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Recombinant Slave Equilibria and Their Cure: Living Wage Full Employment

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  • Douglas Grote

Abstract

Scapegoating and slavery are effects of ordinary necessitous interpersonal relations that are naturally selected, extant in all familial and societal hierarchal equilibria, and evolved from primordial parasitism through our primate cousins in order to manage uncertainty. As such, slavery predates and survives all legal strictures. Although social equilibria have progressed equitably in the developed world, it is suggested that slavery's modern cure will only be found by precluding the genetic proclivity to exclude with an actual living-wage, full-employment economy.

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  • Douglas Grote, 2009. "Recombinant Slave Equilibria and Their Cure: Living Wage Full Employment," Review of Social Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 67(2), pages 175-200.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:rsocec:v:67:y:2009:i:2:p:175-200
    DOI: 10.1080/00346760802245086
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Fitzgibbons, Athol, 1988. "Keynes's Vision: A New Political Economy," OUP Catalogue, Oxford University Press, number 9780198286417.
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    Cited by:

    1. Benedict E. DeDominicis, 2022. "American Regime Institutionalization, Segregation, Integration And Assimilation: The Social Identity Dynamics Of Utilitarian Cooptation," Review of Business and Finance Studies, The Institute for Business and Finance Research, vol. 13(1), pages 1-30.

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