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LIBERTARIANISM (4) answer(s).
 
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ID:   181688


Getting Restraint Right: Liberal Internationalism and American Foreign Policy / Deudney, Daniel; John Ikenberry, G   Journal Article
Deudney, Daniel Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Liberalism and its republican precursors provide the largest and best-developed body of restraint theory and practice. Realist, libertarian and other criticisms of liberalism and liberal internationalism fall short on both historical and theoretical grounds. Liberal internationalism has had a profoundly progressive – even revolutionary – impact on the modern world order, advancing the grand transition from a world of empire to a world of nation-states, building an infrastructure of rules and institutions to foster and protect liberal democracy, and generating international coalitions and projects for tackling the gravest threats to world order and humanity. Unlike the schools of thought that make up the Quincy coalition, liberal internationalism places at the centre of its vision the cooperative organisation of international order – led by the United States and other liberal democracies, allies and partners – to defend shared liberal values and manage global problems of interdependence.
Key Words Realism  Liberal Internationalism  Restraint  Libertarianism  Liberalis 
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2
ID:   142191


Introduction to political philosophy / Moseley, Alexander 2016  Book
Moseley, Alexander Book
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Publication New Delhi, Bloomsbury Publishing India, 2016.
Description 202p.pbk
Standard Number 9789385436970
Key Words Liberalism  Conservatism  Socialism  Environmentalism  Realism  Anarchism 
Political Philosophy  Statism  Libertarianism 
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
058397320.01/MOS 058397MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   115255


Radical thinking in South Africa’s age of retreat / Helliker, Kirk; Vale, Peter   Journal Article
Vale, Peter Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract This article traces the rise and fall of radical praxis in South Africa and offers a critique of the prevailing practices of former Marxists under post-apartheid conditions. Western Marxism emerged in the 1970s in South Africa and Marxist activists became deeply involved in the liberation movements. With the unravelling of apartheid, the main liberation forces made a social pact with capitalist forces and former Marxists embraced a statist project. In the context of the rise of 'new' social movements, radical thinking of a more Libertarian kind is emerging in contemporary South Africa.
Key Words South Africa  Transformation  Statism  Libertarianism  Western Marxism 
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4
ID:   145098


Wedges and widgets: liberalism, libertarianism, and the trade attitudes of the american mass public and elites / Rathbun, Brian   Article
Rathbun, Brian Article
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Summary/Abstract What are the ideological sources of free trade attitudes? Free trade plays a crucial role in classical liberal theory as a way of increasing the prospects of peace between states. Are liberal individuals more supportive of free trade? The literature on foreign policy beliefs largely neglects the question of trade, and those exceptions that find support for the liberal hypothesis generally rely on faulty conceptualization. Using surveys of the American mass public and American elites, this article finds that the combination of views that marks classical liberalism does not in fact predict support for free trade at either the mass or the elite level. Support for free trade at the mass level has libertarian, not liberal, foundations, predicted by a combination of social and economic libertarianism. At the mass level, the combination of cosmopolitanism and dovishness that constitutes foreign policy liberalism has no effect on trade attitudes. At the elite level, cosmopolitanism is actually generally negatively associated with support for free trade. Free trade is a wedge issue that creates strange alliances at the elite level between cosmopolitans and isolationists generally hostile to one another on foreign policy and at the mass level between social and economic libertarians typically antagonistic to each other's domestic agenda.
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