Autonomy and Order: A Communitarian Anthology
By (Author) Edward W. Lehman
Contributions by William R. Lund
Contributions by Dennis H. Wrong
Contributions by Hans Joas
Contributions by Thomas C. Kohler
Contributions by Benjamin D. Zablocki
Contributions by Tom R. Tyler
Contributions by Robert Boeckmann
Contributions by Wilson Carey McWilliams
Contributions by Paul Lichterman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
28th August 2000
United States
General
Non Fiction
Centrist democratic ideologies and movements
320.5
Paperback
272
Width 148mm, Height 228mm, Spine 15mm
358g
The Communitarian Movement asserts that America and other Western societies overemphasize individual rights and underemphasize collective responsibilities. In the debate between the importance of individual and community rights The New Golden Rule by Amitai Etzioni, one of the movement's founders, has emerged at the theoretical cutting edge of Commitarianism's challenge.
This anthology of original essays by prominent political scientists, philosophers, and sociologists systematically advances our understanding of the movement's agenda. Using The New Golden Rule as the guidepost for organizing "conversations," the essays are structured around key questions that spring from Communitarian tenets. Although Amitai Etzioni's book provides the collection's framework, contributors have criticized, modified, or augmented his positions as they saw fit.
Can anything fresh that is also worthwhile be said about communitarianism anymore The essays in this volume show not only that it is possible to do so, but how much of real value can still be learned from continuing to explore the issues raised (and debated) by communitarians. This is the best introduction to the current state of communitarian thinking of which I am aware, and it provides abundant evidence of the continuing intellectual vitality of the movement.... -- R. Bruce Douglass, Georgetown University
Autonomy and Order is a splendid resource for anyone interested in communitarian thought. It includes critical essays as well as penetrating analyses of important themes not usually explored. Above all, the anthology displays the rich texture of communitarian ideas and the many-sided challenges they pose, going well beyond routine slogans about rights, localism, or conformity. -- Philip Selznick, University of California, Berkeley
Can anything fresh that is also worthwhile be said about communitarianism anymore The essays in this volume show not only that it is possible to do so, but how much of real value can still be learned from
continuing to explore the issues raised (and debated) by communitarians. This is the best introduction to the current state of communitarian thinking of which I am aware, and it provides abundant evidence of the continuing intellectual vitality of the movement.
Edward W. Lehman is professor of sociology at New York University.