"This book makes a timely and formidable intervention in current political theory, combining a meticulous analysis of the history of neoliberal thought with a compelling critique of elitist, technocratic, and undemocratic modes of economic governance in this age of austerity."
- Yves Winter, McGill University
"A concise, nuanced, and wide-ranging introduction to the leading theorists of neoliberalism and to the role their ideas have played in recent economic crises.Thomas Biebricher looks beyond familiar critiques of neoliberal ideology and its proponents to ask provocative, insightful questions that are rooted in deep engagement."
- Angus Burgin, Johns Hopkins University
"Thomas Biebricher carefully demonstrates that what unites the many varieties of neoliberalism is not a unified 'theory of politics,' but rather that <i>neoliberalisms</i> share a <i>distinctly</i> political theory. A powerful corrective to the existing scholarship, <i>The Political Theory of Neoliberalism</i> shows readers that within the sweeping generalizations so often made about neoliberalism, the devil truly is in the details."
- Andrew Dilts, Loyola Marymount University
"This is a brilliant book—one of the most illuminating I have read in a long time. Biebricher provides an original account of the emergence of neoliberalism, tracing its development from the 1930s into the present. At once deeply scholarly and profoundly relevant, it is a model of what political theory should be."
- Margaret Kohn, University of Toronto
"At once addressing...skeptics and guiding newcomers to the concept, <i>The Political Theory of Neoliberalism</i> provides one of the most perceptive and analytic treatments of neoliberal thought to date....Going beneath and beyond its usual associations with "mere" economic theory and economic policy, Biebricher offers a compelling reading of neoliberalism as a distinct and internally diverse tradition of political thought."
- William Callison, <i>Contemporary Political Theory</i>