Wallerstein on Liberalism and Democracy
* Article: Immanuel Wallerstein, Libéralisme & démocratie: frères ennemis? AGONE, 1999, no 22, pp. 153-174.
Summary
Michel Bauwens, reading notes of 2004:
The article points out the two contradictory drives of the representatives of capital
- 1) the economic drive to accumulate capital - 2) the socio-psychological drive to secure inheritance by instituting 'rent'
The 19th cy was marked by 3 political forces:
- the Conservatives, the party order, opposed to the French Revolution and Napoleon - the Liberals, the party of movement, sympathetic to the Girondin phase of the French Revolution - the 'Democrats', left liberals who would morph into the socialists after 1948
After 1848, the scared liberals would:
- 1) turn to the right, beng more afraid of radicalism - 2) allow concessions to pacify popular demands - 3) adopt democratic discourses
- Today:
- the liberal consensus, born in 1848, died in 1968 - the emergence of democratic aspirations, expressed in a desire for more health and education, a higher minimum wage - the extreme right (i.e. Le Pen), is against both competene (i.e. the liberals), and the excluded immigrants (i.e. the democratic program) - with the past collapse of liberalism (1968), the coming collapse of the conservatives (neoliberalism), and within 50 years, of the system as such, if it is not replaced by true democracy, it will be worse (extreme right dominance)