Page de couverture de A Century of Anarchy

A Century of Anarchy

Neutral Moresnet through the Revisionist Lens

Aperçu

Obtenez gratuitement l’abonnement Premium Plus pendant 30 jours

14,95 $/mois après l’essai de 30 jours. Annulez à tout moment.
Essayer pour 0,00 $
Autres options d’achat
Acheter pour 4,95 $

Acheter pour 4,95 $

À propos de cet audio

Could a community without a central government avoid descending into chaos and rampant criminality? Could its economy grow and thrive without the intervening regulatory hand of the state? Could disputes between citizens be settled if there existed no state monopoly on legal judgments?

Apparently, the answers to these questions are yes, yes, and yes. Indeed, if the strange and little-known case of the condominium of Neutral Moresnet - a tiny wedge of disputed territory in northwestern Europe - acts as our guide, we must conclude that statelessness is not only possible but beneficial to progress, carrying profound advantages over coercive bureaucracies.

The remarkable enterprise that was Moresnet was an unintended consequence of the Napoleonic Wars (1803 - 1815). Created as a triangle of neutral territory between Prussia and the Netherlands by the Congress of Vienna, Moresnet encapsulates the archetype of market anarchy.

Hidden in its history, we find privately produced, commodity-backed money; competing avenues for the administration of justice; negligible - and, it seems, entirely avoidable - taxes and fees; few, if any, regulations; a defense force without a standing military; open borders (however unintentionally); and an irrepressibly entrepreneurial spirit.

©2014 Peter C. Earle (P)2015 Listen and Think Audio
Liberté et sécurité Moderne Politique Sciences politiques XIXe siècle Économie Entreprise Russie
Pas encore de commentaire