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CESJ Publications Description
Toward Economic and Social Justice.

Founding principles of CESJ. Defines basic terms and outlines the moral principles underlying Kelsonian economics.

Members: $5.00 Non-members: $6.50


Introduction to Social Justice

Rev. William Ferree's 1948 classic treatise defines "social virtues" and "social charity" in terms of how human beings relate to those "invisible structures" called institutions, and how through "acts of social justice" we can correct unjust institutions. Contains study questions.

Members: $5.00 Non-members: $6.50


Curing World Poverty: The New Role of Property

(Published by Social Justice Review in collaboration with CESJ.) Acclaimed collection of writings by leading scholars, practitioners and business leaders on the theory, policy reforms and practical applications of expanded capital ownership-the just free market antidote to the scourge of global poverty. CESJ's "textbook for change."

Members: $12.00 Non-members: $15.00


Declaration of Social Development through Personal Empowerment

CESJ's response to the Draft U.N. Document on Social Development delivered at the 1994 U.N. Summit in Copenhagen.

Members: $3.50 Non-members: $5.00


Questions and Answers:

The Role of Property in Building Economic and Social Justice

Exchanges with scholars and religious leaders participating in 1991 CESJ seminar in Rome.

Members: $3.50 Non-members: $5.00


Expanded Capital Ownership: A New Paradigm for Economic Justice and Empowerment

CESJ presentation to the Congressional Black Caucus on new thrust for community development through empowerment zones. (Contains illustrated guide to the Capital Homestead Act.)

Members: $3.50 Non-members: $5.00


Strategies and Tools for National and Regional Economic Development

The Capital Homestead Act: National Infrastructural Reforms to Make Every Citizen a Shareholder

CESJ'S national credit, tax and expanded ownership reforms for economically empowering every citizen and family with an ownership stake in the high-technology frontier. Updated and expanded from strategy paper developed at the request of the chief economist of the National Security Council in 1982.

Members: $5.00 Non-members: $6.50

The Capitalist Manifesto.

By Louis O. Kelso and Mortimer J. Adler.

Members: $28.00 Non-members: $33.00


The Federal Reserve Discount Window

Examines an untapped off-federal budget source of expanded bank credit for accelerating private sector growth, new ESOPs and genuine economic empowerment for all. Contains 1995 exchange between U.S. Cong. Bennie Thompson and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan with CESJ response.

Members: $3.50 Non-members: $5.00


Beyond ESOP: Steps Toward Tax Justice

Outlines sound tax philosophy and proposed legislative reforms for encouraging a just tax system which promotes expanded capital ownership.

(Appears in Curing World Poverty.)

Members: $5.00 Non-members: $6.50


New Seeds of Hope:
Economic Empowerment of America's Rural Citizens

CESJ rural development reforms developed for the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture and presented at the 1994 USDA Senior Policy Retreat.

Members: $5.00 Non-members: $6.50


High Road to Economic Justice

Report and recommendations to the President and the Congress by the 1986 Presidential Task Force on Project Economic Justice. Advocates ESOPs and widespread citizen access to capital ownership as a new thrust in U.S. regional foreign economic development policy.

Members: $12.00 Non-members: $15.00


An Illustrated Guide for Statesmen

Presents CESJ's two-pronged strategy for implementing ESOP privatizations in a transforming economy.

Members: $3.50 Non-members: $5.00

 

China and the Question of Ownership: Is There a Third Way Forward?

Presents the "third way" as an alternative to conventional capitalism and socialism and a new direction for any wage-welfare system economy.

Members: $5.00 Non-members: $6.50


Strategies and Tools for Community Economic Development

The Community Investment Corporation: A Vehicle for Economic and Political Empowerment of Individual Citizens at the Community Level

This land planning and development mechanism applies the principles of expanded ownership and the logic of ESOP financing for rebuilding our communities. Introduces a new thrust for "super empowerment zones." Members: $3.50 Non-members: $5.00

Journey to an Ownership Culture: Insights from the ESOP Community.

Lessons from leading ESOP companies and professionals on building paticipatory ownership and Value-Based Management in the workplace.

Members: $30.00 Non-members: $35.00


Capital Homesteading for D.C. Citizens: A Federal Reserve Demonstration for Funding Economic Empowerment

Offers a local demonstration of CESJ's Capital Homesteading reforms which can be tailored to the economic development needs of other local economies and communities. Contains an introduction by former D.C. Representative Rev. Walter Fauntroy.

Members: $5.00 Non-members: $6.50


Organizing Tools for CESJ Study Groups and Chapters

How to Win a Revolution...
And Enjoy It

Describes CESJ's "four-pronged" strategy for spreading the "third way" of expanded ownership.

Members: $5.00 Non-members: $6.50


The Expanded Ownership Paradigm: A Graphic Overview

An illustrated tour through the principles of economic justice and Kelsonian economic theory.

Members: $3.50 Non-members: $5.00


Selected Bibliography from the Expanded Ownership Movement

Members: $3.50 Non-members: $5.00


CESJ Chapter Organizing Manual

Contains tips, steps and forms for starting a CESJ chapter in your community or university.

Members: $10.00 Non-members: $12.00


VIDEO.

CESJ Forum with Institute for Policy Studies

Lecture of CESJ President Norman Kurland and round-table discussion on expanded ownership paradigm, with columnist and author William Greider, former chief economist of the National Security Council Dr. Norman Bailey and other scholars.

Members: $15.00 Non-menbers: $18.00


VIDEO.

Economic Empowerment Through Expanded Capital Ownership

Televised interview of the Hon. Rev. Walter Fauntroy and Norman Kurland discusses principles of economic and social justice and the Capital Homestead Initiative for D.C. citizens.

Members: $15.00 Non-members: $18.00

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The Center for Economic and Social Justice - www.cesj.org
P.O. Box 40711, Washington, D.C. 20016 - Phone: 703-243-5155, Fax: 703-243-5935

thirdway@cesj.org (e-mail)

CESJ is a non-profit 501(c)(3) educational and research organization,
contributions to which are tax-deductible under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code.