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  1. The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica. Classical liberals (now often called libertarians) regard the state as the primary threat to individual freedom and advocate limiting its powers to those necessary to protect basic rights against interference by others.

    • New Liberalism

      new liberalism, in British history, a body of distinctive...

  2. 28 de nov. de 1996 · We begin by (1) examining different interpretations of liberalism's core commitment — liberty. We then consider (2) the longstanding debate between the ‘old’ and the ‘newliberalism. In section (3) we turn to the more recent controversy about whether liberalism is a ‘comprehensive’ or a ‘political’ doctrine.

  3. 709–729. Published: 05 September 2013. Split View. Annotate. Cite. Permissions. Share. Abstract. This article presents three core theoretical assumptions underlying liberal theories, elaborates the three variants of liberal theory, and draws some broader implications.

  4. Summary. Some contemporary liberals now acknowledge, partly in response to their communitarian critics, that they must “tap neglected characteristics of the liberal tradition” if they are to revitalize liberal political theory. We seek to do just this by retrieving the new liberalism.

  5. 5 de abr. de 2013 · 1 Liberalism, Old and New; 2 Liberalism and the Public Good; 3 Liberal Ideology and Political Philosophy; 4 Sovereign State, Sovereign Self; 5 The Anarchy Game; 6 The Radical Edge of Liberalism; 7 The Idea of Freedom; 8 Conflicts in Classical Liberalism; 9 Individualism; 10 Methodological Individualism; Epilogue; Index

  6. It is conventional to distinguish between an old liberalism, with a robust conception of private property and a limited role for government in the economy, and a new liberalism that permits government to override individual property rights in the pursuit of the general welfare.