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Conservatism

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In an age of a widening ... - UK Home Secretary 1990s prison works NeoConservatives have sought to mobilise popular opinion in defence of Victorian Values ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conservatism


1
Conservatism
2
Why is conservatism difficult to define?
  • Conservatism has prospered because it is
    unwilling to be tied down to a fixed system of
    ideas.
  • Conservatives have a clearer understanding of
    what they oppose rather than what they are for.
  • Conservatives are more inclined to describe their
    beliefs as an attitude of mind or common sense as
    opposed to an ism or ideology.
  • Conservatism is deeply suspicious of human nature
    and of grandiose schemes thought by human mind-
    hence a natural suspicion towrds ideology.

3
The key tenets
4
Tradition
  • Values practices and institutions which have
    stood the test of time
  • Edmund Burke believed that society was shaped by
    the law of the creator, to tamper with the world
    would be to challenge the creator
  • Most conservatives support tradition without
    arguing for divine origins. GK Chesterton
    (1874-1936) referred to the democracy of the dead
    institutions and customs which have been received
    from previous generations have stood the test of
    time and should be preserved for the benefit of
    generations to come. This reflects a Darwinian
    view of natural selection- survival of the
    fittest.
  • Tradition generates sense of identity and a
    feeling of rootedness and social cohesion
    whereas change is a journey into the unknown.

5
Human Imperfection
  • Early conservatives based such ideas on the
    biblical idea of Original Sin.
  • Humans are imperfect and insecure and naturally
    security seeking. They desire security over
    liberty and this is used to justify authority and
    the maintenance of social order.
  • Humankind is innately selfish and greedy. Crime
    is a reflection of this and people can only be
    dissuaded against violent or criminal activity by
    the effective deterrent of law. The role of law
    is not to preserve liberty but to uphold order.
  • The world is too complex for people to
    understand. Reform and revolution entail great
    risks. In the view of Oakeshott a conservative
    will wish to ensure the cure is not worse than
    the disease. Edmund Burke in On Reflections was
    highly critical of the revolutionary changes
    brought about by the revolution in France with
    the overturning of traditional institutions which
    had stood the test of time.
  • New right has challenged this. The New right is
    radical and based on rational, ideological ideas
    of classical or neo liberal market values.

6
Organic Society
  • As imperfect and security seeking creatures,
    humans cannot exist outside society but seek
    rootedness.
  • Conservatives are opposed to notions of negative
    freedom which separates a person from society. A
    society in which an individual knows only rights
    and not duties would be rootless and atomistic.
    Duty and obligation holds society together.
  • People are bound together and society acts like a
    living organism- organicism- the whole is
    sustained by a fragile set of relationships
    amongst its parts.
  • It is shaped by natural factors rather than by
    human design, ultimately by necessity. For
    example, a family is the result of natural social
    impulses.
  • The rise of the New right has weakened support
    for organic theories- New right has a much more
    atomistic approach through its adoption of neo
    liberal market values

7
Hierarchy and Authority
  • Hierarchy and authority is natural, a reflection
    of the fact that talents are distributed unevenly
    in society and so there is a natural hierarchy.
  • Inequality is an inevitable feature of an organic
    society.
  • Authority develops naturally there is no social
    contract- e.g. the authority of a parent over a
    child. It is necessary and beneficial as everyone
    needs guidance, support and security of knowing
    their place.
  • Authoritarian conservatives authority is absolute
    and unquestionable, whereas most conservatives
    see limits imposed not by an artificial social
    contract but by a sense of social responsibility.

