ETYM Cf. French libéralisme.
1. A political orientation that favors progress and reform.
2. An economic theory advocating free competition and a self-regulating market and the gold standard.
Political and social theory that favors representative government, freedom of the press, speech, and worship, the abolition of class privileges, the use of state resources to protect the welfare of the individual, and international free trade. It is historically associated with the Liberal Party in the UK and the Democratic Party in the us.
Liberalism developed during the 17th–19th centuries as the distinctive theory of the industrial and commercial classes in their struggle against the power of the monarchy, the church, and the feudal landowners. Economically it was associated with laissez faire, or nonintervention. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries its ideas were modified by the acceptance of universal suffrage and a certain amount of state intervention in economic affairs, in order to ensure a minimum standard of living and to remove extremes of poverty and wealth. The classical statement of liberal principles is found in On Liberty and other works of the British philosopher J S Mill.
Slobodoumniji politički pokret; koncepcija koja zastupa izvesne napredne reforme. Npr. moderni liberalizam u SAD traži sada smeliji razvoj državnog kapitalizma. (lat.)
Slobodoljubivost.