This book deals with three key questions about communitarian ideas: how to distinguish what constitutes communitarian thinking; what lessons to take from the historical development of communitarian arguments; and why their practical implications are relevant in devising reforms at the local, national, and global levels. Each chapter covers a distinct period, with a critical exposition of the leading thinkers of that time who contributed to communitarian philosophy and politics. Beginning with an examination of the rise of proto-communitarian ideas in classical Western and Eastern thought, the book closes with a review of communitarian responses to the emergent social and technological changes in the 21st century. Readers will learn about the core features and significance of communitarian theories and practices in relation to morality, education, the economy, freedom and security, community development, and democratic governance; and how they compare and contrast with other ethical andintellectual outlooks.
Inhoudsopgave
Chapter 1. The Roots of Communitarian Ideas.- Chapter 2. The Emergence of Communitarian Challenges: 1400s-1600s. Chapter 3. Towards Enlightened Communities: the 18
th century.- Chapter 4. Beyond
Gemeinschaft &
Gesellschaft: 19
th to early 20
th century.- Chapter 5. Critiques of Depersonalisation: 1920s-1980s.- Chapter 6. Communitarianism Articulated: 1989-2001.- Chapter 7. Tackling Community Disempowerment post-2001.- Chapter 8. Tomorrow’s Communities.
Over de auteur
Henry Tam is Director of Question the Powerful. He has been Lecturer at the University of Cambridge, Visiting Professor at Birkbeck, University of London, and Head of Civil Renewal in the UK Government. His published books include Communitarianism (1998), Time to Save Democracy (2018), and Whose Government is it? (2019).