Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2009
A general perception of crisis at the end of the postwar period of growth has spawned two types of theoretical response: while a conservative theory of overload focusses on ungovernability caused by postmaterialist value change, radical analysis points to the structural contradictions of the welfare and intervention state. This article suggests that the current crisis is characterized by postmaterialist persistence and structural contradictions under the conditions of economic constraint. It examines polarization and potential mobilization of fragmented postindustrial societies in the context of neo-conservative politics, and it suggests a regime of economic dualism and/or corporatism as the most likely outcome.
La crise telle que perçue généralement depuis la fin de la période de croissance des années d'après-guerre a suscité deux types d'explication: celle de la théorie conservatrice qui met l'accent sur le phénomène de l'ingouvernabilité et du changement vers des valeurs post-matérialistes, et celle de l'analyse radicale qui fait ressortir les contradictions structurelles de l'interventionnisme d'état et de l'État providence. Le présent article caractérise la crise actuelle à la fois par la persistance des valeurs post-matérialistes et par l'existence de contradictions structurelles inhérentes aux conditions de l'économie. II examine la polarisation sociale et les possibilités de mobilisation au sein des sociétés post-industrielles fragmentées et ce, dans le contexte des politiques néo-conservatrices, et il propose un régime d'économie mixte et/ou de corporatisme comme étant l'ssue la plus vraisembable.
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