The Kyoto Post-COVID Manifesto For Global Economics Confronting Our Shattered Society

This book, The Kyoto Post-COVID Manifesto for Global Economics (KM-PC), is a sequel to our 2018 book, The Kyoto Manifesto for Global Economics (KM-I, 2018). It further exposes the failures of a global economic regime that, based on self-interest, has led to the enormously unequal and fragmented soci...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Hill, Stephen (Editor), Yagi, Tadashi (Editor), Yamash’ta, Stomu (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Singapore Springer Nature Singapore 2022, 2022
Edition:1st ed. 2022
Series:Creative Economy
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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505 0 |a Chapter 1:Confronting Our Shattered Society -- Chapter 2: Embracing the Circle of Wholeness -- Chapter 3: Polyphony as a System for Delivering Co-creation, Empowerment, Sustainability and Trust -- Chapter 4: Creating an Economy of Care -- Chapter 5: Universal Care – Including the Excluded -- Chapter 6: Sustainability Conditions for Universal Basic Income in the Economic Recession Caused by COVID-19 -- Chapter 7: Towards the Reconstruction of the Cosmos: In Consideration of a Polyphonic Way of Life -- Chapter 8: Achieving Transformation in Our Highly Interconnected World – I: Systems Thinking and Network Thinking -- Chapter 9: Achieving Transformation in Our Highly Interconnected World – II: The Role of the Individual -- Chapter 10: Transdisciplinary Study of How to Integrate Our Shattered World: The Self-Non-Self Circulation Principle of ‘Living Wholeness -- Chapter 11: The Self-Non-Self Circulation Principle of ‘Living’ Nature: How to Survive Our Shattered World -- Chapter 12: A Case Study of the Self-Non-Self Circulation Principle in Action – Towards a New Synthesis beyond Division between Inside and Outside Worlds in Nursing -- Chapter 13: Taiji: - Philosophical, Cultural and Educational Views from Tian Zhen Yuan -- Chapter 14: Systemic Change Driven by Circular Change -- Chapter 15: The New Natural State of the Market -- Chapter 16: The Role of Sustainable Resource Management in an Economy We Want -- Chapter 17: Stewarding System Aliveness – Pathways to Transformation -- Chapter 18: From Sustainability to Thrivability: Transforming Systems with Purpose -- Chapter 19: Where Did Humanity Go? -- Chapter 20: Discovering Our Humanity – Economics of the Future 
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520 |a This book, The Kyoto Post-COVID Manifesto for Global Economics (KM-PC), is a sequel to our 2018 book, The Kyoto Manifesto for Global Economics (KM-I, 2018). It further exposes the failures of a global economic regime that, based on self-interest, has led to the enormously unequal and fragmented society of today and our decreased ability to respond and recover from the critical worldwide consequences of such a regime over time — notably, climate change. At stake is our very survival beyond the twenty-first century. The fundamental tenet of this book is that our power to heal our currently fractured society lies in the depth of our humanity — in our shared human spirit and spirituality. What is sacred or of imperishable supreme value is what we can be as a human race: empowered, fulfilled individuals, living in harmony, deeply sharing and caring for one another and the environment that sustains us across our distinct cultures and worlds in which we live. Thus, the norms in our economic relations do not have to be those of self-interest that separates us, the ever-watchful distrust represented by “the deal” and immediate economic advantage for me. Instead, we can build an economic frame for our society based on mindfulness, care, mutual human benefit, and trust — on our shared humanity. Our argument was complete and we were ready to publish. But then, suddenly, from the dawning of 2020, everything changed. COVID-19 invaded and the world as we knew it simply stopped. No one saw it coming. As authors, we waited to watch and seek to understand. The result is that the book captures the COVID trauma and, against the fractures based on self-interest already visible in today’s society, assesses the impact of COVID-19 now and for the future. Focusing on a humanity-based economics is even more important now, and this book shows why. Chapter 15 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com