8
Property
  • Property provides security in an unpredictable
    world, giving a sense of protection.
  • Thrift is a virtue in itself and therefore
    conservatives have encouraged savings.
  • Property promotes certain social values- those
    who possess property are more likely to respect
    the property of others and value measures to
    maintain law and order. It gives someone a stake
    in society.
  • Property ownership can be regarded as an
    extension of an individuals personality.
    Possessions reflect something of the owners
    personality and character.
  • Libertarian and New right conservatives see
    primacy of ownership rights, conservatives have
    traditionally held that property rights entail
    responsibility. Much of property is passed down
    from generation to generation and therefore the
    present custodians have a duty to preserve and
    protect it for the benefit of future generations.
    Harold Macmillan objected to Conservative
    governments privatisation policies of the 1980s
    as selling off the family silver

9
Conservative traditions
10
Authoritarian conservatism
  • Especially in continental Europe, there is a
    tradition of authoritarian rule. The principal
    defender of which was Joseph de Maistre
    (1753-1821) who argued in defence of absolutism
    as the alternative would be anarchy. Any reform
    would weaken the chains which bound people
    together. Other authoritarian, reactionary
    regimes were the papacy and Tsarist Russia. C20
    conservative classes in both Italy and Germany
    assisted in the rise to power of extreme
    authoritarian regimes.
  • The above are examples of elite authoritarian
    regimes where unquestioning obedience was
    expected to those in established authority.
  • In other regimes- Second Empire France
    (1852-1871) and Peron as president of Argentina
    1946-55. Based support on populist policies. In
    both cases, the regimes were authoritarian in
    terms of rule and suppression of dissent but
    appealed to a populist constituency.

11
Paternalistic conservatism
  • This reflects conservative pragmatism. Burke
    wrote a state without the means of some change is
    without the means of its conservation.
  • Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881) referred to two
    nations. Here he warned against the effects of
    industrialisation which was leading to the
    creation of two nations- rich and poor and this
    risked the breakdown of the organic society. For
    Disraeli the wealth and privilege of the ruling
    class brought responsibility towards those less
    fortunate- noblesse oblige. He romanticised that
    in the past the land owner took care of the
    interests of his tenants and that in an
    industrial age this should be reinvented in the
    form of social reform passed by Parliament. This
    form of conservatism is sometimes referred to as
    One Nation.
  • In an age of a widening franchise, such ideas had
    to be adapted to a more open and democratic
    political system. Tory democracy was the attempt
    by end of century Conservatives to make
    traditional instituitons such as church, monarchy
    and empire popular with the electorate. This
    could be achieved through social reform or Tory
    welfarism.
  • The high point of one nation Toryism came in
    1950s/60s with the conservative support for the
    mixed economy and the expansion of the welfare
    state.
  • On the continent, authoritarian conservatism
    which had been the dominant feature of
    continental conservatism gave way to a more
    conscious embrace of democratic values.
    Christian democracy emerged which supported what
    was known as social market economy. Here there
    is support for a largely free market economy but
    supported by a comprehensive welfare system and
    backed by effective public services.. The market
    was seen as the best means of generating wealth
    to be used for social goals.

12
Libertarian conservatism
  • Liberal doctrines, especially those concerning
    the free market, have been advanced by
    conservatives since the late C18.
  • Libertarian conservatives are libertarian in the
    sense that they advocate the least possible
    economic regulation.
  • Burke argued that the free market is efficient
    and fair and reflected the natural desire for
    wealth. Also he argued that by the late c18
    Britain was now capitalist and therefore the free
    market could be defended on the grounds of
    tradition.
  • Libertarian conservatives are inconsistent
    liberals. They see the free market as a means of
    restraining individuals and moderating behaviour.
    In that sense it is consistent with views on
    human imperfection. They also see the importance
    of a strong state to maintain law and order.
    In this sense, they remain pessimistic about
    human nature.

13
The New right
  • Post 1945 pragmatic and paternalist ideas
    dominated conservatism in the western world.
  • However, especially from the 1970s there was a
    progressive challenging of these ideas
  • There was a concern at the growth of state
    intervention- in particular of the creation of a
    dependent class on state welfare.
  • Keynesian style demand management was justified
    on the grounds that it could deliver continuous
    economic growth but the long post war boom was
    coming to an end and so new solutions were
    sought.
  • There was also a concern among conservative
    circles at the effects of the so called
    permissive society of the 1960s on morals and
    social cohesiveness. Also growing concern over
    the impact of mass immigration on social
    cohesiveness and the organic society.
  • Iin the US, conservatives were alarmed at the
    growing power of the Soviet Union and the impact
    on national prestige of events such as the
    withdrawal from Vietnam. In the UK, there was
    concern at the loss of sovereignty and national
    independence as a result of greater European
    integration. Hence within new right circles there
    was a desire to reinvigorate national pride

