Second general discussion /// Seminar: Capital, the State and European Integration
- Duration: 87:32
- Updated: 18 Jan 2015
Organized by / organizacija: Centre for labour studies (Centar za radničke studije - CRS, radnickistudiji.org)
Seminar: "Capital, the State and European Integration"
net.culture club MaMa, Preradovićeva 18, Zagreb, 18.10.2014., 17.30h
Moderator: Marko Kostanić
The second general discussion in the seminar "Capital, the State and European Integration" was held on the second day, following presentations by Werner Bonefeld (European Economic Constitution and the Transformation of Democracy: On Class and the State of Money and Law) and Bob Jessop via Skype (States and State Power: A Strategic-Relational Approach) as well as presentations on the first day by Jens Wissel ("The EU as a New State Project") and John Kannankulam ("Competing Hegemony Projects in the Current European Crisis: a Historical Materialist Policy Analysis on Political Struggles") followed by the first general discussion.
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Until not too long ago, even amongst parts of the left, the historic decline of the relevance of the state was taken as a 'given'. Under the umbrella of 'globalization theory' far-reaching proclamations on deep tectonic shifts were the height of fashion. At closer inspection, however, the impatiently sweeping character of many such generalizations more often than not revealed itself to be the consequence of a lack of both conceptual rigor and empirical scrupulousness, embarrassingly echoing much of the imaginary of neoliberalism's triumphalism and its intellectual proponents.
The onset of the financial and economic crisis of 2007/2008 and its consequences made many of these theoretical constructs seem obsolete over night. Large, coordinated state interventions and rescue packages were the order of the day, pointing to complexities in the relations between states and capital which simplistic end-of-state narratives seemed decisively badly equipped to tackle, let alone explain in any meaningful fashion. In some quarters this then lead to talk of a 'return of Keynes' or, more generally, proclamations of a 'return of the state' itself. But this pendulum swing in the opposite direction proved to be no less superficial and premature than what had preceded it. Rather than leading to a restoration of post-war Keynesianism, the dominant drive of crisis policies reaffirmed a preference for neoliberal solutions, now of an increasingly authoritarian character, devoid of old democratic niceties and former procedural inhibitions. Here too, a complex and often untransparent assemblage of markets, transnational institutions, nation states and their mutual interactions confirmed the deficiencies of much left thinking to adequately account for these processes and the shifting institutional architecture underpinning them.
Yet without a proper understanding of the contemporary configuration of relations between capital, the state and transnational institutions, it will be impossible to judge the plausibility or implausibility of various competing proposals on the left and their respective strategic projections. Nowhere more so than within the European Union, where deepening integration now assumes the seemingly paradoxical form of deepening socio-economic fragmentation along national lines and a palpable regional polarization into core and periphery. Centripetal and centrifugal forces seem to overlap and intertwine in a complex process with as of yet unclear long-term consequences for the future of the European project itself. The increasingly authoritarian character of 'crisis-resolution' policies pose long-term dangers for the subaltern classes and endanger formal-democratic standards long considered an irreversible historical achievement. In parallel, a new surge of right-wing populism all over Europe seeks to take advantage of the ensuing socio-economic degradation and political disillusionment...
In trying to address these complex issues, the seminar will revisit fundamental questions on the nature of the capitalist state, the degree of transfer of its prerogatives to EU and transnational institutions, the ensuing 'division of labour' between national and transnational levels, the class character of these processes, their implications for democratic standards, as well as their possible contradictions and future perspectives. The political stakes are clear: only by properly understanding the structural conditions of the current conjuncture, its institutional complexities, inherent limits and contradictions, can viable left strategies be formulated.
---
http://radnickistudiji.org/?p=266
Programme of Centre for labour studies is supported by Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung Southeast Europe.
http://wn.com/Second_general_discussion_Seminar_Capital,_the_State_and_European_Integration
Organized by / organizacija: Centre for labour studies (Centar za radničke studije - CRS, radnickistudiji.org)
Seminar: "Capital, the State and European Integration"
net.culture club MaMa, Preradovićeva 18, Zagreb, 18.10.2014., 17.30h
Moderator: Marko Kostanić
The second general discussion in the seminar "Capital, the State and European Integration" was held on the second day, following presentations by Werner Bonefeld (European Economic Constitution and the Transformation of Democracy: On Class and the State of Money and Law) and Bob Jessop via Skype (States and State Power: A Strategic-Relational Approach) as well as presentations on the first day by Jens Wissel ("The EU as a New State Project") and John Kannankulam ("Competing Hegemony Projects in the Current European Crisis: a Historical Materialist Policy Analysis on Political Struggles") followed by the first general discussion.
---
Until not too long ago, even amongst parts of the left, the historic decline of the relevance of the state was taken as a 'given'. Under the umbrella of 'globalization theory' far-reaching proclamations on deep tectonic shifts were the height of fashion. At closer inspection, however, the impatiently sweeping character of many such generalizations more often than not revealed itself to be the consequence of a lack of both conceptual rigor and empirical scrupulousness, embarrassingly echoing much of the imaginary of neoliberalism's triumphalism and its intellectual proponents.
The onset of the financial and economic crisis of 2007/2008 and its consequences made many of these theoretical constructs seem obsolete over night. Large, coordinated state interventions and rescue packages were the order of the day, pointing to complexities in the relations between states and capital which simplistic end-of-state narratives seemed decisively badly equipped to tackle, let alone explain in any meaningful fashion. In some quarters this then lead to talk of a 'return of Keynes' or, more generally, proclamations of a 'return of the state' itself. But this pendulum swing in the opposite direction proved to be no less superficial and premature than what had preceded it. Rather than leading to a restoration of post-war Keynesianism, the dominant drive of crisis policies reaffirmed a preference for neoliberal solutions, now of an increasingly authoritarian character, devoid of old democratic niceties and former procedural inhibitions. Here too, a complex and often untransparent assemblage of markets, transnational institutions, nation states and their mutual interactions confirmed the deficiencies of much left thinking to adequately account for these processes and the shifting institutional architecture underpinning them.
Yet without a proper understanding of the contemporary configuration of relations between capital, the state and transnational institutions, it will be impossible to judge the plausibility or implausibility of various competing proposals on the left and their respective strategic projections. Nowhere more so than within the European Union, where deepening integration now assumes the seemingly paradoxical form of deepening socio-economic fragmentation along national lines and a palpable regional polarization into core and periphery. Centripetal and centrifugal forces seem to overlap and intertwine in a complex process with as of yet unclear long-term consequences for the future of the European project itself. The increasingly authoritarian character of 'crisis-resolution' policies pose long-term dangers for the subaltern classes and endanger formal-democratic standards long considered an irreversible historical achievement. In parallel, a new surge of right-wing populism all over Europe seeks to take advantage of the ensuing socio-economic degradation and political disillusionment...
In trying to address these complex issues, the seminar will revisit fundamental questions on the nature of the capitalist state, the degree of transfer of its prerogatives to EU and transnational institutions, the ensuing 'division of labour' between national and transnational levels, the class character of these processes, their implications for democratic standards, as well as their possible contradictions and future perspectives. The political stakes are clear: only by properly understanding the structural conditions of the current conjuncture, its institutional complexities, inherent limits and contradictions, can viable left strategies be formulated.
---
http://radnickistudiji.org/?p=266
Programme of Centre for labour studies is supported by Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung Southeast Europe.
- published: 18 Jan 2015
- views: 15