Neo-liberalism and ordoliberalism: A critique of two forms of imperialism and authoritarianism

Imperialism is primarily driven by a combination of public policies and accumulation regimes taking place within the domestic environment of the imperial state itself. As an international policy, however, imperialism aims at transforming other states' socioeconomic and political orders, especia...

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Main Author: Fouskas Vassilis K.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Banja Luka, Bosnia and Hercegovina and Institute for Political Studies, Belgrade, Serbia 2018-01-01
Series:Politeia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/2232-9641/2018/2232-96411816149F.pdf
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spelling doaj-347d6e3adc044e6d84931944fba164b22020-11-25T00:13:21ZengFaculty of Political Sciences, University of Banja Luka, Bosnia and Hercegovina and Institute for Political Studies, Belgrade, SerbiaPoliteia2232-96412566-28052018-01-018161491722232-96411816149FNeo-liberalism and ordoliberalism: A critique of two forms of imperialism and authoritarianismFouskas Vassilis K.0University of Athens, Greece + University of Perugia, Italy + University of East London, UKImperialism is primarily driven by a combination of public policies and accumulation regimes taking place within the domestic environment of the imperial state itself. As an international policy, however, imperialism aims at transforming other states' socioeconomic and political orders, especially in the global periphery and semi-periphery, by way of transplanting its own class model prevailing in the metropolitan home. The two most important stylised and separable, but not separate, public policies of our times are that of Anglo-American neo-liberalism, which drives post-Bretton Woods globalisation/financialisation, and that of German-Austrian ordoliberalism, which guides the process of European 'integration'. The argument advanced here is that (Anglo-American) neoliberalism and (German-Austrian) ordoliberalism are not stand-alone domestic policies, but are instead consubstantial with imperial undertakings. The former project is wider and truly global in scope, whereas the latter is dominating the EU/Eurozone and its immediate periphery (the Balkans/Eastern Europe and the MENA region). In this context, the article puts forth a qualitative critique of both public policies as imperial policies of domination, transformation and exploitation, buttressing regimes of permanent austerity and authoritarianism at home and permanent war and devastation abroad.https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/2232-9641/2018/2232-96411816149F.pdfImperialismNew American Imperialism (NAI)Financialisation/GlobalisationOrdoliberalismNeo-LiberalismCore-Periphery Relations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fouskas Vassilis K.
spellingShingle Fouskas Vassilis K.
Neo-liberalism and ordoliberalism: A critique of two forms of imperialism and authoritarianism
Politeia
Imperialism
New American Imperialism (NAI)
Financialisation/Globalisation
Ordoliberalism
Neo-Liberalism
Core-Periphery Relations
author_facet Fouskas Vassilis K.
author_sort Fouskas Vassilis K.
title Neo-liberalism and ordoliberalism: A critique of two forms of imperialism and authoritarianism
title_short Neo-liberalism and ordoliberalism: A critique of two forms of imperialism and authoritarianism
title_full Neo-liberalism and ordoliberalism: A critique of two forms of imperialism and authoritarianism
title_fullStr Neo-liberalism and ordoliberalism: A critique of two forms of imperialism and authoritarianism
title_full_unstemmed Neo-liberalism and ordoliberalism: A critique of two forms of imperialism and authoritarianism
title_sort neo-liberalism and ordoliberalism: a critique of two forms of imperialism and authoritarianism
publisher Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Banja Luka, Bosnia and Hercegovina and Institute for Political Studies, Belgrade, Serbia
series Politeia
issn 2232-9641
2566-2805
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Imperialism is primarily driven by a combination of public policies and accumulation regimes taking place within the domestic environment of the imperial state itself. As an international policy, however, imperialism aims at transforming other states' socioeconomic and political orders, especially in the global periphery and semi-periphery, by way of transplanting its own class model prevailing in the metropolitan home. The two most important stylised and separable, but not separate, public policies of our times are that of Anglo-American neo-liberalism, which drives post-Bretton Woods globalisation/financialisation, and that of German-Austrian ordoliberalism, which guides the process of European 'integration'. The argument advanced here is that (Anglo-American) neoliberalism and (German-Austrian) ordoliberalism are not stand-alone domestic policies, but are instead consubstantial with imperial undertakings. The former project is wider and truly global in scope, whereas the latter is dominating the EU/Eurozone and its immediate periphery (the Balkans/Eastern Europe and the MENA region). In this context, the article puts forth a qualitative critique of both public policies as imperial policies of domination, transformation and exploitation, buttressing regimes of permanent austerity and authoritarianism at home and permanent war and devastation abroad.
topic Imperialism
New American Imperialism (NAI)
Financialisation/Globalisation
Ordoliberalism
Neo-Liberalism
Core-Periphery Relations
url https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/2232-9641/2018/2232-96411816149F.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT fouskasvassilisk neoliberalismandordoliberalismacritiqueoftwoformsofimperialismandauthoritarianism
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