
New Books in Political Science Mark Pennington, "Foucault and Liberal Political Economy: Power, Knowledge, and Freedom" (Oxford UP, 2025)
Mar 30, 2026
Mark Pennington, Professor of Political Economy at King’s College and author of Foucault and Liberal Political Economy, links Foucauldian thought to a post‑modern liberalism. He explores over‑government and decentralized power. He probes limits of expert rule, cultural cartelization, public‑health micro‑regulation, predictive policing, sustainability governance, and crisis narratives that expand control.
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Decentralized Over-Government Narrows Freedom
- Over-government now operates through decentralized networks rather than only direct state commands.
- Mark Pennington explains public health, sustainability, and social justice discourses create surveillance networks that narrow experimental space for individuals.
Self-Creation Is Agency Within Culture
- Agency is culturally situated but still allows self-creation rather than pure autonomy.
- Pennington draws on Foucault's care of the self to show resistance can refashion identities within cultural constraints.
Positivism Produces Control Even When Wrong
- Positivist methods borrowed from natural sciences misrepresent humans as predictable and manageable.
- Pennington argues this belief produces surveillance, targets, and controls even when techniques fail to deliver promised outcomes.