14
Conservative New Right
  • Emerges in the USA in the 1970s as a backlash
    against fears of social fragmentation and
    breakdown.
  • In contrast to the liberal new right, the Neocons
    aim to strengthen leadership and authority in
    society.
  • Like traditional One Nation Conservatives, the
    Neo Cons are organicist, but whereas the former
    see community is best maintained by social
    reform, the Neocons see communities strengthened
    by restoring authority and social discipline. In
    the USA, Neo-Conservatism has been associated
    with the fundamentalist religious right. The new
    darling of the Conservative right- Michelle
    Bachmann has described homosexuality as a
    disorder or sexual dysfunction, drawing on
    support from deeply religious small town America.
    She is also very critical of the state education
    system for being too liberal and home tutored her
    children. Opposed to Federal government
    intervention, she has described Barak Obama as a
    socialist and pledges if elected as president to
    repeal all healthcare reform.
  • Neo conservatism sees rising crime, delinquency
    and anti social behaviour as a consequence of
    decline in authority which has affected most
    western societies since the 1960s..
  • Permissiveness the cult of the individual
    undermines established structures in society by
    permitting the questioning of authority. Neocons
    are therefore advocates of the traditional
    patriarchal family with the hierarchy of husband
    father/provider, wife homemaker and children
    bound by parental authority. (social
    conservatism).
  • Social conservatism is matched by state
    authoritarianism whereby the state has a key role
    to play in tough law and order policies- Michael
    Howard- UK Home Secretary 1990s prison works
  • NeoConservatives have sought to mobilise popular
    opinion in defence of Victorian Values (UK) and
    the Moral Majority campaigns in the USA in
    defence of a return to family values.
  • Neo conservatives reject pluralism because it
    undermines the cohesiveness of society.. A
    permissive society lacks ethical norms and
    unifying standards.
  • Neo Conservatives promote the nation as a
    unifying institution and guard against foreign
    threats. The core themes of NeoCon foreign
    policy is the emphasis on the pursuit of the
    national interest. And a tendency to view the
    world in terms of a struggle between good and
    evil. Reagan referred to the USSR as the Evil
    Empire, George Bush and the Axis of Evil. The
    neocons in the US argued that US hegemony should
    be preserved via military supremacy (Star Wars
    project-) also the successor to this- the Space
    Based Infrared system in the words of the USA
    military is designed to achieve full spectrum
    dominance- land, sea, air, space and information.
    Furthermore, the aim is to spread US style
    democracy via regime change as the best antidote
    to war and expansion.. The latter achieved by
    intervention via military means.

15
Tensions within the right
  • Neo Conservatives tend to be supportive of free
    market principles, nevertheless their main
    concern is with moral and social fragmentation.
    Roger Scruton, a leading Neo conservative in the
    UK argued that a principled commitment to the
    free market had no place within conservatism.
  • Indeed, support for free market is at odds with
    conservative social theory which holds that
    society is organic and that the traditional
    patriarchal family with the father/provider and
    the stay at home mother. Free market principles
    require freedom of individuals to participate in
    the market place- the working as opposed to the
    stay at home wife/mother.
  • Elements within the new right clash- Neo cons are
    socially conservative and see a positive role for
    the state in promoting social cohesion whereas
    Alan Duncan in Saturns Children sees the state
    as the problem critical even of Conservative
    governments law and order policy which he claims
    despite big increase in spending failed to cut
    crime and calling for the repeal of the 1971
    Misuse of Drugs Act. Conservatives such as
    Duncan are much more concerned at the threat of
    the state to individual liberty whereas Neo
    Conservatives stress community and obligation.
  • The liberal new right (neolibs) are positive
    advocates of the free market and have no sympathy
    for social conservatism which seeks to promote
    and protect traditional values. Whereas Neocons
    seek to maintain the independence of the nation
    state and are jealous of its sovereignty, the
    logic of neo liberalism is globalisation and the
    dilution of national barriers.
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