Citizenship and Social Theory, เล่มที่ 24Bryan S Turner SAGE Publications, 1993 - 194 หน้า Going beyond both traditional liberal theories of democracy and Marxist theories of civil society, leading international scholars rethink the relations between the individual and the state, community and family. They assess how social and political participation is changing in the modern world, investigate the historical roots of citizenship and its development alongside the nation state and urban society, and relate it to issues of welfare and the market. The final chapter asks whether the subordination of nation states to supranational institutions will replace state citizenship with a global conception of human rights. |
เนื้อหา
Citizenship in the Modern West | 19 |
Citizenship Class Inequality and Resentment | 36 |
Citizenship in a Liberal Society | 57 |
ลิขสิทธิ์ | |
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action analysis argued argument ascetic Cambridge capitalism capitalist central citizen Citizenship and Social citizenship rights civic responsibility civil rights civil society class inequality class resentment concept of citizenship consequences consumption contemporary critical democracy Durkheim economic egalitarianism eighteenth Émile Durkheim emotion equality ethical example existence global groups Hegel human rights idea of civil important income institutions interests Kalberg liberal London Marshall Marx Max Weber modern citizenship modern societies moral nation-state nature nineteenth century normative normative account ontological participation philosophy political and civil possible pre-modern citizenship principle of citizenship problem Protestantism public sphere realm relations relationship Scottish Enlightenment sense Shotter social citizenship social class social membership social order social rights social trust sociology sociology of emotion sociology of knowledge solidarity status structure tradition Turner University of Essex University Press values Weber welfare world-oriented individualism