2013
DOI: 10.3917/cite.056.0077
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Après Althusser, quelle actualité de Marx ?

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Cited by 17 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Dardot and Laval (2013) argue that the German ordoliberals have shaped the process well before neoliberalism became the dominant ideology. They argue that the German model of Rheinish capitalism should not be confused with ordoliberalism but represents a compromise between ordoliberalism, a strong labour movement and Bismarckian conservative tradition.…”
Section: Neoliberalism and European Economic Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Dardot and Laval (2013) argue that the German ordoliberals have shaped the process well before neoliberalism became the dominant ideology. They argue that the German model of Rheinish capitalism should not be confused with ordoliberalism but represents a compromise between ordoliberalism, a strong labour movement and Bismarckian conservative tradition.…”
Section: Neoliberalism and European Economic Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dardot and Laval (2013) have highlighted the importance of ordoliberalism for European integration. Ordoliberalism maintains that a system of competitive private markets is the preferable economic system, but it goes beyond classical liberalism, firstly, in emphasising the role of government in creating markets and maintaining competition and, secondly, in arguing that states have to be subjected to strict rules and exposed to competitive pressures.…”
Section: Neoliberalism and European Economic Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An important element of this work is the idea that the neoliberal globalized world is sustained and perpetuated through the agents and functionaries of neoliberal global capitalism (Carroll, 2010;Robinson, 2004;Robinson, 2012;Sklair, 2001). For example, a number of emerging literatures are engaging with how this global system is constructed and enacted (Dardot and Laval, 2013;Panitch and Gindin, 2012). There is also work on the global elite (Freeland, 2011;Harvey and Maclean, 2008;Rothkopf, 2008;Unruh and Cabrera, 2013); network capital (Richardson, Kakabadse, and Kakabadse, 2011); nomadic capital (Braidotti, 2011); global contact zones (Yeoh and Willis, 2005); global elite conferences (Carroll and Sapinski, 2010;Richardson et al, 2011); global philanthropy (Newland, Terrazas, and Munster, 2010); celebrity humanitarianism (Bell, 2013;Cooper, 2008;Kapoor, 2012) and; philanthrocapitalism (Bishop and Green, 2008).…”
Section: Critical Perspectives On the Globally Mobile Professional Anmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The increased application of neoliberal logic has augmented the internalisation of market rationality as people are subject to increasing competitive scenarios over scarcer resources which require economic calculation; job opportunities are becoming rarer, work is more insecure, wages are falling or stagnating and obtaining the correct human capital is more complex and time-consuming [48].…”
Section: Neoliberal Rationalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This explanation of neoliberalism stresses the material consequences of neoliberal economic policies through resumption of free trade, balanced budgets, deregulation and upper-class privilege which impoverish the lower classes and increase inequality [47]. Secondly, a Foucauldian variant acknowledges the Marxist materialist explanation but places a greater emphasis on ideational factors and understands neoliberalism as a productive process which constructs the "neoliberal subject" via an epistemological transformation [48,49].…”
Section: Neoliberal Rationalitymentioning
confidence: 99%