
Der Kollektivismus und die soziale Monarchie
Inhaltsverzeichnis.
Einleitung.
I. Die kollektivistische Gesellschaftsordnung in ihren allgemeinsten Umrissen und die Rechtsgrundsätze, nach welchen sie ins Leben einzuführen und nach ihrer Einführung die Verwaltung zu führen sein wird.
II. Das kollektivistische Rechtssubjekt.
IV. Die Monarchie und der Adel.
X. Die Sachproduktion im Kollektivstaat.
XI. Die Verteilung im Kollektivstaat.
XII. Die Beziehungen des Kollektivstaates zum Auslande.
XIII. Vorteile und Nachteile des Kollektivismus.
This work offers a systematic look at a society built on collective principles, laying out the legal foundations that would support such a community from its inception. It begins by defining the collective legal entity and sketches a constitution that balances the authority of the sovereign people with a ceremonial monarchy, exploring voting mechanisms, the scope of popular decisions, and the preservation of national unity.
Beyond the political framework, the author turns to the practical organization of daily life, describing how administration, education, health services, and communication networks would be coordinated for the common good. The text also touches on population policies, family structures, and the role of culture, presenting a vision of a tightly ordered yet socially cohesive state.
Language
de
Duration
~12 hours (702K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jana Srna, Franz L Kuhlmann, Norbert H. Langkau and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2016-05-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1809–1902
Best known today for imagining a future Austria in the year 2020, this 19th-century Austrian writer mixed political ideas with speculative fiction in a way that still feels surprisingly bold. His work offers a curious window into how one earlier age dreamed about society, monarchy, and reform.
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