DEVELOPMENT OF TOOLS FOR BIOPOLITICAL REGULATION OF THE POPULATION AS THE BASIS OF THE BIOPOLITICAL CRISIS
The article is devoted to the study of biopolitical tools for population regulation and its influence on the transformation of biopolitics. Having formed in the 18th century, the biopolitical state created an arsenal of means of population regulation aimed at changing the qualitative and quantitative characteristics of the population in the interests of the state. The great biopolitical game involved the population in social processes, burdening them with hardships, but also providing advantages. Developed social institutions of caring for the population have reached values that meet human interests. Investments in human capital have acquired the character of a generally recognized necessity, having formed a confirmantropic biopolitical strategy. However, having become the norm, human-affirming bipolitics led to a crisis in biopolitics. The growing demands on the authorities by the population give rise to the risks of state default in relation to the programs being implemented.