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  • Cited by 419
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
January 2010
Print publication year:
2003
Online ISBN:
9780511615023
Subjects:
Political Theory, Sociology: General Interest, Politics and International Relations, Sociology

Book description

John Keane, a leading scholar of political theory, tracks the recent development of a big idea with fresh potency - global civil society. In this timely book, Keane explores the contradictory forces currently nurturing or threatening its growth, and he shows how talk of global civil society implies a political vision of a less violent world, founded on legally sanctioned power-sharing arrangements among different and intermingling forms of socio-economic life. Keane's reflections are pitted against the widespread feeling that the world is both too complex and too violent to deserve serious reflection. His account borrows from various scholarly disciplines, including political science and international relations, to challenge the silence and confusion within much of contemporary literature on globalisation and global governance. Against fears of terrorism, rising tides of xenophobia, and loose talk of 'anti-globalisation', the defence of global civil society mounted here implies the need for new democratic ways of living.

Reviews

The most learned, erudite, and encompassing book on the global civil society of this century.’

Amitai Etzioni - author of The New Golden Rule

‘John Keane’s book is an imaginative and productive experiment in contemporary democratic thinking. It is challenging and provocative, and it provides structured orientation in a wide, confusing and unsettled field.’

Hans-Jürgen Puhle - University of Frankfurt

‘John Keane has applied his sharp intellect and moral commitments to a topic of political importance but persistent conceptual confusion to produce a book of forceful clarity and coherence. A sparkling contribution to contemporary political thought.’

Bryan Turner - University of Cambridge

‘… really thought-provoking in addressing a number of issues that we confront in a contemporary world that is becoming more interdependent and volatile than ever … the book is genuinely stimulating and enjoyable in many respects. The space here is too short to summarise its rich arguments, and readers are invited to take their own look.’

Source: Development Policy Review

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Contents

Further reading
Jeffrey C. Alexander (ed.), Real Civil Societies. Dilemmas of Institutionalization (London, 1998)
Helmut Anheier et al. (eds.), Global Civil Society 2001 (Oxford, 2001)
Raymond Aron, ‘The Dawn of Universal History’, in Miriam Conant (ed.), Politics and History. Selected Essays by Raymond Aron (New York and London, 1978)
Axtmann, Roland, ‘Kulturelle Globalisierung, kollektive Identität und demo-kratischer Nationalstaat’, in Leviathan, 23:1(1995), pp. 87–101
Bertrand Badie, L'état importé: L'occidentalisation de l'ordre politique (Paris, 1992)
Baker, Gideon, ‘The Taming of the Idea of Civil Society’, Democratization, 6:3 (Autumn 1999), pp. 1–29
Benjamin Barber, Jihad vs. McWorld: How Globalism and Tribalism are Reshaping the World (New York, 1995)
Gary J. Bass, Stay the Hand of Vengeance. The Politics of War Crimes Tribunals (Princeton and Oxford, 2000)
Ulrich Beck, What is Globalization? (Cambridge, 2000)
John Boli and George N. Thomas (eds.), Constructing World Culture: International Non-Governmental Organizations Since 1875 (Stanford, 1999)
Fernand Braudel, Civilization and Capitalism. 15th–18th Century, vol. 1 (London, 1984)
Hedley Bull and Adam Watson (eds.), The Expansion of International Society (Oxford, 1984)
John Burbidge (ed.), Beyond Prince and Merchant: Citizen Participation and the Rise of Civil Society (New York, 1997)
David Callahan, ‘What is Global Civil Society?’ www.civnet/org/journal/vol3no1/ftdcall.htm
Simone Chambers and Will Kymlicka (eds.), Alternative Conceptions of Civil Society (Princeton, 2000)
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John Keane, Civil Society: Old Images, New Visions (Oxford and Stanford, 1998)
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Ronnie D. Lipschutz and Judith Mayer, Global Civil Society and Global Environmental Governance. The Politics of Nature from Place to Planet (Albany, 1996)
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