Political thinking, political theory, and civil society:
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York [u.a.]
Pearson Longman
2009
|
Ausgabe: | 3. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XI, 388 S. |
ISBN: | 9780205619795 0205619797 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | Contents
Preface x
Introduction
1
I. Political Thinking and Political Theory
1
II. The Link Between Political Theory and Political Thinking
III. Socrates of the Apology and the Crito
3
IV. The Rest of the Book
6
Endnotes 8
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
9
The Importance of a Civil Society
10
I. Civil Society: The Problem Faced
10
II. The Democratic Civil Society
12
III. Civil Society of Mediating Groups
13
IV. Civil Society: The Liberal Approach
14
V. Liberal Civil Society: Civic Norms
15
VI. The Civic Virtues of Toleration and Mutual Respect
16
VII.
The Market Dimension of Civil Society: Adam Smith s Dilemma
18
VIII.
The Importance of Civil Society
21
Endnotes 22
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
22
PART I Civil Society in the Classical
and Religious Traditions
2
Plato: Civic Virtue and the Just Society
24
I. Introduction
24
II. Plato s Just Society
25
III. Plato s Republic: What Justice Is Not
26
A. Cephalus and Polemarchus
26
B. Thrasymachus
27
III
Contents
IV. The Next
Question:
What
Isjustice?
29
A. The Basic Dimensions of Society
29
B. The Guardians and the Three Parts of the Soul
30
C. The Philosopher as King
33
D. Justice, Civic Virtue, and the Noble Lie
34
E. Wisdom, Courage, Moderation, and Justice
34
V. Democracy and Injustice
37
VI. Plato and Civil Society
39
Endnotes 40
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
41
3
Aristotle s Response to Plato: The Importance of Friendship
43
I. Introduction
43
II. Scientific Knowledge and Practical Intelligence
44
III. Aristotle on Plato s Forms and the Search for Happiness
45
IV. The Nature of the
Polis
48
A. Citizenship and Friendship
50
B. Slavery and Friendship
51
C. Citizenship and Differentials in Contribution
53
D. Family and Private Property
53
V. Constitutions: Just and Unjust
55
VI. Democracy and Public Deliberation
57
VII.
Aristotle and Civil Society
59
Endnotes 60
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
62
4
Christian Conceptions of Civic Virtue
63
I. Introduction
63
II. Introduction to Augustine: Cicero
63
A. The Problem of Sin
66
B. The Two Cities: The Earthly City and the Heavenly City
67
C. Implications of Augustine s View for Civic Virtue and Civil Society
68
III. St. Thomas Aquinas: Justice Restored
70
A. The Natural Law in Aquinas
71
B. Human Law and Civic Virtue
74
C. Aquinas on the Question of Civic Virtue and Civil Society
75
IV. Luther and Calvin: An Introduction
75
A. Luther and Calvin: Morality and Civic Virtue
76
B. The State and Intellectual Freedom in Luther and Calvin
77
V. The Implications for Civic Virtue and Civil Society
78
Endnotes 79
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
80
Contents
Elements
of Islamic and Jewish Medieval Political Thought
82
I. Introduction: Alfarabi s Legacy
82
II. Avicenna: The Philosopher and the Lawgiver
84
III. Averroes: The Importance of Democracy
86
IV. Maimonides: The Limits of Reason and Religion
92
V. Conclusion: The Implications for Civil Society
101
Endnotes 101
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
104
PART II Early Modern Approaches to Civil Society
6
Niccolo Machiavelli:
Civic Virtue and Civil Society
105
I. Historical Setting and Introduction
105
II. The Prince
107
A. Monarchy
107
B. Innovation Through Violence
109
C. Techniques of Power: Maintaining Appearances
110
III. The Discourses and Republican Forms
113
IV.
Mandragola
117
V. The Moral of
Mandragola
and
Ovit
Society
118
Endnotes 119
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
120
7
Thomas Hobbes and Modern Civil Society
121
I. Historical Context
121
II. Hobbes s Method
124
III. Hobbes and the State of Nature
126
IV. Hobbes s Civil Society: The Laws of Nature and Civic Virtue
128
V. The Role and Structure of the State
131
VI. The Christian Commonwealth
134
VII.
