Call for Papers: The Politics of Legality in a Neo-liberal Age

August 1-2 2014
Faculty of Law, University of New South Wales

This symposium will examine the nexus between the political dominance of 
liberal legal ideas and the economic dominance of neo-liberal capitalism.

According to classical liberal theory the state is legitimate to the extent 
that it respects legality.  The idea that the state should respect individual 
rights and the rule of law continues to have considerable purchase on our 
political discourse: the language of human rights is used by NGOs to criticise 
state violence, and by the same states to justify the violence of military 
interventions; those concerned with the legal response to terrorism often 
invoke the rule of law to criticise the expansion of powers for the executive 
branch of government; while the very same executive pays meticulous attention 
to justifying actions such as torture in legal terms.  Indeed, law is so 
central to the contemporary political imagination that the theorist Norberto 
Bobbio has dubbed our time the ‘age of rights’.  Economically, however, the age 
in which we live is that of neo-liberal capitalism.  The critique of the 
regulatory state and the advocacy of the ‘free market’ developed by neo-liberal 
thinkers such as Frederich Hayek, Milton Friedman, and Ludwig von Mises have 
had a serious impact on practices of government over the last 30 years.  
Indeed, it has been argued that neo-liberalism has played a major role in the 
concentration of economic power in this time, profoundly influencing the 
policies that have shaped the course of economic globalisation; those that led 
to Global Financial Crisis of 2008; and the politics of austerity that has 
characterised the state response to this crisis in the US and the EU.

Neo-liberalism is not, however, simply an economic theory but a political 
philosophy that has legality at its core, defining itself against the 
regulatory state for violating individual liberty and advocating private 
property rights and a certain vision of the rule of law as crucial to the 
functioning of capitalist economies.  The rule of law has also been central to 
the processes of neo-liberal globalisation with ‘rule of law promotion’ playing 
a crucial role in developing markets in the global South.  And, while human 
rights are often used as tools for political critique and resistance, the 
historian Samuel Moyn has illustrated that the language of human rights has 
colonised political discourse since the late 1970s.  This is the very same 
period in which neo-liberalism has restructured the relationship between 
economy and society and state, raising the question of whether there is a 
relationship between these two phenomena.
An understanding of the contemporary political conjuncture, and the 
possibilities for its transformation, demands an analysis of the relationship 
between liberal legality and the current hegemony of neo-liberal capitalism. 
This symposium will address this conjuncture through papers which engage, among 
a range of other possibilities, the following themes and topics:

-          What is neo-liberalism (a radical economic theory, a political 
philosophy, a governmental practice, a theory of the enterprising subject, a 
mutation in the history of liberalism)? How can we best understand and 
historicize the concept, and what set of theoretical analyses best sheds light 
on its contemporary operations?
-          What transformations has the neo-liberal era wrought to the state, 
its function, its operation, its ideological mode of presentation and 
legitimation?
-          What role specifically do law and legal ideas perform in 
undergirding and reinforcing neo-liberalism as a political and economic project?
-          What is the relationship between the critique of totalitarianism and 
the ideological defence of neo-liberalism? How can we think differently about 
the relation between state repression and the neo-liberal economic project?
-          How does the discourse surrounding the ‘rule of law’ and its 
promotion, especially in the global South, reinforce neo-liberalism? How might 
the rule of law, or aspects of the rule of law tradition, interrupt or restrain 
neo-liberal capitalism?
-          What is the relation between the discourse of human rights and 
neo-liberalism – historically, conceptually, and politically? How do human 
rights actors and institutions recreate (or oppose) neo-liberal hegemony?
-          What critical or emancipatory purchase, if any, do traditional 
liberal legal ideas (such as accountability, the separation of the political 
and the economic, the restraint of arbitrary power) still have in a neo-liberal 
context?
-          What relevance do the classic critiques of these liberal legal ideas 
(of legal objectivity and neutrality, of formalism, and of the commodity form 
in particular, etc.) have to our neo-liberal present? Do they perform the same 
work? What work might they do? How might we reframe or update them to take 
account of changed political-economic circumstances?
-          What prospects are there for legal resistance to contemporary forms 
of neo-liberalism? What might a strategic left response to neo-liberalism look 
like – a defence of the protections of the welfare state, or the creation of 
something new?

The symposium will take place over 2 days at the University of New South Wales 
Law School, Sydney, Australia on 1 and 2 August 2014. We invite paper proposals 
on any of the above, or related, themes. If you wish to discuss your proposed 
paper with the convenors in advance please email either Dr Ben Golder 
([email protected]) or Dr Daniel McLoughlin ([email protected]).

Procedure: Please email a 300 word abstract, 75 word bio and your institutional 
affiliation (if appropriate) to [email protected] by 28 March with the email 
subject line: ‘Neo-liberalism and law symposium’. We regret that only a limited 
number of papers can be selected for this symposium.

Publication Plans: Whilst we do not require full length papers in advance of 
the symposium, the aim of our meeting is to work towards the publication of 
selected papers in an edited volume. Initial negotiations with interested 
publishers are already underway.


Daniel McLoughlin
Vice-Chancellor's Postdoctoral Fellow
Faculty of Law
Room 358, Law Building
University of New South Wales
Kensington
NSW, 2052
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