|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SEARCH RESULTS
|
|
Keywords: 'Amico-nemico'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Le ascendenze teoriche del pensiero neoconservatore
|
|
|
|
|
1. L’evoluzione del pensiero liberale. 2. La guerra come prassi storica. 3. La Lega delle Nazioni e l’assetto internazionale. 4. Soldati e partigiani. La guerra tra gli uomini. 5. Antimodernismo come risposta alla crisi.
Le origini del pensiero politico in USA e in Europa secondo Robert Kagan: realismo materialista, normativismo utopistico, Hobbes, Locke, Kant. Influssi trotskisti e neoconservatori. Pensiero politico illuminista, pensiero politico romantico. La Grande Guerra: dagli eserciti alla mobilitazione totale. Carl Schmitt, Leo Strauss.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ideologia e strategia
|
|
|
|
|
1. Riflessioni conclusive
Guerra preventiva, multilateralismo, esportazione della democrazia: il momento unipolare. Lo strappo con l’Europa, il ruolo della Nato. Movimento neocon e ascendenze trotskiste: legittimità, efficienza, scontro di civiltà. Lettura premoderna del concetto di guerra, evangelizzazione liberal-democratica.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Public Enemies
|
|
|
|
|
1. Facing Migrants. 2. The “Immigrant Emergency” and Its Victims. 3. Democratic Exclusion. 4. A Sense of Hostility. 5. The Logic of Public Opinion.
European policies and Italian laws (1995, 1998): expulsions, detainment centers, deportation, hostility toward foreigners, police brutality, coincidence foreigner-deviant, “penalization” of foreigners. Italian press: forms of violence against migrants as the effects of a situation caused by immigration. The Turco-Napolitano Law: legal and illegal migrants, fundamental human rights and civil rights, camps-prisons, arbitrary evaluations. A political barrier: language discrimination (immigrant, extracommunitari, clandestini, irregolari, third-worlders), equation migrant-enemy (invading our national space), an ontological enemy, modern metoikos. Public opinion, construction of the world, performative and productive character.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Global Paradoxes
|
|
|
|
|
1. A World of Uncertainty. 2. Goods, People, and Borders. 3. Inside the Paradox. Afterword.
Globalized world: supremacy of movement, elimination of economic and communication borders, faster circulation of goods, symbols, and ideas, acceleration in decision-making time. Promethean nature of global capitalism: producing universal cultural forms, the exclusive economic system of society, homogenization of material cultural world-wide. Liberalism, uncertainty in the economic prospects of the developed world, local and state restraints, quality of life, end of the modern social contract, material existence precariousness, the decay of social relations. Equality, lower labor costs, inequalities, migrants and refugees. The need of a complete overturning of “the enemy” presupposition. The Bossi-Fini law: temporary residency, contract for residency, will of the employer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |