.
(Collaboration with Nellie Nearing)
The Super Race.
Elements of Economics.
The New Education.
Economics.
Community Civics.
(Collaboration with Jessie Field)
Solution of the Child Labor Problem.
Social Sanity.
The American Empire.
Copyright, 1922
All Rights Reserved
Printed in the United States of America
This book is dedicated to the task of emancipating the human race from economic servitude
"The community needs service first, regardless of who gets the profits, because its life depends on the service it gets."
"Organizing for Work."
H.L. Gantt.
"It is not common language, literature and tradition alone, nor yet clearly defined or strategic frontiers, that will in the future give stability to the boundary lines of Europe, but rather such distribution of its supplies of coal and iron as will prevent any of the great nations of Europe becoming strong enough to dominate or absorb all the others."
"The Economic Basis of an Enduring Peace."
C.W. MacFarlane.
"Men cannot exist in their present numbers on the earth without world co-operation."
"Our Social Heritage."
Graham Wallas.
"The real way, surely, in which to organize the interests of producers is by working out a delimitation of industry, and confiding the care of its problems to those most concerned with them. This is, in fact, a kind of federalism in which the powers represented are not areas but functions."
"Foundations of Sovereignty."
H.J. Laski.