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Rubie Mccloughan

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Jul 11, 2024, 9:37:52 AM7/11/24
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It now seems that some of the engines that have driven this process are breaking down, not only from a conjectural perspective due to the most immediate episodes (pandemic, wars, planetary awareness of global warming, etc.) but also in view of the sustainability of long-term socio-economic development.

In their disruption of current models, technological innovation, robotization, and AI may represent an opportunity to move toward this new world order. But the governance of the coming transformations must also lead to the construction of new forms of political organization and new labor scenarios that overcome the ups and downs of volatile and geographically limited democratic systems.

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More than three decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the old Western dream of the urbi et orbi extension of its old democratic formulas of economic and political governance does not seem to have prevailed. Rather, we are besieged by a malaise resulting from the advance of growing authoritarianism, even in the very heart of the oldest democracies. It is not, as in the past, the emergence of fascism or Nazism, strictu sensu, but the expansion of authoritarian expressions of all kinds, with idiosyncratic characteristics, that are permeating institutions in the most varied geographical settings.

These authoritarianisms obstruct the opportunities offered by technological progress for a more inclusive world in all spheres of human life. The counterpoint will have to be new forms of governance in institutions, freeing us from the absolute power of large corporations. Emerging social movements demand forms of democracy that are more participatory than representative, with direct involvement in the collective governance of citizens and their forms of organization in interconnected networks. A new socio-economic paradigm would have to provide answers to this socio-political breaking point.

Socio-economics, it should be remembered, is a scientific approach that seeks to build alternative paradigms in the social sciences; thus, in this context, it is a dynamic axis that contributes to the establishment of a new theoretical and methodological horizon in the social sciences. In this perspective, SASE provides a platform for creative empirical and theoretical research on key social problems. We are committed to supporting a diverse international membership which fosters and produces thoughtful yet lively intellectual and interdisciplinary debates.

With regard to these themes, and the more specific areas of the 18 networks that organize the contents of our society, we encourage you to submit your papers and your proposals for mini-conferences at the 35th annual SASE conference, which will be held at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro in July 2023.

Ahora parece que algunos de los motores que han estado impulsando este proceso se estn estropeando, no slo desde una perspectiva coyuntural por los episodios ms inmediatos (guerras pandmicas, conciencia planetaria del aumento del calentamiento global, etc.) sino tambin a la vista de la sostenibilidad del desarrollo socioeconmico a largo plazo.

En su disrupcin de los modelos actuales, la innovacin tecnolgica, la robotizacin y la IA pueden representar una oportunidad para avanzar hacia este nuevo orden mundial. Pero la gobernanza de las transformaciones venideras tambin debe conducir a la construccin de nuevas formas de organizacin poltica y nuevos escenarios laborales que superen los vaivenes de sistemas democrticos voltiles y geogrficamente limitados.

Ms de tres dcadas despus de la cada del Muro de Berln, el viejo sueo occidental de la extensin urbi et orbi de sus viejas frmulas democrticas de gobernanza econmica y poltica no parece haber prevalecido. Ms bien nos asedia un malestar producto del avance de un autoritarismo creciente, incluso en el seno mismo de las democracias ms antiguas. No se trata, como en el pasado, del surgimiento del fascismo o del nazismo, strictu sensu, sino de la expansin de expresiones autoritarias de todo tipo, con caractersticas idiosincrsicas, que estn permeando instituciones en los ms variados escenarios geogrficos.

Estos autoritarismos obstruyen las oportunidades que ofrece el progreso tecnolgico para un mundo ms inclusivo en todas las esferas de la vida humana. El contrapunto tendrn que ser nuevas formas de gobierno en las instituciones, liberndonos del poder absoluto de las grandes corporaciones. Los movimientos sociales emergentes demandan formas de democracia ms participativas que representativas, con implicacin directa en la gobernanza colectiva de los ciudadanos y sus formas de organizacin en redes interconectadas. Un nuevo paradigma socioeconmico tendra que dar respuestas a este punto de quiebre sociopoltico.

La demografa no ayuda en el asunto. Somos conscientes de que el modelo de produccin y consumo -que venimos construyendo con mayor o menor xito, segn la regin geogrfica- y el estabilizador social y poltico del Estado del Bienestar, sufren una ruptura demogrfica en este siglo. El aumento de la longevidad obliga a repensar este modelo basado en una economa en constante crecimiento en un marco de mercado que impulsa intensas desigualdades.

