Neo-liberalism has become the principle for restructuring the world’s economy and societies. Upholding the principle of freedom, in reality it serves the immediate interests of dominant economic actors. The concentration of capital produces power which is then beyond democratic control, and which is responsible for the spreading of strive and misery. This policy is illustrated by the politics of the European Union and its free trade agreements throughout Africa with an empirical emphasis on the case of Tunisia. To earnestly combat impoverishment and misery in order to prevent conflict would need a radical change allowing - at least - the development of national capitalism and politically regulated social justice.
Diese Seite ist durch reCAPTCHA geschützt und es gelten die Google Datenschutzbestimmungen und Nutzungsbedingungen.