The political economy of civil society and human rights
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The political economy of civil society and human rights
(Routledge studies in social and political thought)
Routledge, 1998
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 273-292) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Madison uses the concept of civil society and his distinctive version of 'communicative rationality' to provide a closely-argued and robust defence of the neo-liberal political and economic tradition.
Writing with considerable elegance and humour, the author draws on the hermeneutical and neo-pragmatist traditions, and on a diverse range of evidence and discussion, mainly concerning transitional economies and societies in Eastern Europe and around the world. Providing a systematic analysis of the multi-faceted notion of civil society, this book shows in detail how the three main orders of civil society - the moral-cultural, the political, and the economic - constitute 'spheres of autonomy'. At the same time, it illustrates how these different orders are closely interrelated and interact in a synergetic manner. A unique feature of this study is the way in which the author demonstrates how the logic of the various orders of civil society is, in a way appropriate to the distinct nature of each order, a logic of communicative rationality. The work concludes by arguing that the only sure way of achieving international justice is by the construction of civil society world-wide.
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 The Idea of Civil Society
- Chapter 2 A New Threat to an Old Idea
- Chapter 3 The Moral-Cultural Order
- Chapter 4 The Political Order
- Chapter 5 The Economic Order
by "Nielsen BookData"