Response and Rejoinder
136
Endnotes 137
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
138
8
Benedict Spinoza and Liberal Democracy
139
I. Introduction
139
II. Historical Setting
139
III. Philosophy and Religion
140
IV. The Social Contract of a Democratic State
142
V. Spinoza and Civil Society
143
Endnotes 144
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
144
Contents
9 John Locke,
Civil
Society,
and the Constrained Majority
145
I. Introduction
145
II. The Concept of Political Authority
146
A. The State of Nature I: Justification for Political Authority
147
B. State of Nature II: Constraints for Freedom
148
C. The Nature of Civil Society and Constrained Majority Rule
151
III. Locke s Limited Government
154
A. The Right of Revolution
156
B. Toleration and Civil Society
156
IV. Response and Rejoinder
159
Endnotes 160
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
161
10
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Community and Civil Society
162
I. Introduction
162
II. Selfishness and Self-Love
164
III. The Second Discourse on the Origin of Inequality Among Men
165
A. The Loss of Civic Virtue
169
B. The New Social Contract and the New Civil Society
170
IV. Rousseau s Threat to Civil Society
174
V. Response and Rejoinder
177
Endnotes 179
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
180
PART III Late Modern and Contemporary Approaches
to Civil Society
11 Immanuel Kant:
Civil Society and International Order
181
I. Public Reason
181
II. The Process of Practical Reason
183
III. Kant s Civil Society
185
IV. Nature s Secret Plan
187
V. The New World Order: A Federation of Civil Societies
188
VI. Public Reason and Civil Society
190
VII.
Response and Rejoinder
192
Endnotes 195
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
196
12
G. W. F. Hegel: Civil Society and the State
197
I. Introduction
197
II. Phenomenology of Spirit
198
III. Civil Society
200
IV. The State and Civic Virtue
203
Contents
V. Response
and Rejoinder
208
Endnotes 211
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
211
13
Karl Marx and the Economic Argument about Civil Society
213
I. Marx s Reaction to Hegel
213
II. Political Emancipation: Rights in Civil Society
215
III. Modern Alienation
217
A. The Norms of Alienated Life
219
B. Historical Context of Alienation
220
IV. The Economic Argument: The Sources of Exploitation
223
A. Crisis of Capitalism: Declining Profits
224
B. The New Order
225
V. Response and Rejoinder
226
Endnotes 229
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
230
14
John Stuart Mill: Civil Society as a Higher Calling
231
I. Mill s Perfected Civil Society
231
II. Mill and Jeremy
Bentham
and the Principle of Utility
232
A. Bentham s Pleasure Calculus
232
B. Utility, Justice, and Rights
234
III. On Liberty: The Culture of Civil Society
235
A. Well-Developed Persons
235
B. Opinion Advocacy and Civic Virtue
237
С
Self-Regarding Conduct
238
IV. The Stationary Economy and Private Property
239
V. On Representative Government
241
VI. Response and Rejoinder
244
Endnotes 246
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
247
15
John Rawls: The Just and Fair Civil Society
248
I. Introduction
248
II. Rawls s Principles of Justice in A Theory of Justice
248
A. The Weil-Ordered Society
252
III. Political Liberalism and Value Pluralism
253
A. The Overlapping Consensus and Civic Virtue
256
B. Public Reason and Democratic Citizenship
257
C. Civil Society and Political Liberalism
259
IV. Response and Rejoinder
262
Endnotes 264
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
265
Contents
16
The Conservative View: Edmund Burke, Alexis
de Tocqueville,
and Michael Oakeshott
267
I. Introduction
267
II. Burke: The Purpose of Civil Society
268
A. The Natural Aristocracy
271
B. The Role of Virtue: The Importance of Moderation
271
C. Local Affiliations and Religion
272
D. Identity and Civic Virtue in Burke
273
III. Tocqueville and the Commitment to Equality
274
A. The Passion for Equality
274
B. Voluntary Associations and Local Government
275
C. Materialism and Religion
277
D. Threats to Civil Society
278
E. Tocqueville, Identity, and Civic Virtue
279
IV. Introduction: Oakeshott and Civil Society
280
A. Oakeshott s Free Agent
280
B. Civitas Versus Universitas
281
C. Civitas, Politics, and Government
282
V. Response and Rejoinder
285
Endnotes 288
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
289
PART IV Critiques of Civil Society
17
The Critique of Power in Civil Society:
Friedrich
Nietzsche
and Michel
Foucault
290
I. Introduction
290
II. Nietzsche and the Will to Power
290
III. Dionysus Versus Apollo and the Quest for a New Culture
291
IV. The Place of Morality
293
A. The Master and Slave Moralities
294
B. Origin of Slave and Herd Moralities
297
V. Democracy and Civil Society
299
VI. Politics of Bad Conscience
301
VII.
