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After Liberalism : Mass Democracy in the Managerial State / Paul Edward Gottfried.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: New forum booksPublication details: Princeton : Princeton University Press, 2001.Description: 1 online resource (200 pages }Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781400822898
  • 1400822890
  • 9780691089829
  • 0691089825
  • 0691059837
  • 9780691059839
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: After Liberalism : Mass Democracy in the Managerial State.DDC classification:
  • 351
LOC classification:
  • JC479
Online resources:
Contents:
""Book Cover""; ""Title""; ""Copyright""; ""Contents""
Summary: In this trenchant challenge to social engineering, Paul Gottfried analyzes a patricide: the slaying of nineteenth-century liberalism by the managerial state. Many people, of course, realize that liberalism no longer connotes distributed powers and bourgeois moral standards, the need to protect civil society from an encroaching state, or the virtues of vigorous self-government. Many also know that today's "liberals" have far different goals from those of their predecessors, aiming as they do largely to combat prejudice, to provide social services and welfare benefits, and to defend expressive and "lifestyle" freedoms. Paul Gottfried does more than analyze these historical facts, however. He builds on them to show why it matters that the managerial state has replaced traditional liberalism: the new regimes of social engineers, he maintains, are elitists, and their rule is consensual only in the sense that it is unopposed by any widespread organized opposition.
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In this trenchant challenge to social engineering, Paul Gottfried analyzes a patricide: the slaying of nineteenth-century liberalism by the managerial state. Many people, of course, realize that liberalism no longer connotes distributed powers and bourgeois moral standards, the need to protect civil society from an encroaching state, or the virtues of vigorous self-government. Many also know that today's "liberals" have far different goals from those of their predecessors, aiming as they do largely to combat prejudice, to provide social services and welfare benefits, and to defend expressive and "lifestyle" freedoms. Paul Gottfried does more than analyze these historical facts, however. He builds on them to show why it matters that the managerial state has replaced traditional liberalism: the new regimes of social engineers, he maintains, are elitists, and their rule is consensual only in the sense that it is unopposed by any widespread organized opposition.

Print version record.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

""Book Cover""; ""Title""; ""Copyright""; ""Contents""

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