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The recent publication of Kenneth Dyson’s book Conservative Liberalism, Liberalism, Ordo-Liberalism, and the State offers an occasion to reconsider the body of ideas known as ordoliberalism.
Thomas F. Remington
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Ordoliberalism – A Research Approach for Today?
Research background: To a limited extent, modern researchers are interested in ordoliberalism, as a theory of the socio-economic system, which is confirmed by the results of the bibliometric analysis.
Jurczuk Anna +2 more
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Changing the way of thinking: was German ordoliberalism travelling to China in 1978–1985? [PDF]
China after the economic reform process is probably less different from the Western countries than often imagined. Through a profound document analysis, this article’s aim is to assess German ordoliberal influence on the Chinese economic reform agenda ...
Peter Nedergaard
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The Biopolitics of Ordoliberalism
This article examines the biopolitical dimension in ordoliberal thought using Wilhelm Röpke and Alexander Rüstow as exemplary figures of this tradition. Based on an explication of various biopolitical themes that can be extracted from Foucault’s writings
Thomas Biebricher
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Ethical foundations of competitive order according to Walter Eucken [PDF]
Ordoliberalism is a German economic and legal doctrine, in which ethics occupies a privileged place. The basic premise is the freedom and responsibility of human beings.
Katarzyna Kamińska
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Freedom and the Strong State : On German Ordoliberalism [PDF]
Ordoliberalism is the theory behind the German social market economy. Its theoretical stance developed in the context of the economic crisis and political turmoil of the Weimar Republic in the late 1920s.
Bonefeld, Werner
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The ideological use and abuse of Freiburg’s ordoliberalism [PDF]
AbstractIn the aftermath of the Eurozone crisis, a battle of ideas emerged over whether ordoliberalism is part of the cause or the solution of economic problems in Europe. While German ordoliberals argued that their policy proposals were largely ignored before, during and after the crisis, critics saw too much ordoliberal influence, especially in form ...
Malte Dold, Tim Krieger
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Market democracy, rising populism, and contemporary ordoliberalism
Populist movements increasingly challenge liberal Western market democracies. Populism can be explained only in part by phenomena like globalization and digitization producing winners and losers in economic terms. Growing feelings of alienation from the market-democratic system and the perceived loss of autonomy within the political system contribute ...
Dold, Malte, Krieger, Tim
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The Freiburg School: Walter Eucken and Ordoliberalism [PDF]
What has become known as the Freiburg School or the Ordo-liberal School was founded in the 1930s at the University of Freiburg in Germany by economist Walter Eucken (1891-1950) and two jurists, Franz Böhm (1895-1977) and Hans Großmann-Doerth (1894-1944).
Vanberg, Viktor J.
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Shelter from the storm. The ordoliberal world of welfare capitalism [PDF]
The social policy of the ordoliberal tradition has attracted limited scholarly attention despite an increased interest in the content of Ordoliberalism.
Peter Nedergaard
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