Beyond Tocqueville: Civil Society and the Social Capital Debate in Comparative PerspectiveBob Edwards, Michael W. Foley, Mario Diani University Press of New England, 2001 - 340 من الصفحات Recent discussion about the role of civil society in democratic governance around the world and the decline of social capital in the US has raised pressing theoretical and empirical questions about the character of contemporary societies and the social and institutional correlates of sound and dynamic democracies. This debate has reached a North American and European audience that extends well beyond academia. The predominant refrain in the debate, following Alexis de Tocqueville's 160-year-old analysis of democracy in America, attaches tremendous importance to the role of voluntary associations in contemporary democracies. Participation in such groups is said to produce social capital, often linked to high levels of social trust. Social capital in turn is conceived as a crucial national resource for promoting collective action for the common good. Beyond Tocqueville presents 21 varied essays on how civic engagement and political and economic cooperation are generated in contemporary societies, linking theoretical discourse with public policy and actual behaviors. |
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الصفحة 59
... situation . An important implication of the vari- ability of networks from one situation to another is that social capital can- not be reduced to a static quantity single unit possessed by individuals , and even less can it be ...
... situation . An important implication of the vari- ability of networks from one situation to another is that social capital can- not be reduced to a static quantity single unit possessed by individuals , and even less can it be ...
الصفحة 60
... situation to another , it also spills up , creating the large - scale rep- resentative institutions such as political parties important in Making De- mocracy Work ( Putnam 1993a ) . This leads to the empirical prediction : There is ...
... situation to another , it also spills up , creating the large - scale rep- resentative institutions such as political parties important in Making De- mocracy Work ( Putnam 1993a ) . This leads to the empirical prediction : There is ...
الصفحة 62
... situation . For each situation , a multiplicity of tactics was offered , including the government organization working as it ought to . The answers show which network or networks Russians rely on and the extent to which tactics vary ...
... situation . For each situation , a multiplicity of tactics was offered , including the government organization working as it ought to . The answers show which network or networks Russians rely on and the extent to which tactics vary ...
المحتوى
Editors Introduction | 17 |
Civil Society and Political Institutionalization | 32 |
Civil Society and Political Context in Central America | 43 |
حقوق النشر | |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activists actors African American analysis antimodern argued attitudes behavior Bourdieu campaign capital Political Central Central America church cial citizens civic engagement civil society activity Coleman collective action community organizing concept conflict cooperation COPS crucial debate democracy Diani diverse economic effective elite example face-to-face Foley and Edwards form of social formal organizations global groups Hispanics identity impact individuals infrastructures interaction interpersonal trust Kannapolis leaders Mario Diani mass society membership ment mobilization modern society movement organizations national social movement neighborhood associations neo-Tocquevilleans nomic organizational percent political capital political institutions produce Putnam racial regime relations relationships repression respondents Robert Putnam role Russians San Antonio sector sense of community social and political social capital social movements social networks social structures social trust specific tional tions Tocqueville Tocqueville's transnational TSMOs types union variables volume voluntary associations workers