Politics and capital : auctioning the American dream / John Attanasio.
2018
KF380 .A88 2018 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Politics and capital : auctioning the American dream / John Attanasio.
Published
New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2018]
Call Number
KF380 .A88 2018
ISBN
9780190847029 hardcover ; alkaline paper
0190847026 hardcover ; alkaline paper
0190847026 hardcover ; alkaline paper
Description
xvi, 286 pages ; 25 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)1002419181
Summary
"This book is about good government, especially an ethical and fair government and constitution. It has five key ideas. Understanding these ideas is critical to addressing the problems besetting the American political and economic systems. First, the book proposes the new principle of distributive autonomy to guarantee first-order rights. The principle sharply contrasts with modern, individualistic libertarian ideas. Good governance must be centrally concerned with the distribution of freedom for all. If your own autonomy matters, so does everyone else's. Valuing the autonomy of others is authentic autonomy. A core aspect of ethical governance must value the autonomy of everyone. Second, the book demonstrates how the campaign finance cases violate distributive autonomy and completely subvert the American system of government. Third, the book deploys Thomas Piketty's data to correlate the campaign finance cases with the dramatic rise in wealth and particularly income inequality in the United States. Fourth, the book demonstrates that the distorted allocation of income has adversely affected the centrally important demand curve of the American economy, which may be helping to drive economic stagnation and the debt overhang. Fifth, the book concludes that political freedom, in the sense of distributive autonomy, is necessary for participatory democracy and that participatory democracy may be a necessary condition to sustain long-term, prosperous capitalism." -- Publisher's website.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Gift
Purchased from the income of the Edith L. Fisch Fund
Gift

The Arthur W. Diamond Law Library
Purchased from the income of the Edith L. Fisch Fund
Table of Contents
Preface
xi
Acknowledgments
xv
pt. I
CHALLENGES TO MODERN LIBERTARIANISM NOTES
1
1.
Distributive Autonomy and the Foundational Problem of Campaign Finance
3
A.
Idea of Distributive Autonomy
3
B.
Lens of Campaign Finance
4
C.
Property Interests v. Participatory Democracy
5
D.
Discourse
9
Notes
12
2.
Distributive Autonomy: An Introductory Essay
17
A.
What Is Liberty? What Is Autonomy? And Why Do They Matter?
17
B.
Baseline Autonomy
23
C.
Bounded Autonomy?
24
D.
Distributive Autonomy: A First Approximation
30
E.
What Counts as an Infringement of Distributive Autonomy?
39
F.
Disconnect of Modern Liberty and Autonomy Theory from Founding Fathers Mill and Kant
45
Notes
48
pt. II
DECLINE OF LIBERTARIAN PROTECTION OF PROPERTY RIGHTS
Note
51
3.
Direct Judicial Protection of Property Rights
53
Notes
57
4.
Carolene Products Paradigm of Participatory Democracy
61
A.
Carolene Products Constitutional Settlement
61
B.
Voice and Vote as Pillars of Participatory Democracy
66
C.
Property Rights versus Property Interests
69
D.
Weak Libertarian Paradigm of Free Speech Jurisprudence and Participatory Democracy
70
Notes
73
pt. III
RISE OF CONSTITUTIONAL LIBERTARIAN PROTECTION FOR PROPERTY INTERESTS: CAMPAIGN FINANCE
5.
Buckley Constitution and the Strong Libertarian Paradigm of American Politics
83
A.
Seeds: The Absolutist Speech Protection of Justices Black and Douglas
83
B.
Strong Libertarian Paradigm of Free Speech and the Decline of Democracy in America
87
1.
Equating Campaign Speaking and Campaign Spending: The Supreme Court's Momentous Pivot
87
2.
Bolstering the Strong Libertarian Paradigm: Corporate Spending
93
C.
Austin and McConnell: A Brief Turn toward the Participatory Democracy Paradigm
94
Notes
97
6.
Stronger Libertarian Paradigm and The Death of the New Deal Constitution
107
A.
Protecting Campaign Spending by Corporations and Unions
107
B.
Invalidating Reciprocal Public Funding
112
C.
Purchasing Entire Election Cycles: Invalidating Limits on Aggregate Contributions
114
D.
Stronger Libertarian Archetype: Transforming the Playing Field Again
118
E.
Protecting the Rule of Law: Upholding Limits on Judicial Fundraising
119
F.
Death of the New Deal Constitution
122
G.
Constitutional Content of Distributive Autonomy
124
1.
Liberty and Equality
125
2.
Federalism, Constituent Representation, and Divided Power
127
Notes
130
pt. IV
DISTRIBUTIVE AUTONOMY: PHILOSOPHICAL ORIGINS, CONSTITUTIONAL APPLICABILTY, AND CAMPAIGN FINANCE
7.
Philosophical Ruminations: The Tension between Liberty and Equality
147
A.
Doctrinal Wrong Turns: Equating Spending Money with Speaking
147
B.
Philosophical Expressions of the Tension between Liberty and Equality
152
Notes
156
8.
Principle of Distributive Autonomy
159
A.
Modern Libertarianism: The Influential Theory of Robert Nozick
159
B.
Contrasting Libertarian Ideas of Nozick and Mill
162
C.
Kantian Autonomy Theory and Libertarianism
164
D.
Liberty/Order Paradox: The Weakness of Strong Libertarian Theories
167
E.
Rawlsian Quest to Reconcile Liberty and Equality
172
F.
Campaign Finance: Illuminating the Tension between Liberty and Equality
175
G.
Distributive Autonomy: A Fusion of Liberty and Equality
177
Notes
186
9.
Distributive Autonomy, The Constitution, and Campaign Finance
191
A.
Distributive Autonomy Critique of the Campaign Finance Cases
191
1.
Speech as Reasoned Argument?
193
2.
Affording Campaign Finance Mid-level Protection
195
3.
Calabresi: Distortion, Information Economics, and Public Choice Theory
200
4.
Campaign Finance Cases: Constricting Distributive Autonomy
207
B.
Distributive Autonomy and the Free Speech Theories of Meiklejohn and Emerson
211
C.
Yin and Yang: Libertarian Campaign Financing versus Egalitarian One Person, One Vote
215
Notes
219
pt. V
DISTRIBUTIVE AUTONOMY: CAPITAL AND POLITICS
10.
Distributive Autonomy, Democracy, and Capital
225
A.
Disparate Voice in Elections Has Ballooned Economic Disparities
225
1.
Post-Buckley Changes in Concentrations of Income and Wealth
225
2.
Dose Response Correlations between the Case Law and Increases in Campaign Funding
226
3.
Donations Lead to Access
229
4.
Access Leads to Influence and to Law
231
B.
Buckley and Piketty: The Astonishing Temporal Correlations
236
1.
Income and Wealth Correlations
236
2.
Tax and Other Policy Changes
240
Notes
249
11.
Income and Wealth Disparities, and the Demand Curve
257
A.
Shrinking, Anemic Middle Class
257
B.
Sellers Need Buyers and Buyers Need Sellers (Employers)
260
C.
2016 Election
265
D.
Tax Cuts and the National Debt
267
E.
Epilogue: Distributive Autonomy, Libertarianism, and Democracy
272
Notes
274
Index
279