Post‐liberalism vs. temperate liberalism
In: Critical review: a journal of politics and society, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 365-375
ISSN: 1933-8007
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In: Critical review: a journal of politics and society, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 365-375
ISSN: 1933-8007
In: Philosophy and public affairs, Band 39, Heft 1, S. 3-45
ISSN: 1088-4963
In: Millennium: journal of international studies, Band 38, Heft 3, S. 545-551
ISSN: 1477-9021
Liberalism will survive this crisis, as it has many others, but it will have changed. The felt need to ensure the security of the economy, and the threats posed to the social order by individuals with potentially threatening capabilities, will require more and more surveillance of our everyday lives and more and more of our participation in those processes of 'keeping an eye out' for anonymous parcels, suspicious behaviours, provocative speech and dangerous thoughts. We will all be enlisted in the Army of Observation, free to choose but self-regulating in our choices. Everyone will watch everyone, and the new age of opto-liberalism will have dawned.
I. H. Handley. Religious liberalism.--II. F. C. Burkitt. Theological liberalism.--III. J. R. Wilkinson. Biblical liberalism.--IV. C. R. Shaw Stewart. Devotional liberalism.--V. H. Rashdall. Clerical liberalism.--VI. P. Gardner. Lay liberalism.--VII. Sir C. T. D. Acland. Political liberalism.--VIII. A. J. Carlyle. Social liberalism.--IX. H. G. Woods. Past liberalism.--X. A. Caldecott. Nonconformist liberalism.--XI. W. D. Morrison. German Evangelic liberalism.--XII. A. L. Lilley. Roman Catholic liberalism. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: Palgrave Studies in Classical Liberalism
In: Springer eBook Collection
1. Reclaiming Democratic Classical Liberalism; David Ellerman -- 2. Democracy, Liberalism, and Discretion: The Political Puzzle of the Administrative State; Stephen Turner -- 3. Ordoliberalism as the Operationalisation of Liberal Politics; Mikayla Novak -- 4. Liberalism, Through a Glass Darkly; David F. Hardwick and Leslie Marsh -- 5. Liberalism and the Nine Waves of Modern Freedom; David D. Corey -- 6. Liberalism for the 21st Century: From markets to civil society, from economics to human beings; Gus diZerega -- 7. The Origins of the Rule of Law; Andrew Irvine -- 8. Burke's Liberalism: Prejudice, Habit, and Affections and the Remaking of the Social Contract; Lauren Hall -- 9. Democratic Peace Theory, Montesquieu, and Public Choice; Sarah Burns and Chad Van Schoelandt -- 10. 'China's Hayek' and the Horrors of Totalitarianism: the Liberal Lessons in Gu Zhun's Thought; Chor-yung Cheung.
In: History workshop: a journal of socialist and feminist historians, Band 17, Heft 1, S. 1-2
ISSN: 1477-4569
In: Theorising Welfare: Enlightenment and Modern Society, S. 16-44
In: Continuum Collection
This book explores liberalism's past and present transformations and proposes a prospective future as a neo-republican democratic liberalism. Bellamy engages with theorists of liberalism from J. S. Mill, through T. H. Green, Guido De Ruggiero, Carl Schmitt and Joseph Schumpeter, to F. A. Hayek, John Rawls and Michael Walzer. He contends that the pluralism and complexity of modern societies have undermined liberalism's communitarian and ethical assumptions. Studies of the Poll Tax fiasco in Britain, and of the constitutional dilemmas posed by the European Union confirm the contemporary inadequa