The
UK has experienced 2 major shocks in the last 6 years – Brexit
and Covid – on top of 40 years of relentless neoliberalism. The
series has been trying to explore the effect this has
this had on the UK’s social, political
and institutional health,
I
have to say that I find a surprising paucity of material about this.
I’ve mentioned The
Neoliberal
Age?
Britain
since
the 1970s
(2021)
but
this
is really the
intellectual history of an idea and doesn’t, unfortunately, try
to
explore the effect that it
has had
on our social,
political and institutional
lives.
One
of the few authors who, clearly and strongly, frames Brexit as a
consequence of the global financial crisis of 2007/8 is sociologist
William Davies whose
essays can be accessed in both the
Guardian and the London
Review of Books but collected in This
is not normal – the collaps hee
of Liberal
Britain
(2020) which he
nicely introduces thus
There
are various preoccupations throughout this book -
the
abandoning of liberal economic rationality,
the
declining authority of empirical facts,
the
main-streaming of nationalism,
the
hatred of ‘liberal elites’,
the
effect of big data and real-time media on our politics,
the
new mould of celebrity leaders,
the
crisis of democratic representation.
These
are all linked in ways that I’ve endeavoured to show. The
over-arching theme is of a shift from a liberal polity based around
norms, laws, expertise and institutions to a neoliberal one based
around algorithmic surveillance and financial calculation.
The
task for the kind of ‘real-time sociology’ that I was engaged in
with these essays is to straddle the fast-moving world of the news
cycle (which has grown significantly faster in the twenty-first
century) with the search for underlying structures and conditions.
This is not unlike the kind of ‘conjunctural analysis’ that
Gramscians have long aimed at, and for which Stuart Hall’s work has
been the model. Hall always encouraged us to pay attention to the new
and unprecedented, and not simply view history as a predictable
unfolding of underlying mechanics. Many of the essays in this volume
perform a kind of brokerage service, moving between unfamiliar and
shocking political events and familiar social and political theories,
including many of the classics – Marx, Hirschman, Arendt, Foucault,
Weber. In scurrying back and forth between my Twitter feed and my
bookshelves, the hope is that we can understand what’s going on,
without either wishful thinking or denial of the genuine conjunctural
novelty.
And
it is really odd that the best (weekly) analysis of the condition of
British politics comes not from a journalist or political scientist
but from another sociologist – this time of the organisational
sort whose blog has been following Brexit for more than 6 years -
namely Chris
Grey’s
Brexit and Beyond. What makes his blog remarkable is the forensic
logic with which his weekly post dissects the various arguments of
that week – replete with copious hyperlinks and reminders of the
typologies of previous argumentation. Just
look at the incisive
power with which Grey assesses the possibilities and constraints
facing the UK’s latest Prime Minister
The
other analysis I’ve picked out is Reckless
Opportunists
– elites
at the end of the establishment; Aeron Davies (2018)
based on 20 years of researching elite figures
in five areas associated with the modern Establishment:
Over
that time, I have interviewed and observed over 350 people working in
or close to the top. The book is organised in
four parts. Part I surveys the elite state of play in Britain as it
is now. Chapter 1 argues
that the Establishment, as it has been conceived, is coming to an
end. Chapter 2 looks
at how elites, by trying to get ahead, have destabilised the very
institutions on which their power is based. Part II looks at how
leaders have adapted to get to the top.
Those
most suited to pleasing their assessors get there first.
That
means PPE degrees and MBAs rather
than qualifications in law or engineering; media management and
accounting skills instead of creativity and entrepreneurship. Sellers
now trump makers, and bluffers outrank experts.
Part
III reveals some of the ways elites stay at the top once they get
there. As Chapter 5 shows,
joining the club means sharing its culture and ideas, and adopting
dominant norms and positions, no matter how nonsensical.
Chapter
6 looks at the secrets and lies that
underpin elite power and control. Some
are systematic and organised, and some are simply the lies leaders
tell themselves. Chapter 7 shows
that leadership has been transformed into a numbers game because
numbers can be tallied up in a way that ideas can't. And
because elites co-create the game, they can also change the rules as
and when they need to.
Part
IV focuses on exit strategies and how canny elites survive when it
all goes wrong. As Chapter 8 shows,
leaders follow far more than they lead. It's safer that way. And when
the going gets tough, the tough join the herd. Chapter
9 is all about mobility, because the
modern leader must be ready to up and go whenever things start
falling apart.
Staying
ahead no longer means staying on top of one organisation or nation
but floating across several. The conclusion tries to join the dots and briefly explores what
solutions there might be to the current problems of leadership