Foucaulťs
Nietzschean Critique
303
VIII.
Maclntyre s Response to the Nietzschean Critique
309
End notes
311
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
313
18
Feminist Responses to Civil Society
314
I. The Public and the Private
314
II. The Exclusion of Women
315
Contents ix
///.
Political Theory and the Feminist Critique: Hegel and Mill
315
IV. Perspective on the Feminist Political Project
318
A. Pateman on the Sexual Contract
318
B. Liberalism as Feminism: The Case for Gender Neutrality and Individual
Rights
319
C. Female Empowerment, Social Censorship, and the State: Catherine
MacKinnon
322
D. Feminist Ethics and the Discourse of Justice: Jean Bethke Elshtain
325
E. The Marxist Feminist Viewpoint: Nancy Hartsock
327
F. Feminist Perspectives on Power and Will:
Camille
Paglia
and Judith Butler
330
V. Response and Rejoinder
335
VI. Feminism Beyond Gender?: The Expanding Scope of the Feminist Project
337
Endnotes 340
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
341
19
Multiculturalism and the Challenges of a Global Civil Society
343
I. Introduction
343
II. Communication, Rationality, and Civil Society
344
III. Multiculturalism and Civil Society
346
IV. Civil Society and Religion
351
V. Civility and Global Civil Society
357
A. A New Challenge for Global Civil Society
358
B. Group Differences and Expanding Civil Society
363
VI. Conclusion: A Multicultural and Liberal Civil Society?
365
Endnotes 366
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
368
20
Conclusion: Civil Society and Civic Renewal
369
I. Negotiating the Boundaries of Civil Society
369
II. Why We Should Care: Civil Society, Liberal Democracy, and Civic Life
370
III. The Decline of Civic Engagement
374
IV. The Quest for Civic Renewal
378
Endnotes 379
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
380
Index
382
|
adam_txt |
Contents
Preface x
Introduction
1
I. Political Thinking and Political Theory
1
II. The Link Between Political Theory and Political Thinking
III. Socrates of the Apology and the Crito
3
IV. The Rest of the Book
6
Endnotes 8
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
9
The Importance of a Civil Society
10
I. Civil Society: The Problem Faced
10
II. The Democratic Civil Society
12
III. Civil Society of Mediating Groups
13
IV. Civil Society: The Liberal Approach
14
V. Liberal Civil Society: Civic Norms
15
VI. The Civic Virtues of Toleration and Mutual Respect
16
VII.
The Market Dimension of Civil Society: Adam Smith's Dilemma
18
VIII.
The Importance of Civil Society
21
Endnotes 22
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
22
PART I Civil Society in the Classical
and Religious Traditions
2
Plato: Civic Virtue and the Just Society
24
I. Introduction
24
II. Plato's "Just Society"
25
III. Plato's Republic: What Justice Is Not
26
A. Cephalus and Polemarchus
26
B. Thrasymachus
27
III
Contents
IV. The Next
Question:
What
Isjustice?
29
A. The Basic Dimensions of Society
29
B. The Guardians and the Three Parts of the Soul
30
C. The Philosopher as King
33
D. Justice, Civic Virtue, and the Noble Lie
34
E. Wisdom, Courage, Moderation, and Justice
34
V. Democracy and Injustice
37
VI. Plato and Civil Society
39
Endnotes 40
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
41
3
Aristotle's Response to Plato: The Importance of Friendship
43
I. Introduction
43
II. Scientific Knowledge and Practical Intelligence
44
III. Aristotle on Plato's Forms and the Search for Happiness
45
IV. The Nature of the
Polis
48
A. Citizenship and Friendship
50
B. Slavery and Friendship
51
C. Citizenship and Differentials in Contribution
53
D. Family and Private Property
53
V. Constitutions: Just and Unjust
55
VI. Democracy and Public Deliberation
57
VII.
