A2 Government & Politics Unit:3b, Topic:1 (Liberalism)
Condensed notes on Liberalism
- Created by: SabertoothTiger
- Created on: 20-05-14 21:37
Liberalism Part 1
- Product of the breakdown of feudalism (system of agrarian-based producton characterised by fixed hierarchies)
- Reflected the aspirations of the rising middle classes (embourgeoisement)
- Liberal ideas were formely considered radical
- Was put in the place of absolutism (form of gov't in which political power is concentrated,an asbolute monarchy)
- Nineteenth century was the liberal century
- Liberals advocated an industrialised and market economic order free from gov't
- Undoubtdely been the most powerful ideological force shaping western political tradition
- Liberalism now has become increasingly conservative due to this - as it is already in place, so merely wants to conserve
- Desire to minimise gov't - limited gov't (classical liberalism)
- Modern liberalism - welfare provision and economic managment
- Seen as an incoherent ideology in some ways as it embraces some contradictory beliefs
- Influenced by the Englightenment belief in universal reason
- Liberalism has fashionably been seen as morally neutral
Liberalism Core Values
- Individualism
- Freedom
- Reason
- Justice
- Toleration
- Rational and scientific explanations gradually displaced traditional religious theories
- Individualism - supreme importance of the individual over any social group or collective body
- Can be associated with atomism (belief that society is made up of a collection of self-interested and largely self-sufficient individuals not social groups)
- Liberty and freedom are interchangeable - and also supreme political value
- Radical libertarians defend the view of addictive drugs being legalised - as only damaging yourself, whereas smoking has been denied - as it harms others too
- Liberals give priority to freedom
- Categorised as positive (ML) and negative (CL) freedoms
Individualism
- Rational and scientific explanations have gradually displaced traditional religious theories
- Immanuel Kant - Dignity and equal worth of human beings - his conception of individuals as "ends in themselves" and not merely means for the achievement of the ends of others
- Equated with atomism - belief that society is made up of collection of self-interested and largely self-suffiecient inds.)
- C. B. Macpherson - "possessive individualism" - proprietor of own person or capacities "owing nothing to society for them"
- Optimistic view of human nature
Freedom
- Liberty and freedom are interchangeable
- Freedom is the supreme political value
- J. S. Mill - freedom so long as it does not cause "harm to others" Positive freedom
- E.g. addictive drugs such as heroin and cocaine are okay as they only do harm to the individual, but smoking is not as it damages those around through second hand smoke
- J. Rawls - Everyone is entitled to the widest possible liberrty
- Isaiah Berlin - distinguised between negative and positive freedoms.
- Negative - no restrictions - no constraints
- Positive - self-mastery, achievement of autonomy - development of the human personality
- T.H. Green - Negative freedom is to do as I like, positive is to do what I like
Reason
- "Age of reason" under the Enlightenment
- Key thinkers include Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Immanuel Kant, Adam Smith and Jeremy Bentham
- Human beings are rational, thinking creatures
- Strong bias against paternalism
- View human history in terms of progress not defeat
- Seldom subscribed to the utopian creed of human perfectibility
- Believes in self-interest and egoism
- Believe that force can be justified on the grounds of self-defence or as a means of countering opperssion, but always and only after reason and argument have been exhausted
Justice
- Denotes a particular kind of moral judgement
- Belief in equality
- Strong commitment to oundational equality
- Equality before the law as an element of judicial neutrality - "one person, one vote; one vote, one value" and udnerpins the liberal commitment to democracy
- Belief in equality of opportunity, not equality of outcome. E.g. LibDems increasing amount of bursaries on offer while in the coalition
- Leads to a belief in meritocracy
- People should be judged by their talents not race or anything else, Martin Luther King - "the content of their character"
- John Rawls - economic inequality is justifiable if it works ot the benefit of those poorest in society
Toleration
- Acceptance of pluralism
- Toleration been attributed to Voltaire - "I detest what you say but will defend to the death your right to say it"
- Leads to a goal of personal autonomy
- Toleration should lead to a balanced society
The liberal state
- Liberals do not believe that a balanced tolerant society will simply develop naturally - fear that humans will want to exploit others. Our liberty rests upon them being refrained from encroaching on our freedom
- This is where liberals highly differ from anarchists - who believe that law and gov't are unnecessary
- John Locke - "where there is no law there is no freedom"
- Hobbes - "Social contract theory" - agreement by individuals to form a state in order to escape from the chaos of the "state of nature"
- The state acts as an umpire or a neutral referee in society
Constitutionalism
- All gov'ts are potential tyrannies against the individual
- Egoism plus power equals corruption
- Principle of limited gov't
- First written constitution - USA Constitution written in 1787
- The Bill of Rights was also a liberal step - establishing entrenched liberties for American citizens
- Montesquieu "Power should be a check to power"
Liberal Democracy
- Liberal democracy is the dominant pollitical force in the developed world
- Its 'liberal' features are reflected in a network of internal and external checks on gov't that are designed to guarantee civil liberty and ensure a healthy civil society (seen esp. in the USA)
- 'democratic' features are seen in a system of regualr and competitve elections
- 19C liberals often saw democracy as threatnening or dangerous
- Echoed the ideas of Plato and Aristotle
- 'Democratic solution' to conflict is a recourse to numbers and the application of maj. rule - the will of the maj. should outweigh the min.
