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The Politics of Civil Society

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2011 shook the world politically. The Occupy Movement, Los Indignados and the Greek Aganaktismenoi (outraged) reacted to zombie capitalism in the West, while the Arab Spring challenged political t...
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  • 01 May 2013
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2011 shook the world politically. The Occupy Movement, Los Indignados and the Greek Aganaktismenoi (outraged) reacted to zombie capitalism in the West, while the Arab Spring challenged political tyrannies in the Maghreb-Mashreq region.Democracy became the meta-question of the moment. New communicative technologies unleashed a tidal wave of civic protest that spread across the globe, bringing new political actors on to the street.

But what does this protest movement mean? Are we on the threshold of a transformation in global political consciousness? Is civil society the necessary counter-power that is democratising democracy from within? Or are we living through an apocalyptic terminal phase of civilisation?

In the second, revised edition of this indispensable book, the author looks behind the mirror of power and differentiates the real from the fake in policy and politics. It offers an original and compelling history of the present and will have wide appeal to a broad cross-disciplinary audience.

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Price: $44.95
Pages: 224
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 01 May 2013
ISBN: 9781447307143
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / General, Public administration / Public policy
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Fred Powell is Professor of Social Policy and Dean of Social Science at the University College Cork, National University of Ireland. He has published extensively on civil society, political thought and citizen participation.

Introduction;

Doublethink: the Big Society, Small Government Debate;

The renaissance of civil society;

Modernity, civil society and civic virtue;

Radical Civil Society, Early Social Movements and the Socialisation of the State;

Nietzsche’s Revenge: Totalitarian Big Society;

Rights talk, New Social Movements and Civic Revolts;

American Exceptionalism, Multicultural Civil Society and Plato’s Noble Lie;

Global civil society: myth or reality?.