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The Soul of Civil Society
Voluntary Associations and the Public Value of Moral Habits
The Soul of Civil Society
Voluntary Associations and the Public Value of Moral Habits
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Description
Americans care about the public value of moral habits. They like to see virtue rewarded and vice censured, appealing as this does to the nation's deep sense that one's success rests neither in money nor in power but in one's civility. In The Soul of Civil Society Don Eberly and Ryan Streeter look beyond such abstractions as the "voluntary sector" and superficial communitarian solutions to civic anomie to identify the pivotal role played by local voluntary associations in a civil society. Not only important for the services they provide, these "little platoons," as Edmund Burke labeled them, are the public incubators of a "new" morality, their emphasis on civic engagement at the local level central to preserving America's democratic culture on the national and international stage. More than simply championing the promise of a social renaissance, The Soul of Civil Society is essential reading for those seeking to do battle with a culturally entrenched individualism that threatens the core of America's moral vitality.
Table of Contents
Part 2 The Promise of Social Renaissance
Chapter 3 The Coming Social Renaissance: Restoring America's Civic and Moral Creed
Chapter 4 Toward a Human Scale: Making the World Work at the Street Level
Chapter 5 Individuals and a Healthy Civic Order
Part 6 Voluntary Associations, Public Policy, and the Marketplace
Chapter 7 Voluntary Associations and the Remoralization of America
Chapter 8 Targeting Recovery to Low-Income Families
Chapter 9 A Humane Economy: The Moral Dimensions of Enterprise
Part 10 Moral Habits and the Public Good
Chapter 11 Fathers, Families, and Citizenship
Chapter 12 Cultivating Moral Habits: Four Social Virtues Worth the Work
Chapter 13 The Reformation of Manners
Chapter 14 The Golden Rule: A Universal Moral Ethic for Society
Product details
| Published | 15 Aug 2002 |
|---|---|
| Format | Paperback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 162 |
| ISBN | 9780739104248 |
| Imprint | Lexington Books |
| Dimensions | 226 x 155 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Not only is this book a solid, thoughtful argument on a many-stranded subject; it is a treasure house of references and citations to a vast and important literature.
Michael Novak, former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Human Rights Commission, 1994 Templeton laureate
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If you want angry partisanship and political name-calling, this is not the book for you. If you want wisdom, lots of fresh ideas, palpable good will, and intellectual seriousness, it is.
David Blankenhorn, Institute for American Values
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Don Eberly and Ryan Streeter are two of America's most thoughtful students of civic and moral renewal. I plan to 'read unto others' their splendid call for a national movement to restore the Golden Rule to American life.
Adam Meyerson, president, The Philanthropy Roundtable
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A major contribution to the continuing debate about the well-being of American democracy. . . . Without in any way downplaying the distinctiveness of the present, [Eberly and Streeter] call upon us to draw wisdom from the past. But, most of all, they orient us toward the future with dedication and hope, with faith in democracy and in one another.
Jean Bethke Elshtain, The Laura Spelman Rockeller Professor of Social and Political Ethics, University of Chicago; author of Just War Against Terror

























