The Little Platoons: Sub-Local Governments in Modern History
By (Author) George Liebmann
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
27th June 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Regional, state and other local government
Urban communities
320.8
Hardback
190
The Little Platoons examines sub-local governmentthe small-scale structures of civil society that lie between the individual and large governmental actorsin England, France, Germany, the United States, Russia, China, and Japan. The work examines community councils, educational districts, neighborhood organizations, and the like, as seen in various societies in the modern age. And, in identifying common attributes of these civil and societal organizations, the work has particular relevanceand indeed makes ameliorative recommendationsfor the problems of our modern cities. In a period of dissatisfaction with a self-regarding and centralized political class and with both market and bureaucratic institutions, Liebmann's thoughtful analysis of community and civil organization in a variety of societies and traditions broadens our understanding of comparative politics and sociology, urban planning, and state and local government.
"Little Platoons fills a significant gap in modern social theory. In the tradition of Tocqueville, he reminds us of the continuing importance of small-scale political structures. More importantly, he shows how "sublocal governments" may hold the keys to some of the most perplexing problems of modern social welfare states."-Mary Ann Glendon Learned Hand Professor of Law, Harvard Law School
Liebmann, an attorney in private practice, provides a historical and legal view of the semiofficial, small-scale governments that have supplied services to local publics. He surveys not only the US but also Britain, France, Germany, China, Russia, and Japan for their unique grassroots institutions....Of interest to specialists and to libraries with strong collections in law and government organization.-Choice
"Liebmann, an attorney in private practice, provides a historical and legal view of the semiofficial, small-scale governments that have supplied services to local publics. He surveys not only the US but also Britain, France, Germany, China, Russia, and Japan for their unique grassroots institutions....Of interest to specialists and to libraries with strong collections in law and government organization."-Choice
GEORGE W. LIEBMANN, an attorney in private practice in Baltimore, Maryland, is a graduate of Dartmouth College and the University of Chicago School of Law. He has served as an executive assistant to the Governor of Maryland and Assistant Attorney General of Maryland, and he has taught at Johns Hopkins University and the University of Maryland School of Law. In 1993-94, while writing this book, Liebmann was a Simon Industrial and Professional Fellow at the University of Manchester in England.