Como seala Diane Coyle en su ltimo trabajo, estamos en un perodo en el que no hay visiones del mundo claras para dar forma a las decisiones polticas, y hay una mezcla de ideas, tanto estatistas como de libre mercado, combinadas con un profundo descontento de los votantes y prdida de confianza. (2021:195). En suma, estamos inmersos en una sociedad desorientada, en la que la eleccin poltica se vuelve muy difcil y confusa, y se expresa a travs de protestas ms o menos violentas (Badiou 2021).

A pesar del fracaso del neoliberalismo en alcanzar niveles ms altos de crecimiento, prosperidad, equidad y libertad, su extraa no muerte (Crouch 2011) ha seguido obstruyendo el surgimiento de nuevos paradigmas socioeconmicos. Es necesario avanzar con un nuevo paradigma social, econmico y poltico que ilumine nuevos caminos para la organizacin productiva y el modelo de consumo, y que nos permita mantener un equilibrio estable con el mundo natural en el que vivimos.

Mini-conferences consist of a minimum of 3 panels, which will be featured as a separate stream in the program. Submissions are open to all scholars on the basis of an extended abstract. If your abstract is accepted, all mini-conferences require accepted participants to submit full papers by 15 June 2023. If a paper proposal cannot be accommodated within a mini-conference, organizers will forward it to the most appropriate research network as a regular submission.

Gabriel Rached is an Academic Researcher and Associate Professor in International Studies. He holds a PhD in International Political Economy (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro) with his thesis concerning Multilateral Organizations and Economic Development. He carries out research and teaches on the topic of Global Governance and is involved with undergraduate and graduate activities. In the last years, he has been conducting research as a Postdoctoral Fellow in International Studies (Universit degli Studi di Milano) working on Global Shifts and the insertion of the emerging countries in the international arena. Since then, has been studying thematics related to the New World Order and contemporary changes in the international system, particularly discussing new features for Regional Cooperation and the contemporary challenges of Multilateralism.

Quinn Slobodian is Marion Butler MacLean Professor of the History of Ideas at Wellesley College and associate fellow at Chatham House. He is the author of Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism (Harvard, 2018), and the co-editor (with Dieter Plehwe) of Market Civilizations: Neoliberals East and South (Zone Books, 2022) and Nine Lives of Neoliberalism (Verso, 2020). His next book, Crack-Up Capitalism, will be published in 2023 by Metropolitan in the US and Penguin in the UK. He is the co-director of the History & Political Economy Project ( ).

Christy Thornton is assistant professor of sociology and Latin American studies at Johns Hopkins University. She is the author of Revolution in Development: Mexico and the Governance of the Global Economy (University of California Press, 2021). She is the co-director of the History & Political Economy Project ( ).

This is not the first time that neoliberalism has been pronounced dead or dying. In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, there was no shortage of commentary on the imminent collapse of the neoliberal order (e.g., Stiglitz, 2008; Wallerstein, 2008). But over the subsequent decade, social scientists comprehensively documented that this was not the case. For example, the crisis had long-lasting adverse effects on employment, and sparked a renewed assault on state intervention through austerity and privatization. Will this time be different?

This mini-conference hopes to encourage empirical attempts to capture the broad contours of post-neoliberal transformations, including attention to their intellectual, bureaucratic and political aspects, as well as place them in their broader historical context. How have countries or regions sought to move beyond the neoliberal paradigm, how have they succeeded or failed, and why? How have global processes shaped the possibilities for post-neoliberal alternatives? How do social movements and political forces across the ideological spectrum relate to the neoliberal order and its potential overhaul? What are the intellectual underpinnings of ongoing political-economic transformations? What parallels can be drawn from past attempts at fundamental paradigm change? Submissions that approach these questions through innovative theoretical and empirical work across a range of disciplines (including political science, sociology, history, public policy, geography, and economics) are welcome.

Dr. Andreas Nlke is Professor of Political Science at Goethe University (Frankfurt) and Senior Researcher at the Leibniz Institute for Financial Research SAFE. Before joining Goethe University, he has taught at the universities of Konstanz, Leipzig, Amsterdam and Utrecht. His main research areas are at the intersection of comparative and international political economy, including the political economy of emerging economies, the political dimensions of financialization, the institutions of the German export model, the politics of European economic (dis-)integration and the political economy of populism. He has published in journals such as the Review of International Political Economy, New Political Economy, World Politics, Business and Politics, International Politics, Competition and Change, the European Journal of International Relations, Critical Perspectives on International Business, the Review of African Political Economy, the Socio-Economic Review, Environment and Planning and the Journal of Common Market Studies. Andreas also served as consultant in the field of development cooperation, mainly for the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ), but also for the European Commission and the World Bank.

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