Risk and the Deconstruction of Solidarity
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Köp båda 2 för 667 kr'This is a ruthless book. It is learned, demanding, and does not respect your habits as a reader of mainstream scholarship. Berkeley liberal arts radicalism meets continental European intellectual style. Precisely for those reasons, I recommend it to you. The core argument is certainly worth your consideration: namely, that neoliberalism has a corrosive effect on the state, on society, and on the relations between the two. (But whither neoliberalism? Is it not erstwhile neoliberals who now call more vociferously for state intervention than anybody else?)' Dr Jorg Friedrichs, University of Oxford 'The Great Transformation could have been the title of this book. Di Palma picks up the central theme of Polanyi's masterwork - the impact of neoliberal capitalism on society - and extends it in two new directions: its impact on the capacity of the state and on the quality of democracy. He is less sanguine about the eventual countervailing political reaction to its destructive tendencies and frustrated expectations, but his cautious predictions seem well-grounded in the contemporary context.' Professor Philippe C Schmitter, European University Institute 'Di Palma's highly original and profound book combines classic political philosophy and political science with a Foucauldian analysis of power. These seemingly incompatible intellectual approaches nevertheless prove extremely fruitful in helping us understand neoliberal domination. In a very Foucauldian way, the author problematises neoliberalism as the transformation of social collective solidarity into risk management and individual responsibility. He also shows how the 'ownership society' that characterises neoliberalism is based on possessive individualism and commodification, signalling the end of the centrality of the notion of collectivity. But Di Palma complements this through his re-reading of classical works, demonstrating the transformation through subtle analysis of the subjective uses of the principle of precaution; the plurality of the meaning of risk, responsibility, and solidarity; and the unintended consequences of individual commitment to social order in the name of liberty.' Dr Beatrice Hibou, Sciences Po Paris 'In a work that follows the injunction to practice 'pessimism of the intellect,' Giuseppe Di Palma elaborates a withering critique of the ways that market ideology subverts the modern state and social solidarity. While he insists that it is premature to declare the death of neoliberalism, his book helps us see how we must think about the connections between state and society if we are ever to overcome its destructive power.' Professor Fred Block, University of California at Davis
Giuseppe Di Palma is emeritus professor of Political Science, University of California at Berkeley, where he has taught since 1964. He has written on political behaviour (Apathy and Participation, 1970), on Italian politics (Surviving without Governing, 1977), on transitions to democracy, and on democratic theory (To Craft Democracies, 1990). In the years since his retirement he has turned his attention to the American political system and American politics, and to the role of ideas and narratives in politics.
Contents Acknowledgements vii Chapter One: The State and Civil Society: Revisiting the Past, Assessing the Present 1 Chapter Two: Social Risk in Early Modernity: Solidarity as Precaution 11 Chapter Three: The Century of the Social State 21 Chapter Four: Social Risk in an Era of Uncertainty: The Dismantling of Solidarity 33 Chapter Five: Toward the Criminalisation of the Other 55 Chapter Six: Selling Out State and Law 67 Chapter Seven: Old and New Risks: Neoliberalism's Precautionary Opportunism 75 Chapter Eight: Challenges to Neoliberalism? 93 Chapter Nine: The Future? Ask Me Later 105 Bibliography 113 Index 119