Beyond Liberal Democracy: Political Thinking for an East.
Towards Illiberal Democracy. Authors: Bell, D., Brown, D., Jayasuriya, K., Jones, D.. This book challenges the view that liberal democracy is the inevitable outcome of economic modernization. Focusing on the stable and prosperous societies of Pacific Asia, it argues that contemporary political arrangements are legitimised by the values of hierarchy, familism and harmony. An arrangement that.
Bell, Daniel A. Beyond Liberal Democracy Political Thinking for an East Asian Context.
Get this from a library! Beyond liberal democracy: political thinking for an East Asian context. (Daniel Bell) -- Is liberal democracy appropriate for East Asia? In this provocative book, Daniel Bell argues for morally legitimate alternatives to Western-style liberal democracy in the region. Beyond Liberal.
Departing from the Liberal Framework An Interview with Daniel A. Bell. University Press, rev. ed. 2010), Beyond Liberal Democracy (Princeton University Press, 2006), East Meets West (Princeton University Press, 2000), and Communitarianism and Its Critics (Oxford University Press, 1993). He is the coauthor of The Spirit of Cities (Princeton University Press, 2011). He has edited and coedited.
How Societies Change, Second Edition, Daniel Chirot. Sociology and Human Rights: A Bill of Rights for the Twenty-First Century, Judith Blau and Mark Frezzo. The Sociology of Childhood, Third Edition, William A. Corsaro. Constructing Social Research, Second Edition, Charles C. Ragin and Lisa M. Amoroso. Beyond a Border: The Causes and Consequences of Contemporary Immigration, Peter Kivisto and.
Bell, Daniel 1964- (Daniel A.), Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, c2006. Check Holdings. 6 Beyond liberal democracy political thinking for an East Asian context Online Access. 7 Contemporary moral problems: war, terrorism, torture and assassination Boston, MA: Wadsworth, (2012). Check Holdings. 8 Contingent pacifism: revisiting just war theory Online Access. 9 Essays on Chinese.
Daniel Bell and Nathan Glazer moved toward a mixture of liberal and socialist sympathies. Irving Howe, the longest of the four to remain a radical Marxist was, by the early fifties, a democratic.