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  1. Foucault, Gary Becker and the Critique of Neoliberalism.David Newheiser - 2016 - Theory, Culture and Society 33 (5):3-21.
    Although Foucault’s 1979 lectures on The Birth of Biopolitics promised to treat the theme of biopolitics, the course deals at length with neoliberalism while mentioning biopolitics hardly at all. Some scholars account for this elision by claiming that Foucault sympathized with neoliberalism; I argue on the contrary that Foucault develops a penetrating critique of the neoliberal claim to preserve individual liberty. Following Foucault, I show that the Chicago economist Gary Becker exemplifies what Foucault describes elsewhere as biopolitics: a form of (...)
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  • The Identity Game: Michel Foucault's Discourse-Mediated Identity as an Effective Tool for Achieving a Narrative-Based Ethic.Steve Urbanski - 2011 - Open Ethics Journal 5 (1):3-9.
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  • Post-Marxism and the Politics of Human Rights: Lefort, Badiou, Agamben, Rancière.Daniel McLoughlin - 2016 - Law and Critique 27 (3):303-321.
    Recent histories of human rights have shown that the turn to human rights as a form of politics occurred as a placeholder for utopian energies at the end of history, coinciding with a retreat of the organised left, the abandonment of the theme of revolution, and the pluralisation of political struggles. This essay examines the way that radical continental theory has responded to the political hegemony of human rights by focusing on ‘post-Marxist’ thought. Examining the work of four influential critics (...)
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  • La guerra y el gobierno en la encrucijada de la filosofía política de Michel Foucault con la tradición illustrada liberal.Luis Félix Blengino - 2014 - Nuevo Pensamiento. Revista de Filosofía 4 (4).
    En este artículo se discute la opinión dominante acerca de que Foucault habría abandonado el modelo de la guerra para pensar el poder para reemplazarlo por el del gobierno. Esto lo acercaría a la tradición ilustrada liberal mientras que lo alejaría de la influencia nietzscheana. Por el contrario, defendemos la idea de que no hay tal abandono sino más bien la elaboración de un modelo bélico- gubernamental.
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  • The domestication of Foucault: Government, critique, war.Ansgar Allen & Roy Goddard - 2014 - History of the Human Sciences 27 (5):26-53.
    Though Foucault was intrigued by the possibilities of radical social transformation, he resolutely resisted the idea that such transformation could escape the effects of power and expressed caution when it came to the question of revolution. In this article we argue that in one particularly influential line of development of Foucault’s work his exemplary caution has been exaggerated in a way that weakens the political aspirations of post-Foucaldian scholarship. The site of this reduction is a complex debate over the role (...)
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