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Conservative Liberalism, Ordo-liberalism, and the State
Conservative Liberalism, Ordo-liberalism, and the State
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★★★★★
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€182.90
A01=Kenneth Dyson
Author_Kenneth Dyson
Category=JBCC9
Category=JPA
Category=KCP
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Product details
- ISBN 9780198854289
- Weight: 1002g
- Dimensions: 166 x 241mm
- Publication Date: 26 Jan 2021
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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This book uses extensive original archival and elite interview research to examine the attempt to rejuvenate liberalism as a means of disciplining democracy and the market through a new rule-based economic and political order. This rebirth took the form of conservative liberalism and, in its most developed form, Ordo-liberalism. It occurred against the historical background of the great transformational crisis of liberalism in the first part of the twentieth century. Conservative liberalism evolved as a cross-national phenomenon. It included such eminent and cultured liberal economists as James Buchanan, Frank Knight, Henry Simons, Ralph Hawtrey, Jacques Rueff, Luigi Einaudi, Walter Eucken, Friedrich Hayek, Alfred Müller-Armack, Wilhelm Röpke, Alexander Rüstow, and Paul van Zeeland, as well as leading lawyers like Louis Brandeis, Franz Böhm, and Maurice Hauriou. Conservative liberals also played a formative role in establishing new international networks, notably the Mont Pèlerin Society.
The book investigates the rich intellectual inheritance of this variant of new liberalism from aristocratic liberalism, ethical philosophy, and religious thought. It also locates the social basis of conservative liberalism and Ordo-liberalism in the cultivated bourgeois intelligentsia. The book goes on to examine the attempts to embed this new disciplinary form of liberalism in Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and the United States, and to consider the determinants of its varying significance across space and over time. It concludes by assessing the historical significance and contemporary relevance of conservative liberalism and Ordo-liberalism as liberalism confronts a new transformational crisis at the beginning of the new millennium. Is their promise of disciplining democracy and the market a hollow one?
Kenneth Dyson is Visiting Professor of European Political Studies, School of Law and Politics, Cardiff University. His publications include States, Debt and Power (OUP, 2015), Architects of the Euro (co-edited with I Maes, OUP, 2016), and European Economic Governance and Policies (two volumes, with L Quaglia, OUP, 2010).
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