Authoritarian Liberalism
In light of the reforms undertaken for the sake of the Euro, the article revisits the concept authoritarian liberalism that was introduced in 1933 by the German public law scholar Hermann Heller. This notion seeks to capture the liaison between the “strong state” and economic liberalism. The article...
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Brigitte Lurger, Elisabeth Staudegger, Stefan Storr
2015-04-01
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doaj-286aa2af800f47ec81b9407b2f3534b12020-11-25T03:58:58ZdeuBrigitte Lurger, Elisabeth Staudegger, Stefan StorrAustrian Law Journal2409-69112015-04-011678737Authoritarian LiberalismAlexander SomekIn light of the reforms undertaken for the sake of the Euro, the article revisits the concept authoritarian liberalism that was introduced in 1933 by the German public law scholar Hermann Heller. This notion seeks to capture the liaison between the “strong state” and economic liberalism. The article suggests that this notion can be fruitfully used to designate the new governance of economic and monetary union. It argues, particularly, that it makes sense to speak of an authoritarian style of governance even if the latter does not wear vestiges of outright repression. Two different faces of authoritarian liberalism can be distinguished: one that looks more towards authoritarianism and another one that views authoritarian rule as a managerial strategy that is good for the economy. The article then speculates whether the European Union has been, indeed, successful because it shifts between the two. Disturbingly, there may be something deeply as well as more accidentally authoritarian about European integration.https://alj.uni-graz.at/index.php/alj/article/view/37 |
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language |
deu |
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Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Alexander Somek |
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Alexander Somek Authoritarian Liberalism Austrian Law Journal |
author_facet |
Alexander Somek |
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Alexander Somek |
title |
Authoritarian Liberalism |
title_short |
Authoritarian Liberalism |
title_full |
Authoritarian Liberalism |
title_fullStr |
Authoritarian Liberalism |
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Authoritarian Liberalism |
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authoritarian liberalism |
publisher |
Brigitte Lurger, Elisabeth Staudegger, Stefan Storr |
series |
Austrian Law Journal |
issn |
2409-6911 |
publishDate |
2015-04-01 |
description |
In light of the reforms undertaken for the sake of the Euro, the article revisits the concept authoritarian liberalism that was introduced in 1933 by the German public law scholar Hermann Heller. This notion seeks to capture the liaison between the “strong state” and economic liberalism. The article suggests that this notion can be fruitfully used to designate the new governance of economic and monetary union. It argues, particularly, that it makes sense to speak of an authoritarian style of governance even if the latter does not wear vestiges of outright repression. Two different faces of authoritarian liberalism can be distinguished: one that looks more towards authoritarianism and another one that views authoritarian rule as a managerial strategy that is good for the economy. The article then speculates whether the European Union has been, indeed, successful because it shifts between the two. Disturbingly, there may be something deeply as well as more accidentally authoritarian about European integration. |
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https://alj.uni-graz.at/index.php/alj/article/view/37 |
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AT alexandersomek authoritarianliberalism |
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