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Membership and Morals
A01=Nancy L. Rosenblum
Activism
Anti-discrimination law
Apathy
Attempt
Author_Nancy L. Rosenblum
Category=JH
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Category=JPA
Citizenship
Civic virtue
Civil disobedience
Civil society
Communitarianism
Concurrence
Consent of the governed
Consideration
Conspiracy theory
Crime
Deference
Deliberation
Deprogramming
Despotism
Disparate impact
Due process
Employment
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eq_society-politics
Exclusion
Fraud
Freedom of association
Freedom of speech
Gun control
Hate group
Henry David Thoreau
Ideology
Incest
Individual and group rights
Individualism
Institution
Jewish Defense League
Judicial deference
Legislation
Liberal democracy
Liberal elite
Liberalism
Morality
Nativism (politics)
Necessity
NIMBY
Oppression
Orwellian
Political philosophy
Politics
Posse Comitatus (organization)
Public policy
Public sphere
Racial segregation
Racism
Reasonable person
Reform Judaism
Regulation
Republicanism
Right to keep and bear arms
Right-wing politics
Second-class citizen
Secret society
Sedition
Separatism
Sherbert v. Verner
Slavery
Statute
Subversion
Tax
Utilitarianism
Voluntary association
Voting
Product details
- ISBN 9780691050232
- Weight: 624g
- Dimensions: 197 x 254mm
- Publication Date: 28 May 2000
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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In recent years, membership has dropped in traditional voluntary associations such as Rotary Clubs, Jaycees, and bowling leagues. At the same time, concern is rising about the growth of paramilitary and hate groups. Scholars have warned that these trends are undermining civic society by creating a dangerous number of isolated, mistrustful individuals and organized, antisocial renegades. In this provocative book, however, Nancy Rosenblum takes a new, less narrowly political approach to the study of groups. And she reaches more optimistic conclusions about the state of civil society. Rosenblum argues that we should judge associations not only by what they do for civic virtue, but also by what they do for individual members. She shows that groups of all kinds--among them religious groups, corporations, homeowner associations, secret societies, racial and cultural identity groups, prayer groups, and even paramilitary groups--fill deep psychological and moral needs. And she contends that the failure to recognize this has contributed to an alarmist view of their social impact.
For example, she argues that, although extremist groups have obvious antisocial aims, they constrain individuals who would be even more dangerous as maladjusted loners. And she examines the rapid growth of small "support groups"--which are usually dismissed as politically irrelevant--and shows that the moral support people find in such places as prayer groups and self-help groups helps to cultivate the social trust some scholars say is disappearing. Rosenblum concludes that, for practical and principled reasons, American democracy should permit expansive freedom of association, illustrating her case with discussion of specific cases in law. Rosenblum recognizes, however, that freedom has a price. She reminds us that some groups have oppressive and even criminal tendencies, and she explores what liberal democracy should do to ensure that individuals also have freedom within associations and freedom to exit. Throughout, Rosenblum writes eloquently and with a powerful moral voice, drawing on law, practical politics, and psychology to produce an original political theory of the moral uses of pluralism.
The book adds remarkable depth and subtlety to one of the leading subjects in contemporary social and political debate.
Nancy L. Rosenblum is Henry Merritt Wriston Professor and Professor of Political Science at Brown University. She is the author of Another Liberalism: Romanticism and the Reconstruction of Liberal Thought and Bentham's Theory of the Modern State. She is the editor of Liberalism and the Moral Life; Thoreau's Political Writings; and Obligations of Citizenship and Demands of Faith.
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