History and Theory of Compromise
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Edited by:
Jan-Hendryk de Boer
, Manon Westphal , Julia Mariko Jacoby , Karsten Mause and Stefan Zeppenfeld
About this book
Interest in compromise has recently grown both in public and scholarly debates. However, there is a lack of interdisciplinary dialogue on the topic. This volume fills this gap by bringing together contributions from various relevant disciplines. They show that compromise has been a central technique to regulate social and political conflicts in different contexts. In a compromise the conflicting parties create an agreement by making mutual concessions, but do not give up their original claims. Therein lies the capacity of compromise to prevent or end escalated conflicts even in situations in which disagreements cannot be transformed into a consensus. In addition to theoretical investigations of the concept, the volume includes case studies on Europe in the Middle Ages, in the 19th and 20th centuries, and on pre-modern and contemporary Japan. The overarching question is about the preconditions of compromises. The authors examine the role of compromise in diplomacy, politics, trade, economics, and everyday life. Together they generate a comprehensive picture of the capacities and limitations of compromise in the past and today.
Author / Editor information
Dr. Jan-Hendryk de Boer, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany; Dr. Manon Westphal, University of Münster, Münster, Germany; Dr. Mariko Jacoby, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany; Dr. Karsten Mause, University of Münster, Münster, Germany; Dr. Stefan Zeppenfeld, Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany.
Topics
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Frontmatter
I -
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Preface
V -
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Contents
VII -
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List of Contributors
IX -
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Introduction: Theoretical and Historical Perspectives on Compromise
1 - Section I: Theoretical Perspectives
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The Concept of Compromise Revisited
11 -
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The Fragility of Compromise
45 -
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There Are Epistemic Reasons to Compromise
65 -
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The Shame of Compromise? The Politics of Education and the Education of Politics
87 -
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A Comparative Conceptual Exploration of Inter- and Intra-Personal Compromise
105 - Section II: Compromise in Japan
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Settling Disputes to Avoid Troubles: Compromise and Law in Early Medieval Japan
125 -
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Compromise in Noh Theater Performance: The Relationship between Actor and Audience in the Fifteenth Century
153 -
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Compromise in Deliberative Democracy and Civic Education
169 - Section III: Compromise in Europe
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Behind the Facade? Some Remarks on Consensus and the Possibility of Other Forms of Decision-Making in Medieval Narrative Sources
195 -
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Between Conflict and Cooperation: Compromise in the Late Medieval Feud
221 -
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Switzerland as Compromise? The Federal State since 1848 between Reconciliation and Exclusion
243 -
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Compromise in Politics and the Politics of Compromise: The Example of Switzerland
265 -
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Searching for a “Golden Mean”: The Bavarian State’s Arrangements with the House of Wittelsbach during the Weimar Republic
285 -
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The Power of the Purse: Budget Laws and Cultures of Compromise in the Second Empire, Weimar, and Bonn
307 -
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Compromise in Theory and History: Summaries and Future Research Perspectives
331 -
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Persons Index
345 -
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Places Index
349
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