Aristotle and Civil Society
59
Endnotes 60
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
62
4
Christian Conceptions of Civic Virtue
63
I. Introduction
63
II. Introduction to Augustine: Cicero
63
A. The Problem of Sin
66
B. The Two Cities: The Earthly City and the Heavenly City
67
C. Implications of Augustine's View for Civic Virtue and Civil Society
68
III. St. Thomas Aquinas: Justice Restored
70
A. The Natural Law in Aquinas
71
B. Human Law and Civic Virtue
74
C. Aquinas on the Question of Civic Virtue and Civil Society
75
IV. Luther and Calvin: An Introduction
75
A. Luther and Calvin: Morality and Civic Virtue
76
B. The State and Intellectual Freedom in Luther and Calvin
77
V. The Implications for Civic Virtue and Civil Society
78
Endnotes 79
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
80
Contents
Elements
of Islamic and Jewish Medieval Political Thought
82
I. Introduction: Alfarabi's Legacy
82
II. Avicenna: The Philosopher and the Lawgiver
84
III. Averroes: The Importance of Democracy
86
IV. Maimonides: The Limits of Reason and Religion
92
V. Conclusion: The Implications for Civil Society
101
Endnotes 101
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
104
PART II Early Modern Approaches to Civil Society
6
Niccolo Machiavelli:
Civic Virtue and Civil Society
105
I. Historical Setting and Introduction
105
II. The Prince
107
A. Monarchy
107
B. Innovation Through Violence
109
C. Techniques of Power: Maintaining Appearances
110
III. The Discourses and Republican Forms
113
IV.
Mandragola
117
V. The Moral of
Mandragola
and
Ovit
Society
118
Endnotes 119
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
120
7
Thomas Hobbes and Modern Civil Society
121
I. Historical Context
121
II. Hobbes's Method
124
III. Hobbes and the State of Nature
126
IV. Hobbes's Civil Society: The Laws of Nature and Civic Virtue
128
V. The Role and Structure of the State
131
VI. The Christian Commonwealth
134
VII.
Response and Rejoinder
136
Endnotes 137
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
138
8
Benedict Spinoza and Liberal Democracy
139
I. Introduction
139
II. Historical Setting
139
III. Philosophy and Religion
140
IV. The Social Contract of a Democratic State
142
V. Spinoza and Civil Society
143
Endnotes 144
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
144
Contents
9 John Locke,
Civil
Society,
and the Constrained Majority
145
I. Introduction
145
II. The Concept of Political Authority
146
A. The State of Nature I: Justification for Political Authority
147
B. State of Nature II: Constraints for Freedom
148
C. The Nature of Civil Society and Constrained Majority Rule
151
III. Locke's Limited Government
154
A. The Right of Revolution
156
B. Toleration and Civil Society
156
IV. Response and Rejoinder
159
Endnotes 160
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
161
10
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Community and Civil Society
162
I. Introduction
162
II. Selfishness and Self-Love
164
III. The Second Discourse on the Origin of Inequality Among Men
165
A. The Loss of Civic Virtue
169
B. The New Social Contract and the New Civil Society
170
IV. Rousseau's Threat to Civil Society
174
V. Response and Rejoinder
177
Endnotes 179
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
180
PART III Late Modern and Contemporary Approaches
to Civil Society
11 Immanuel Kant:
Civil Society and International Order
181
I. Public Reason
181
II. The Process of Practical Reason
183
III. Kant's Civil Society
185
IV. Nature's Secret Plan
187
V. The New World Order: A Federation of Civil Societies
188
VI. Public Reason and Civil Society
190
VII.
