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Talk:Libertarian liberalism

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(1) In Continental philosophy (cf. Michel Clouscard, Néofascisme et idéologie du désir and Critique du libéralisme libertaire) 'libertarian liberalism' (see Libéral-libertaire) refers to a stage of capitalism in Western societies—according to French Wikipedia's article on him: "Clouscard ne fait qu'analyser comment l'évolution du mode de production capitaliste et sa survie politique après 1945 conduisent au stade du libéralisme libertaire".
(2a) Andreas Hess, American Social and Political Thought: A Concise Introduction, 2000, p. 120: "theoretically sophisticated political philosophers such as Rawls and Nozick (the former from an egalitarian liberal position, the latter from a libertarian liberal position)." [my emphasis; here "libertarian liberal" is roughly synonymous with right-libertarianism]
(2b) Also: The Bloomsbury Companion to Anarchism, 2012, p. 396: "Focus on right libertarian/liberal minimal and anti-statists: Hayek, Nozick, Rand, etc." [my emphasis; here "libertarian liberal" is roughly synonymous with right-libertarianism]
(2c) Also: Engaging Agnes Heller: A Critical Companion, edited by Katie Terezakis, 2009, p. 55: "[ Ágnes Heller moved] in ideological terms is the move from a clearly anti-capitalist and humanist Marxist position, to a libertarian (liberal) or democratic socialist one". [ambiguous use]
(3) For Libertarian Democrat: "Jerry Brown on the Issues". Ontheissues.org. Retrieved 2013-07-06. Jerry Brown is a Moderate Libertarian Liberal.
Note: 'Libertarian liberalism' could perhaps refer to left-libertarianism in some circles in the U.S. (as User:Colchester121891 suggests) but we need to have instances of this use recorded in reliable literature. --Omnipaedista (talk) 12:51, 7 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]