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5 - Technocratic Organization: The Power of Networks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 March 2021

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Summary

From Brussels to Silicon Valley, coping with the failures of technocratic rule.

(Shahbaz, 2018)

What really happened in the 1980s?

The fourth and latest technocratic revolution begins in the 1980s, a decade usually recognized as a watershed in political history for reasons such as Thatcher, Reagan, the end of Keynesian economic policy and the mixed economy, welfare state retrenchment, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the end of history and so forth. In one way or another, the common narrative of the key events in the 1980s is the rise of liberalism, less state and more market, or at least the acceptance of free market capitalism as the limit of the state. The most decisive technocratic event of the 1980s, however, had little to do with changes in the balance of power in a zero-sum game between state and market, but rather with a third form of organization: the network. Recalling the general observation that technocratic revolutions occur during times of rapid technological innovation and progress, the importance of the 1980s lies rather in the onset of the information age and the emergence of network society. Of course, no type of society or social order arrives fully packaged within the span of a decade, but in hindsight it is reasonable to view the 1980s as the decisive step towards a situation where:

the network society is not the future that we must reach as the next stage of human progress by embracing the new technological paradigm. It is our society, in different degrees, and under different forms depending on countries and cultures. Any policy, any strategy, any human project, has to start from this basic fact. It is not our destination, but our point of departure to wherever ‘we’ want to go, be it heaven, hell, or just a refurbished home. (Castells, 2005: 12)

Many of the key technological innovations were of course in place much earlier, and the embryonic informational revolution was, as noted by Bell and many others, already under way in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War. It is only ‘since the mid-1980s’, however, that ‘microcomputers cannot be conceived of in isolation: they perform in networks, with increasing mobility’ (Castells, 2010a: 43).

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The New Technocracy , pp. 111 - 140
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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