Liberalism 2.0 and the Rise of China

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A01=David Tyfield
Author_David Tyfield
Category=JB
Category=JHB
Category=JPFK
Category=KCP
CCP
CCP Regime
China
China and the Crises of Neoliberalism
Chinese capitalism studies
Chinese Decision Makers
Chinese Innovation
Chinese Innovation System
Chinese Middle Class
Climate change
Crises (of capitalism)
Cultural political economy
David Tyfield
Electric Vehicle
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Essential Contestation
Global Risk Society
Global System Crisis
green mobility transition
Hi-tech Innovation
High Skilled Knowledge Work
Immoveable Object
Innovation
Innovation Upgrade
Liberalism 2.0
Liberalism 2.0 and the New 19th Century
Low Carbon Innovations
Low Carbon Transition
Low Suzhi
Mobility Innovation
Neoliberal Innovation
Neoliberalism
neoliberalism crisis
Party State Regime
Phronesis
power dynamics analysis
risk society research
social innovation theory
Socio-technical System Transition
System Dynamism
Technological change
Unstoppable Force
Urban Mobility
urban mobility systems transformation
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138393042
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Apr 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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What can we do in this period of historic, global turbulence? Mainstream narratives have no plausible account of how to stop exacerbating the multiple, overlapping challenges; much less begin to address them meaningfully. The only thing everyone agrees is innovation will be needed.

But what is innovation? Usually, it is understood as new technologies that will ‘solve’ specific ‘problems’ – and, it is hoped, return life to a ‘business as usual’ of progress in individual freedom and wealth. But innovation is a thoroughly social process with profound implications for the arrangement of power in a society, hence shaping the emergence of new social systems. Exploring evidence from the key arenas of low-carbon innovation, including in the pivotal location of a rising China, this book describes the global systemic crisis of a neoliberal world order and the embryonic emergence of an alternative global power regime of a ‘liberalism 2.0’. This augurs both a web 2.0-based revitalization of the classical liberalism of the nineteenth century and new Dickensian inequalities and injustices. Against hopes that the present is a ‘revolutionary’ moment, therefore, political engagement with this emerging power regime is thus presented as the most productive strategy for a progressive twenty-first century politics.

David Tyfield is a Reader at the Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, a Director of the Joint Institute for the Environment, Guangzhou and Co-Director of the Centre for Mobilities Research.

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