In the wake of the economic crash, public policy is in search of a new
moral compass. This book explains why the Third Way's combination of
market-friendly and abstract, value-led principles has failed, and shows
what is needed for an adequate replacement as a political and moral
project. It criticises the economic analysis on which the Third Way
approach to policy was founded and suggests an alternative to its
legalistic and managerial basis for the regulation of social relations.