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© 2022, Berghahn Books, New York, Oxford

© 2022, Berghahn Books, New York, Oxford

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Foreword ix
  4. Introduction 1
  5. I The Concept of Civil Society
  6. 1. The Concept of Civil Society 7
  7. 2. Private and Public Roles in Civil Society 29
  8. 3. Interpreting the Notion of Civil Society 35
  9. 4. Reconceptualizing Civil Society for Now: Some Somewhat Gramscian Turnings 41
  10. 5. Civil Society, Hard Cases and the End of the Cold War 69
  11. II The Communitarian Approach
  12. 6. In Common Together: Unity, Diversity, and Civic Virtue 77
  13. 7. Too Many Rights, Too Few Responsibilities 99
  14. 8. Progressive Politics and Communitarian Culture 107
  15. 9. Neo-Hegelian Reflections on the Communitarian Debate 113
  16. 10. From Socialism to Communitarianism 127
  17. 11. On Labels and Reasons: The Communitarian Approach–Some European Comments 133
  18. III Economic Policy and Social Justice
  19. 12. Economic Policy and the Role of the State— The Invisible, the Visible and the Third Hand 149
  20. 13. Industrial Policy—Will Clinton Find the High Wage Path? 159
  21. 14. Redefining the Role of the State to Facilitate Reform in East and West 173
  22. 15. Between Social Darwinism and the Overprotective State — Some Reflections on a Modern Concept of Social Welfare Policy 179
  23. 16. Civil Society and Social Justice 195
  24. 17. American Social Reform and a New Kind of Modernity 201
  25. IV The Internationalization of Politics and Economics and the Challenge of Nationalism, Immigration, and Minority Conflict
  26. 18. East European Reform and West European Integration 211
  27. 19. Rooted Cosmopolitanism 223
  28. 20. Ethnicity, Migration, and the Validity of the Nation-State 235
  29. 21. Neither Politics Nor Economics 241
  30. 22. The Left in the Process of Democratization in Central and Eastern European Countries 251
  31. V European Socialism and American Social Reform
  32. 23. After the Disappointment of the Epoch: American Social Tradition between Past and Future 261
  33. 24. Pluralism and the Left Identity 295
  34. 25. What’s Left After Socialism 301
  35. 26. Some Reflections on the New World Order and Disorder 307
  36. Notes on Contributors 317
  37. Index 325
Toward a Global Civil Society
This chapter is in the book Toward a Global Civil Society
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