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- Technocracy - Wikipedia
A technocracy differs from a traditional democracy in that individuals selected to a leadership role are chosen through a process that emphasizes their relevant skills and proven performance, as opposed to whether or not they fit the majority interests of a popular vote
- Technocracy | Modern Movement, Social Engineering Scientific . . .
Technocratic organizations sprang up across the United States and western Canada, but the technocracy movement was weakened by its failure to develop politically viable programs for change, and support was lost to the New Deal and third-party movements
- Understanding Technocracy: Definition, Functioning, and Critiques
What Is Technocracy? A technocracy is a governance model where leaders are selected based on their technical skills rather than popular vote
- Technocracy vs. Socialism: One Is Economic, The Other Is Political
Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) was an economist who judged Socialism as a political theory without a cogent economic theory He was familiar with Technocracy but didn't see that it was an economic theory without a political system The Marxists of his day clearly saw that Technocracy was a whack-a-doodle economic system that wanted "nothing less than the abolition of human labor," which had
- Technocracy - MDPI
Technocracy refers to any political–social–economic system that is governed and managed using purportedly objective scientific and technical principles, and in which ultimate power and authority rests with technical and scientific experts
- Technocracy | Meaning, Principles, Advantages Examples
What is Technocracy? Technocracy is a system of governance in which experts and specialists, rather than elected politicians, make decisions based on knowledge, data, and technical expertise
- TECHNOCRACY | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
We live in a technocracy where progress involves the mastering of increasingly complex data In her opinion, technocracy was not incompatible with democracy
- The New Technocracy on JSTOR
This book sets a new benchmark for studies of technocracy, showing that a solution to the challenge of populism will depend as much on a technocratic retreat as democratic innovation
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