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Facing the future: the legacies of post neoliberalism

Facing the future: the legacies of post neoliberalism
Facing the future: the legacies of post neoliberalism
In this issue, Guest Editors Jean Grugel and Pia Riggirozzi outline the post neoliberal debate and ask whether the legacies of post-neoliberalism in Latin America will continue to reverberate and shape the region’s politics and political economy and if so, how. By exploring these questions Grugel and Riggirozzi discuss approaches to much-discussed topics of democratic citizenship and inclusive and sustainable development. While there is no settled debate, and certainly no settled practice in relation to democracy and development in current Latin America, the editors focus on the various forms of political and social contention surrounding post neoliberalism alternative policy paradigms. Surveying the literature published in Development and Change over the last decade, this virtual issue is concerned with three inter-linked themes: (i) the critique of neoliberal development, in which development itself frequently became conflated with growth and social and cultural homogeneity, and the articulation of alternatives in the shadow of the Sustainable Development Goals; (ii) the ever-present challenges of citizenship and democracy in Latin America, which have consistently underpinned demands for political, cultural and economic changes in the region since twentieth century; and (iii) the nexus between post-neoliberalism, the environment and the sustainability agenda, which is critical for the survival and wellbeing for many of the region’s peoples and communities. The articles reviewed in this issue cover a range of country experiences and trace the evolving critique to and opportunities of post-neoliberalism in Latin America.

What becomes clear is that unsettled questions around citizenship, democracy and development are practical as well as theoretical. The Editors therefore propose a much-needed discussion about achievements, limitations and legacies of post-neoliberalism to make sense of its ideological and political economic prospects.


0012-155X
Riggirozzi, Pia
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Grugel, Jean
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Riggirozzi, Pia
ed3be4f8-37e7-46a2-8242-f6495d727c22
Grugel, Jean
11807d62-c315-4527-a3dd-d5f135f2d307

Riggirozzi, Pia and Grugel, Jean (2019) Facing the future: the legacies of post neoliberalism. Development and Change.

Record type: Special issue

Abstract

In this issue, Guest Editors Jean Grugel and Pia Riggirozzi outline the post neoliberal debate and ask whether the legacies of post-neoliberalism in Latin America will continue to reverberate and shape the region’s politics and political economy and if so, how. By exploring these questions Grugel and Riggirozzi discuss approaches to much-discussed topics of democratic citizenship and inclusive and sustainable development. While there is no settled debate, and certainly no settled practice in relation to democracy and development in current Latin America, the editors focus on the various forms of political and social contention surrounding post neoliberalism alternative policy paradigms. Surveying the literature published in Development and Change over the last decade, this virtual issue is concerned with three inter-linked themes: (i) the critique of neoliberal development, in which development itself frequently became conflated with growth and social and cultural homogeneity, and the articulation of alternatives in the shadow of the Sustainable Development Goals; (ii) the ever-present challenges of citizenship and democracy in Latin America, which have consistently underpinned demands for political, cultural and economic changes in the region since twentieth century; and (iii) the nexus between post-neoliberalism, the environment and the sustainability agenda, which is critical for the survival and wellbeing for many of the region’s peoples and communities. The articles reviewed in this issue cover a range of country experiences and trace the evolving critique to and opportunities of post-neoliberalism in Latin America.

What becomes clear is that unsettled questions around citizenship, democracy and development are practical as well as theoretical. The Editors therefore propose a much-needed discussion about achievements, limitations and legacies of post-neoliberalism to make sense of its ideological and political economic prospects.


Text
Facing the Future DC August 30 final - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 3 October 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 April 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 425316
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/425316
ISSN: 0012-155X
PURE UUID: a6d4acec-b96e-4eb9-9ba7-d91c4afad533
ORCID for Pia Riggirozzi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5809-890X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 12 Oct 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:09

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Contributors

Author: Pia Riggirozzi ORCID iD
Author: Jean Grugel

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