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Egan, Daniel

Daniel Egan is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Massachusetts-Lowell, where he teaches courses in political sociology and social inequality. He has conducted research on workers’ cooperatives, globalization and international institutions, and government subsidies for business.

Politics of Economic Reconstruction in London, 1981-1986
2001 0-7734-7360-2
This study examines the extent to which local state institutions can exercise political autonomy in an increasingly global capitalism. This book is critical of the argument that politics have become secondary to market forces, and instead suggests that the organization of the local state can provide important opportunities and resources for progressive social movements to define economic restructuring in more democratic ways. This argument is made through an examination of the radical local economic strategy developed by the Labour party-controlled metropolitan government of London, the Greater London Council, during the 1980s. With its emphasis on participatory planning and production for social need, the Labour GLC was an important experiment in economic democracy. In contrast to recent theories that see civil society as the major force for democratization, the case of the Labour GLC suggest that forces in civil society need the resources and coordination of state institutions if they are to construct a viable alternative to neoliberalism.