Response and Rejoinder
192
Endnotes 195
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
196
12
G. W. F. Hegel: Civil Society and the State
197
I. Introduction
197
II. Phenomenology of Spirit
198
III. Civil Society
200
IV. The State and Civic Virtue
203
Contents
V. Response
and Rejoinder
208
Endnotes 211
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
211
13
Karl Marx and the Economic Argument about Civil Society
213
I. Marx's Reaction to Hegel
213
II. Political Emancipation: Rights in Civil Society
215
III. Modern Alienation
217
A. The Norms of Alienated Life
219
B. Historical Context of Alienation
220
IV. The Economic Argument: The Sources of Exploitation
223
A. Crisis of Capitalism: Declining Profits
224
B. The New Order
225
V. Response and Rejoinder
226
Endnotes 229
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
230
14
John Stuart Mill: Civil Society as a Higher Calling
231
I. Mill's Perfected Civil Society
231
II. Mill and Jeremy
Bentham
and the Principle of Utility
232
A. Bentham's Pleasure Calculus
232
B. Utility, Justice, and Rights
234
III. On Liberty: The Culture of Civil Society
235
A. Well-Developed Persons
235
B. Opinion Advocacy and Civic Virtue
237
С
Self-Regarding Conduct
238
IV. The Stationary Economy and Private Property
239
V. On Representative Government
241
VI. Response and Rejoinder
244
Endnotes 246
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
247
15
John Rawls: The Just and Fair Civil Society
248
I. Introduction
248
II. Rawls's Principles of Justice in A Theory of Justice
248
A. The Weil-Ordered Society
252
III. Political Liberalism and Value Pluralism
253
A. The Overlapping Consensus and Civic Virtue
256
B. Public Reason and Democratic Citizenship
257
C. Civil Society and Political Liberalism
259
IV. Response and Rejoinder
262
Endnotes 264
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
265
Contents
16
The Conservative View: Edmund Burke, Alexis
de Tocqueville,
and Michael Oakeshott
267
I. Introduction
267
II. Burke: The Purpose of Civil Society
268
A. The Natural Aristocracy
271
B. The Role of Virtue: The Importance of Moderation
271
C. Local Affiliations and Religion
272
D. Identity and Civic Virtue in Burke
273
III. Tocqueville and the Commitment to Equality
274
A. The Passion for Equality
274
B. Voluntary Associations and Local Government
275
C. Materialism and Religion
277
D. Threats to Civil Society
278
E. Tocqueville, Identity, and Civic Virtue
279
IV. Introduction: Oakeshott and Civil Society
280
A. Oakeshott's Free Agent
280
B. Civitas Versus Universitas
281
C. Civitas, Politics, and Government
282
V. Response and Rejoinder
285
Endnotes 288
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
289
PART IV Critiques of Civil Society
17
The Critique of Power in Civil Society:
Friedrich
Nietzsche
and Michel
Foucault
290
I. Introduction
290
II. Nietzsche and the Will to Power
290
III. Dionysus Versus Apollo and the Quest for a New Culture
291
IV. The Place of Morality
293
A. The Master and Slave Moralities
294
B. Origin of Slave and Herd Moralities
297
V. Democracy and Civil Society
299
VI. Politics of Bad Conscience
301
VII.
Foucaulťs
Nietzschean Critique
303
VIII.
Maclntyre's Response to the Nietzschean Critique
309
End notes
311
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
313
18
Feminist Responses to Civil Society
314
I. The Public and the Private
314
II. The Exclusion of Women
315
Contents ix
///.
