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End of Protest: How Free-Market Capitalism Learned to Control Dissent [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 122 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 216x140x7 mm, kaal: 454 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Nov-2016
  • Kirjastus: Cornell Selects
  • ISBN-10: 1501707469
  • ISBN-13: 9781501707469
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 122 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 216x140x7 mm, kaal: 454 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Nov-2016
  • Kirjastus: Cornell Selects
  • ISBN-10: 1501707469
  • ISBN-13: 9781501707469
Teised raamatud teemal:
The United States has just gone through the worst economic crisis in a generation. Why wasn’t there more protest, as there was in other countries? During the United States’ last great era of free-market policies, before World War II, economic crises were always accompanied by unrest. "The history of capitalism," the economist Joseph Schumpeter...

The United States has just gone through the worst economic crisis in a generation. Why wasn’t there more protest, as there was in other countries? During the United States’ last great era of free-market policies, before World War II, economic crises were always accompanied by unrest. "The history of capitalism," the economist Joseph Schumpeter warned in 1942, "is studded with violent bursts and catastrophes." In The End of Protest, Alasdair Roberts explains how, in the modern age, governments learned to unleash market forces while also avoiding protest about the market’s failures.

Roberts argues that in the last three decades, the two countries that led the free-market revolution—the United States and Britain—have invented new strategies for dealing with unrest over free market policies. The organizing capacity of unions has been undermined so that it is harder to mobilize discontent. The mobilizing potential of new information technologies has also been checked. Police forces are bigger and better equipped than ever before. And technocrats in central banks have been given unprecedented power to avoid full-scale economic calamities.

Tracing the histories of economic unrest in the United States and Great Britain from the nineteenth century to the present, The End of Protest shows that governments have always been preoccupied with the task of controlling dissent over free market policies. But today’s methods pose a new threat to democratic values. For the moment, advocates of free-market capitalism have found ways of controlling discontent, but the continued effectiveness of these strategies is by no means certain.

Arvustused

"Kudos to Cornell University Press for launching the series in order to engage the broader public about matters of the moment, such as the question of dissent."-Critical Margins

The Quiet Crisis vii
1 Schumpeter's Paradox
1(4)
2 Controlling Disorder in the First Liberal Age
5(36)
Bread or Blood
6(7)
"Can Capitalism Survive?"
13(4)
Building the Capacity for Repression
17(6)
Law, Urban Space, and the Language of Control
23(10)
Reducing Economic Risks
33(8)
3 The Market Comes Back
41(17)
Two Myths about Peaceful Reform
45(13)
4 The New Method of Controlling Disorder
58(36)
Breaking the Unions
58(6)
The Limits of Networked Protest
64(4)
Strengthening the Police
68(9)
Technocratic Crisis Management
77(12)
The New Politics of Intolerance
89(5)
5 The End of Crowd Politics
94(5)
Notes 99(10)
About the Author 109
Alasdair Roberts is the Jerome L. Rappaport Professor of Law and Public Policy at Suffolk University Law School in Boston, Massachusetts. He is also a Fellow of the U.S. National Academy of Public Administration. He is the author of America's First Great Depression, also from Cornell, The Logic of Discipline, and Blacked Out: Government Secrecy in the Information Age.