Introduction
Pedro Ramos Pinto, Peter Sloman and Daniel Zamora
I. Anglo-American Economists and Guaranteed Incomes
1. Varieties of Basic Income: The British Case, Peter Sloman
2. Milton Friedman's Negative Income Tax and the Demise of Welfare Economics, Daniel Zamora Vargas
3. Living Wages and Universal Incomes: Radical Economics Activists in Neoliberal America, Tiago Mata
II. Feminism, Post-Work and Automation
4. The End of Work? Guaranteed Income as a Feminist and Ecological Response to Fordism, Alyssa Battistoni
5. Basic Income and the Spectre of the Machine, Andrew Sanchez
III. Basic Income in Post-Industrial Europe
6. "Free of Our Labors and Joined Back to Nature": Basic Income and the Politics of Post-Work in the Low Countries, c.1968-1986, Anton Jäger
7. Activating the Unemployed or Liberating Workers? Basic Income in the French Welfare Reform Debate, 1988-2018, Marc Antoine Sabaté
8. André Gorz's Recantation of the Second Cheque Strategy and his Adoption of UBI, Walter van Trier
IV. Cash Transfers in a Global Context
9. Jobs or Income Guarantees? A History of the Rise, Fall, and Questionable Resurgence of Universal Basic Income and Cash Transfers in Southern Africa, Liz Fouksman
10. From Freedom to Finance: How Development Paradigms Framed Basic Income, Louise Haagh
11. Basic Needs and the Discovery of Global Poverty, Samuel Moyn
Peter Sloman is Senior Lecturer in British Politics at the University of Cambridge, UK.
Daniel Zamora Vargas is Lecturer in Sociology at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium.
Pedro Ramos Pinto is Senior Lecturer in International Economic History at the University of Cambridge, UK.