Firstly,
it critiques social liberalism, as you mention here.
Not exact matches
A vast international convergence seems possible on such objectives because
social forces with a radical
critique of
liberalism have developed (MST in Brazil, KCTU in Korea, European marches, etc.) and because international and regional demonstrations (above all in Europe, America and Asia) are growing in strength.
The communitarian
critique of
liberalism, whatever one may think of it as philosophy, has succeeded in reminding liberals that
liberalism does have
social and cultural presuppositions, and that these must be attended to if
liberalism is to survive.
Catholic
social thinkers mounted an early and sustained
critique of the doctrinaire individualism and the abstract
social contract approaches of theorists on whom modern
liberalism rests: Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, and their followers.