Right-Liberalism

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Right-Liberalism
AlignmentCenter-Right
Key Principles
  • Free Market Economics
  • Right-Leaning Cultural Values
Values


Right-Liberalism is a collection of center-right ideologies that tend to favour free-market (often laissez-faire) capitalism, private property rights, and occasionally certain conservative values, while opposing state-intervention and social welfare, though in other cases they may moreso present as a combination of conservative and liberal beliefs. In modern times, Right-Liberal ideologies are most visible in the Liberal Democratic Alliance coalition of the Yatan-Theian Accord's government.

Sub-Ideologies

  • Agrarian Capitalism: A system of government that combines capitalist market economics with an agricultural society.
  • Agrarianism: A system of government focused on the interests of farmers, favouring their subsidization and rural lifestyle.
  • Anarcho-Capitalism: A form of anarchism that aims to organize a society that lacks rulers or any other constituted authority via free-market economics and privatization of all facets of society.
  • Authoritarian Capitalism: A system where a capitalist market economy exists alongside an authoritarian government.
  • Capitalism: An economic model where individuals have private ownership over the means of production and property, thus value is determined by competition.
  • Christian Democracy: A system which combines the doctrine and values of Christianity with liberal democracy, occupying a middle-position between secularism and theocracy.
  • Classical Liberalism: A form of liberalism focused on individual liberty, free markets, and the opposition towards government interference.
  • Conservative Liberalism: A form of conservatism which aims to implement liberal policies such as free markets and individual liberty under a conservative government that preserves traditions and ethics.
  • Corporatocracy: A system where the state is either directly run by major corporations, or intervenes in the benefit of them.
  • Islamic Democracy: A system which combines the doctrine and values of Islam with liberal democracy, occupying a middle-position between secularism and theocracy.
  • Laissez-Faire Capitalism: A form of capitalism which forgoes nearly all regulation and state influence over the economy.
  • Liberal Conservatism: A form of moderate conservatism advocating for the implementation of right-liberal economic policies under a government which preserves traditions.
  • Libertarianism: A form of laissez-faire capitalism advocating for property rights and as minimal state-intervention in the lives of people as possible in order to maximize freedom.
  • Market Liberalism: A form of liberalism with an emphasis on free-market capitalist economics.
  • Minarchism: A form of 'governance' where an as minimal state of possible exists to maintain a 'functional society'.
  • National Liberalism: A form of liberalism focused on individual liberty and free markets under a government focused on advancing nationalist interests.
  • Neoconservatism: A branch of liberal conservatism favouring widespread military intervention in order to spread democratic values in opposition to 'radical ideologies'.
  • Neoliberalism: A form of bureaucratic capitalism that coexists with generally left-leaning cultural policies that promotes globalization and rejects interventionism.
  • Objectivism: A form of libertarianism with an even stronger emphasis on being anti-state alongside implementing a more complex philosophical framework centred around the natural self-interest of humanity.
  • Technocratic Capitalism: A form of laissez-faire capitalism with a focus on technological advancement and meritocratic/'efficient' governance.
  • Plutocracy: A system where the government is ruled by the wealthy elite of society.
  • Uchtadaryo System: A form of free-market liberal democracy within a feudal system directed by homeowners associations rather than 'lords', with each HOA being represented in government and granted near total control over their 'territories'.