What if scarcity was a lie - and justice was a design challenge?
In an age defined by paradox - obscene wealth alongside starvation, trillion-dollar fortunes amid planetary collapse, overflowing homes while families sleep in cars - a new kind of book has arrived. Bold, actionable, and grounded in rigorous analysis, Reclaiming the Future dares to ask the one question most economists, politicians, and pundits avoid:
What would it actually take to build a world where every person's basic needs are guaranteed - and the planet thrives in balance?
This is not a book of wishful thinking or empty slogans. It is a full-spectrum blueprint for economic transformation, grounded in the best of modern interdisciplinary research, post-growth economics, public health equity, environmental governance, and human rights law.
Why This Book Matters Now:We are standing at the edge of ecological collapse, democratic erosion, and soul-deep exhaustion. Traditional economics has failed. Incrementalism is obsolete. But despair is not strategy.
Reclaiming the Future insists on a different approach: one rooted in moral imagination and institutional design. It reminds us that poverty is not natural, hunger is not inevitable, and the future is not yet written.
This book is for:
From scarcity to sufficiency. From despair to design. From critique to creation.
Reclaiming the Future is not just a book - it's a manifesto, a playbook, a legal toolkit, and an open invitation to participate in the making of a world where everyone has enough, and no one is left behind.
This is the book we've been waiting for.
And now, the waiting is over.