Neoliberalization: States, Networks, PeoplesISBN: 978-1-4051-3432-3
Paperback
352 pages
July 2007, Wiley-Blackwell
Other Available Formats: Hardcover
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“Neoliberalism is a word that can easily come to mean
everything and so nothing. And yet the process and relations of
‘neoliberalization’ are far more significant than
either of these meanings. By focusing on places in which
neoliberalization is shaped and experienced, and on critical
analyses of the processes and relations of which it is constituted,
this book reveals its profound importance.”
Roger Lee, Queen Mary, University of London <!--end-->
Roger Lee, Queen Mary, University of London <!--end-->
“This excellent collection of essays brings substance to
processes of neoliberalization and their impacts in different parts
of the globe, from Argentina to Canada, Nepal to China, and New
Zealand to Japan. It illuminates, from diverse intellectual and
disciplinary traditions, the complexity and contingency of
neoliberalisms through a detailed analysis of economic and
political institutions, people, places, and networks involved in
their (re)production and dissemination. This needs to be understood
if we are to gain a better theorized account of concrete historical
realities and gain leverage for alternative political
directions.”
Helga Leitner, University of Minnesota