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Citizens: Why the Key to Fixing Everything is All of Us

Citizens: Why the Key to Fixing Everything is All of Us

Citizens: Why the Key to Fixing Everything is All of Us
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Citizens: Why the Key to Fixing Everything is All of Us Hardback - 2022

by Jon Alexander; Ariane Conrad (With); Brian Eno

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Description

Canbury Press, 3/17/2022 12:00:01 A. hardcover. Very Good. 1.2598 9.4488 6.3780.
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Details

  • Title Citizens: Why the Key to Fixing Everything is All of Us
  • Author Jon Alexander; Ariane Conrad (With); Brian Eno
  • Binding Hardback
  • Condition Used - Very good
  • Pages 320
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Canbury Press
  • Publication date 3/17/2022 12:00:01 A
  • Features Bibliography, Index
  • Bookseller's Inventory # mon0003234260
  • ISBN 9781912454846 / 191245484X
  • Weight 1.14 lbs (0.52 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.1 in (23.62 x 15.75 x 2.79 cm)
  • Size 1.2598 9.4488 6.3780
  • Category Business / Economics / Finance
  • Library of Congress subjects Political science, Political participation
  • Dewey Decimal Code 323.6
  • Quantity available 3
  • Bookseller catalogues Book

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Reader reviews for Citizens: Why the Key to Fixing Everything is All of Us

From the publisher

Citizens by Jon Alexander is a bold, uplifting wake-up call for anyone who feels that democracy, community, and everyday life have been reduced to clicking, buying, complaining - and waiting for "them" to fix it. If you're tired of politics-as-performance, brands-as-saviours, and institutions that treat people like customers or problems to manage, this book hands you a different lens: the Citizen inside every one of us.

Alexander's core idea is brilliantly simple and deeply practical: to change the future, we must change the story. He reveals the hidden narratives shaping modern society - and why so many well-meaning reforms fail because they keep the same assumptions in place.

The three stories:

- The Consumer Story: we're users, consumers, taxpayers, and voters-as-buyers. We demand, choose, and rate while organisations compete to "serve" us.

- The Subject Story: in fear and uncertainty, we trade agency for protection - hierarchy, obedience, surveillance, and strongman certainty.

- The Citizen Story: we are interdependent, creative, empathic people who can participate, collaborate, and co-create solutions. Citizenship becomes a verb: engagement, responsibility, belonging, contribution.

With a foreword by Brian Eno and praise from leading voices in democracy, business, and social change, Citizens makes a persuasive case that the Citizen Story is already rising - often beneath the media radar. From citizens self-organising in crisis to neighbourhood renewal, Alexander shows how citizen power and collective intelligence can outperform "top-down" command or "market fixes" when challenges are complex: climate change, inequality, polarisation, loneliness, and loss of trust.

What you'll get from this book:

- A fresh, memorable framework for democratic renewal, civic participation, and citizen-led change (ideal for readers of politics, social science, and systems thinking)

- A clear diagnosis of why consumerism can't solve the problems it created - and why "change without consequences" is a dangerous fantasy

- Real-world stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary work -f rom Birmingham and Berlin to Kibera, London, and Grimsby-proving that citizenship is not rare; it's human

- Practical pathways to participatory democracy: citizens' assemblies, deliberative democracy, participatory budgeting, community organising, volunteering, crowdfunding, civic tech, and open innovation

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