Social Compromise in Two Books by John Stuart Mill: Principles of Political Economy and The Subjection of Women (With Harriet Taylor Mill's Contributions)

Authors

  • Elena Gallego Abaroa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1016/S1698-6989(11)70003-0

Keywords:

Political Economy, Income Distributions, Women’s Suffrage, Women And The Labour Market, Working Classes, B12, B20, B31, B54

Abstract

This paper consists of a re-reading of three works by John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor: the Principles of Political Economy (1848), The Subjection of Women (1869) both by J.S. Mill and Harriet Taylor's essay, “The Emancipation of Women” (1851). The paper seeks to reinterpret these texts, seeing them as part of a joint pool of ideas and an explicit social and political programme set out by the two authors, a programme inspired by their wish to improve the lot in society, above all, of women and of the working classes. The ideas which underlie this programme have been classified under five headings: tradition and custom as stumbling blocks to social progress; education as a fundamental element in personal development; the right to vote and to be elected; freedom of access to the labour market; and finally the future advancement in the condition of the working classes

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How to Cite

Gallego Abaroa, E. (2019). Social Compromise in Two Books by John Stuart Mill: Principles of Political Economy and The Subjection of Women (With Harriet Taylor Mill’s Contributions). Investigaciones De Historia Económica, 7(1), 59–84. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1698-6989(11)70003-0

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Section

ARTICLES