“…Otherwise, rather than see ing the emergence of post-neoliberalism, we will probably see the emergence of neo-developmentalism or the neo-developmental state where neoliberalism is combined with increased state intervention, especially in the form of state selecting and dictating the flourishing of certain sectors and industries over the others. Consequently, some scholars have already started using the term "neo-developmental state" for certain countries, including the ones in Latin America such as Brazil and Argentina, or have pointed out to the emergence of the developmental state (with the potential of a more democratic gover nance) in South Africa (Fine, 2010;Evans, 2010) and less in Russia (Dutkiewicz, 2011a(Dutkiewicz, , 2011b. As has been clearly articulated by Brenner et al (2010b), "in the absence of viable, context-specific regulatory experiments, our imagination for what a global alternative to neoliberalisation might look like will be seriously constrained."…”