Governmentality: Power and Rule in Modern Society

Voorkant
SAGE, 4 okt 1999 - 229 pagina's
What is governmentality? How are individuals and cultures organized in modern society? Foucault's work placed the subject of governmentality back on the social science agenda. Foucault's discussion of knowledge and power revealed the micro-politics of governmentality. His work extended our understanding of the principles of governmentality to the bio-politics, the police, the state, welfarism, liberalism and proposed new areas of study such as authoritarian rule and reflexive government. But his work also obscured the history of the concept of governmentality and blunted the heritage of work in sociology and political science on the subject. This book aims to reclaim governmentality as a central concept in sociology. Author Mitchell Dean seeks to learn from Foucault, but also to draw on wider analytical frameworks and traditions to provide the first complete overview of the concept. He argues that governmentality encapsulates a fundamentally new orientation to the study of power and authority. It allows for a new, more relevant understanding of how the individual is connected to the state and vice versa. Lucid, timely and shrewd, the book makes a major contribution to understanding a concept that is belatedly being recognized as a core concept in the social sciences.
 

Inhoudsopgave

Basic Concepts and Themes
9
Genealogy and Governmentality 40
40
Two Case Studies 60 19
60
Pastoral Power Police and Reason of State 73 1332
73
BioPolitics and Sovereignty
98
Liberalism
113
Authoritarian Governmentality 131 111
131
NeoLiberalism and Advanced Liberal Government
149
Risk and Reflexive Government
176
Not Bad but Dangerous
198
Glossary
209
Index
215
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Over de auteur (1999)

Mitchell Dean is Professor of Public Governance, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark, and Professor of Sociology at the University of Newcastle, Australia. His previous books include Governmentality: Power and Rule in Modern Society (1999, revised second edition, SAGE, 2010),The Constitution of Poverty: Toward a Genealogy of Liberal Governance (Routledge, 1991/2012), Critical and Effective Histories: Foucault's Methods and Historical Sociology (Routledge, 1994), and Governing Societies: Political Perspectives on Domestic and International Rule (Open University Press, 2007). His publications range across a large number of fields focusing on problems of government, sovereignty and power, liberalism and neoliberalism, political and social thought, historical sociology, and social and public policy. However he has also published on topics as diverse as risk management, e-government, political mythology, ancient societies, war and peace, contemporary art, cinema and fashion.

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