Orsan on Tue, 9 Jan 2018 00:21:26 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> managerialism |
The book is not out yet, but arguments the authors make in their recent articles sound very important to me, when rethinking different versions of corporatism as managerial class mediated consensus projects; since the progressive era, new medievalism, guildism, institutionalism, Fabianism, social democracy, state-capitalism (socialism), Keynesianism, fascism, as well as third-way, or today's tech-technocracy, new-networked fascism and nazism (http://www.cepremap.fr/membres/dlevy/biblioa.htm). In the long 20th cc managerial class fractions played a mediator role, between the ruling and ruled classes; capitalist and workers. They mediated their ideologies; liberalism, conservatism, socialism, and communism. By making alliances and formulating consensus based on compromise between them. Since the 90s with the emergence of ICTs neo-liberal managerialism and authoritarianism it erect as a dominant class candidate, for itself, able to promote its own agenda, as a new mode of production. Managerial capitalism (or platform capitalism) refers this so-called and so-promoted post-capitalism of managerial class. The below recent piece, by Kees Van der Pijl, is complementary to their argument I think: Best, Orsan |
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