
Special Issue around Isabelle Ferreras Paper in Politics & Society, Vol. 51, Issue 2
In the context of capitalist democracies, the contradiction between people’s expectations of equality and the subordination they experience at work is intense. I argue that it is the defining experience of the contradiction between capitalism and democracy. Capitalism grants political rights to property owners, while democracy grants political rights to the citizens recognized as equals. They are thus regimes of government that distribute rights in dramatically different ways. This essay is grounded in the understanding that firms are best analyzed as “political entities,” and workers as “labor investors,” and have thus a legitimate right to bear on the government of their work life. Examining the history of how political entities have become democratic through the innovation of bicameralism provides a “real utopia”: economic bicameralism, that is, a set of patterns that may be applied to democratize and transition the corporate firm beyond capitalism.
Articles on this Issue:
- Isabelle Ferreras, « Democratizing the Corporation: The Bicameral Firm as Real Utopia » pp. 188-224.
- Tom Malleson, « The Corporation, Democracy, and the Idea of the Bicameral Firm » pp. 167-187.
- David Ellerman, « Fallacies about Corporations: Comments on Democratizing the Corporation » pp. 225-242.
- Marc Fleurbaey, « Workplace Democracy, the Bicameral Firm, and Stakeholder Theory » pp. 243-257.
- Simon Pek, « Learning from Cooperatives to Strengthen Economic Bicameralism » pp. 258-277.
- Robert F. Freeland, « Prospects for DEmocratizing the Corporation in US Law » pp. 278-292.
- Sanjay Pinto, « Economic Democracy against Racial Capitalism: Seeding Freedom » pp.293-313.