ABSTRACT

Analyses within contemporary liberalism, on the other hand, hardly ever take into account the theoretical work done by nineteenth-century Austrian liberals-notwithstanding the fact that, especially in America, these analyses address problems rather similar to those faced (and in some respects solved) by Austrian Altliberalismus, and that the work of Austrian-born scholars (Hayek, Mises, Voegelin) is so manifestly present in modern liberal, market-oriented theory, today increasingly associated with the term ‘neoconservatism’.