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Saidel, Matías

Matías Saidel has obtained his PhD in Theoretical and Political Philosophy (2011) with a thesis on the ontological and impolitical perspectives on the common developed by Jean-Luc Nancy, Giorgio Agamben and Roberto Esposito. Currently he works as Researcher at the Argentinean National Council of Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET) and as Professor of Political Philosophy and Researcher at the Faculty of Social Work of the National University of Entre Ríos, Argentina. He has also taught postgraduate seminars on the Common and on Neoliberal Capitalism at the National University of Rosario, National University of Comahue and National University of Entre Ríos (Argentina) and was a visiting scholar at Cornell University (2010) and Madrid Complutense University (2018). He has published more than 30 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters on the common(s), neoliberalism and biopolitics. He has also edited a book of interviews with the Italian philosopher Roberto Esposito.

Neoliberalism Reloaded</a>

Neoliberalism Reloaded

Neoliberalism Reloaded: Authoritarian Governmentality and the Rise of the Radical Right analyzes the violent enforcement of neoliberal governmentality and its relationship to the emergence of a new political and cultural Right that combines political authoritarianism, ethnocentric nationalism, racism, misogyny, and antifeminism with neoliberal economic principles.

Neoliberalism Reloaded</a>

Neoliberalism Reloaded

Neoliberalism Reloaded: Authoritarian Governmentality and the Rise of the Radical Right analyzes the violent enforcement of neoliberal governmentality and its relationship to the emergence of a new political and cultural Right that combines political authoritarianism, ethnocentric nationalism, racism, misogyny, and antifeminism with neoliberal economic principles.

Neoliberalism Reloaded</a>

Neoliberalism Reloaded

Neoliberalism Reloaded: Authoritarian Governmentality and the Rise of the Radical Right analyzes the violent enforcement of neoliberal governmentality and its relationship to the emergence of a new political and cultural Right that combines political authoritarianism, ethnocentric nationalism, racism, misogyny, and antifeminism with neoliberal economic principles.