- Alexis de Tocqueville - "Tyranny of the majority"
- James Madison - Consitutitional Convention 1787 checks and balances are the best defence against majoritarianism and protecting minorities
- J.S. Mill stated that the make-up of society means that political wisdom is unequally distributed due to educaton - still applies today
- SO elected pols should speak for themselves rather than reflect the views of their electors
- 20C - Libs see democracy as a virtue - earliest justification was consent of democracy
- John Locke then extended this that voting rights should be extended
- American Revoltuion - "No taxation without representation"
- 20C - need for consensus in society was the reason for democracy
Classical Liberalism
- High point during 19C - can be referred to as "nineteenth-century liberalism"
- Cradle of clas lib was the UK
- Deeply rooted in Anglo-Saxon countries - UK and USA
- Modernly referred to as neoclassical liberalism or neoliberalism
- Beliefs:
- Egoistical liberalism - humans are rationally, self-interested creatures
- Negative freedom
- State is a 'necessary evil' - Paine, "nightwatchman" - Locke
- Civil society needs a self-regulating market economy
- Core values:
- NATURAL RIGHTS
- UTILITARIANISM
- ECONOMIC LIBERALISM
- SOCIAL DARWINISM
- NEOLIBERALISM
Natural Rights
- Theorists: Locke and Jefferson
- Jefferson: 'inalienable rights' that cannot be taken away = "life, liberty and property"
- Locke - argued against arbitrary or unlimited gov't - if gov't violates the rights of its citizens, they in return have the right of rebellion
- Main functions of the state:
- Maintaining public order and protecting property
- Providing defence against external attack
- Ensuring that contracts are enforced
- Jefferson - "That gov't is best which governs least"
Utilitarianism
- "Greatest happiness for the greatest number" - Bentham
- Notably Bentham and Mill in this area
- Measure the 'rightness' of an action
- Human beings are rationally self-interested creatures - they can decide what choice to make to benefit themselves the most
- No one else can judge the quality or degree of their happiness - LIMITATION
- also - someone is going to be unhappy by this, only appeasing the majority, minorities are left out LIMITATION
Economic liberalism
- Based on Smith and Ricardo
- Wide-ranging gov't restrictions upon economic activity
- Smith - economy operates as a market
- Economic theory therefore drew on utilitarianism in constructing the idea of 'economic man' - that humans are egoistical and bent on material acquisition
- Smith - "invisible hand" of the market
- Free-market beliefs - laissez-faire economics
Social Darwinism
- Samuel Smiles - "Self-Help" - used the phrase "Heaven helps those who help themselves"
- Cobden - "Look not to Parliament, look only to yourselves"
- Spencer - highlighted survival of the fittest
- Sumner - "the drunkard in the gutter is just where he ought to be"
Neoliberalism
- 'Thatcherism' and 'Reaganism' - neoliberalism formed part of a larger, new right ideological project - seeking lairssez-faire economics with a cons. social policy
- Amounts to a form of market fundamentalism (absolute faith in the market)
- von Hayek and Friedman attacked the economic role of the gov't
- Smith - "invisible hand"
Modern liberalism
- '20C liberalism'
- Classical libs argued mod libs have broke with principles such as individualism
- Libs say they have not betrayed - they have built on ideas
- Modern lib ideas;
- Individuality
- Positive freedom
- Social liberalism
- Economic management
J.S. Mill - described as the "heart of liberalism" - bridge between clas lib and mod lib
Mill - "the individual is sovereign"
T.H. Green - positive freedom - egoism is restrained by a degree of altruism - 'socialist lib'
Social Liberalism
- Growth of state intervention
- Social welfare increasing
- Modern states become welfare states
- Promoted by mod libs
- Defended on the basis of equality of opportunity
- Welfare rights are positive rights
- Rawls developed a defence of redistribution and welfare based on the idea of 'equality as fairness'
- If people were unaware of their social position and circumstances they would view an egalitarian society as 'fairer' than an inegalitarian one
Economic management
- Abandonment of laissez-faire
- Great Depression 1930s , Wall Street Crash 1929 - high levels of unemployment
- Large extent the interventionist policies that followed were guided by the work of UK economist John Maynard Keynes
- Gov't spending is an 'injection' of demand to the economy, and taxation is a withdrawal from the economy
- Unemployment could therefore be solved, not by capitalism, but by gov't intervention
- Gov't 'overspending' will do well for the economy
Other
- Commercial liberalism - Ricardo - free trade is important
- Republican liberalism - Woodrow Wilson - autocratic or authoritarian states are inherently aggressive, democratic states are naturally peaceful
- Humanitarian intervention - e.g. Iraq 2003 - debateable
Key Figures / Examples
- J. Locke - Constitutionalism, limited gov't 17C/18C
- A. Smith - 'Invisible hand' of the market, economic importance - 18C
- I. Kant - Treat others as ends not merely means 18C/19C
- T. Jefferson - Natural aristocracy, limited gov't and laissez faire economics 19C
- J. Bentham - Utilitarianism 19C
- J. Madison - Checks and balances - 19C
- J.S. Mill - "Heart of liberalism" - 19C
- T. H. Green - Positive freedom 19C
- J. Rawls - Justice = fairness 20C
- 1994 - lost the right to remain silent when arrested and it not to mean guilt - anti-freedom
- 2015 - attempts to put no income tax on anyone earning under £10,000 p.a. economic freedom
- Freedom - attempts to reduce voting age to 16 - Clegg
- Pluralism AV referendum 2011
- Civil Liberties protected - Same Sex Marriage Act 2013 and Human Rights Act 1998
- Checks and balances e.g. Judicial Review
Tensions
Classical liberalism..................................................Modern liberalism
economic liberalism....................................................social liberalism
egoistical individualism................................................developmental individualism
maximise utility..........................................................personal growth
negative freedom.........................................................positive freedom
minimal state..............................................................enabling state
free-market economy..................................................managed economy
rights-based justice....................................................justice as fairness
strict meritocracy.......................................................concern for the poor
individual responsibility...............................................social responsibility
safety-net welfare.......................................................cradle-to-grave welfare
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