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Hayek the road to serfdom
Hayek the road to serfdom







Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994, xxvii–xliv.Īndrew Farrant, Hayek and the Labour Government of 1945–1951, Working Paper, 2014. Hayek, Preface to the 1956 paperback edition: The Road to Serfdom. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007, 22.į. (Ed.), The Road to Serfdom: Text and Documents. Caldwell, ‘Introduction’, in Caldwell, B. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994. Levy for helpful conversation about Hayek, Orwell, and related topics. I thank Robert Leeson and Guinevere Nell for helpful comments on an earlier draft and David M. Hayek for permission to quote from Hayek’s unpublished early 1948 letter to Durbin and his unpublished 1984 address to the Mont Pèlerin Society. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves. These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. 4 In particular, Hayek was much perturbed by the Attlee government’s late 1947 reintroduction of the wartime power to direct labour. In early 1948, however, Hayek had provided a far less sanguine analysis of the way in which Attlee’s government was seemingly taking Britain down the road to serfdom. 3 Unsurprisingly, Hayek’s 1956 preface readily ceded that Britain had not gone totalitarian during the Attlee years.

hayek the road to serfdom

2 Nevertheless, aspects of Hayek’s partially completed postscript - for example, Hayek’s late 1940s assessment of Clement Attlee’s Labour government - would later appear in Hayek’s 1956 preface to the first American paperback edition of The Road to Serfdom. 1 Unfortunately, Hayek’s draft postscript - meant to appear in a new edition of Hayek’s book that was initially suggested by the University of Chicago Press in late 1945 - was never published. Hayek ceased work on a relatively lengthy draft postscript to The Road to Serfdom.









Hayek the road to serfdom