Political Theory and the Feminist Critique: Hegel and Mill
315
IV. Perspective on the Feminist Political Project
318
A. Pateman on the Sexual Contract
318
B. Liberalism as Feminism: The Case for Gender Neutrality and Individual
Rights
319
C. Female Empowerment, Social Censorship, and the State: Catherine
MacKinnon
322
D. Feminist Ethics and the Discourse of Justice: Jean Bethke Elshtain
325
E. The Marxist Feminist Viewpoint: Nancy Hartsock
327
F. Feminist Perspectives on Power and Will:
Camille
Paglia
and Judith Butler
330
V. Response and Rejoinder
335
VI. Feminism Beyond Gender?: The Expanding Scope of the Feminist Project
337
Endnotes 340
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
341
19
Multiculturalism and the Challenges of a Global Civil Society
343
I. Introduction
343
II. Communication, Rationality, and Civil Society
344
III. Multiculturalism and Civil Society
346
IV. Civil Society and Religion
351
V. Civility and Global Civil Society
357
A. A New Challenge for Global Civil Society
358
B. Group Differences and Expanding Civil Society
363
VI. Conclusion: A Multicultural and Liberal Civil Society?
365
Endnotes 366
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
368
20
Conclusion: Civil Society and Civic Renewal
369
I. Negotiating the Boundaries of Civil Society
369
II. Why We Should Care: Civil Society, Liberal Democracy, and Civic Life
370
III. The Decline of Civic Engagement
374
IV. The Quest for Civic Renewal
378
Endnotes 379
Partial Bibliography and Further Reading
380
Index
382 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | DeLue, Steven M. 1945- Dale, Tim M. |
author_GND | (DE-588)1047954338 (DE-588)141867817 |
author_facet | DeLue, Steven M. 1945- Dale, Tim M. |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | DeLue, Steven M. 1945- |
author_variant | s m d sm smd t m d tm tmd |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035112916 |
callnumber-first | J - Political Science |
callnumber-label | JC337 |
callnumber-raw | JC337 |
callnumber-search | JC337 |
callnumber-sort | JC 3337 |
callnumber-subject | JC - Political Theory |
classification_rvk | ME 3100 |
classification_tum | POL 300f |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)190842609 (DE-599)GBV55670066X |
dewey-full | 320.01 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 320 - Political science (Politics and government) |
dewey-raw | 320.01 |
dewey-search | 320.01 |
dewey-sort | 3320.01 |
dewey-tens | 320 - Political science (Politics and government) |
discipline | Politologie |
discipline_str_mv | Politologie |
edition | 3. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035112916 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T22:18:21Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:22:36Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780205619795 0205619797 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016780716 |
oclc_num | 190842609 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-91 DE-BY-TUM |
owner_facet | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-91 DE-BY-TUM |
physical | XI, 388 S. |
publishDate | 2009 |
publishDateSearch | 2009 |
publishDateSort | 2009 |
publisher | Pearson Longman |
record_format | marc |
spelling | DeLue, Steven M. 1945- Verfasser (DE-588)1047954338 aut Political thinking, political theory, and civil society Steven M. DeLue 3. ed. New York [u.a.] Pearson Longman 2009 XI, 388 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Philosophie Politische Wissenschaft Civil society Political science Philosophy Demokratie (DE-588)4011413-2 gnd rswk-swf Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 gnd rswk-swf Politische Theorie (DE-588)4046563-9 gnd rswk-swf Politisches Denken (DE-588)4115590-7 gnd rswk-swf Staatsbürger (DE-588)4182642-5 gnd rswk-swf Demokratie (DE-588)4011413-2 s DE-604 Politische Theorie (DE-588)4046563-9 s Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 s Politisches Denken (DE-588)4115590-7 s Staatsbürger (DE-588)4182642-5 s Dale, Tim M. Verfasser (DE-588)141867817 aut Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016780716&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | DeLue, Steven M. 1945- Dale, Tim M. Political thinking, political theory, and civil society Philosophie Politische Wissenschaft Civil society Political science Philosophy Demokratie (DE-588)4011413-2 gnd Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 gnd Politische Theorie (DE-588)4046563-9 gnd Politisches Denken (DE-588)4115590-7 gnd Staatsbürger (DE-588)4182642-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4011413-2 (DE-588)4076226-9 (DE-588)4046563-9 (DE-588)4115590-7 (DE-588)4182642-5 |
title | Political thinking, political theory, and civil society |
title_auth | Political thinking, political theory, and civil society |
title_exact_search | Political thinking, political theory, and civil society |
title_exact_search_txtP | Political thinking, political theory, and civil society |
title_full | Political thinking, political theory, and civil society Steven M. DeLue |
title_fullStr | Political thinking, political theory, and civil society Steven M. DeLue |
title_full_unstemmed | Political thinking, political theory, and civil society Steven M. DeLue |
title_short | Political thinking, political theory, and civil society |
title_sort | political thinking political theory and civil society |
topic | Philosophie Politische Wissenschaft Civil society Political science Philosophy Demokratie (DE-588)4011413-2 gnd Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 gnd Politische Theorie (DE-588)4046563-9 gnd Politisches Denken (DE-588)4115590-7 gnd Staatsbürger (DE-588)4182642-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Philosophie Politische Wissenschaft Civil society Political science Philosophy Demokratie Politische Philosophie Politische Theorie Politisches Denken Staatsbürger |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016780716&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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