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Civil Society. Michael EdwardsЧитать онлайн книгу.

Civil Society - Michael  Edwards


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through an active and democratic public sphere which enables common ground to be negotiated across the lines of difference, but when the structures of communication are themselves privatized and fractured, this is obviously more difficult. One of the most alarming features of politics and organizing in the United States today (and to a lesser extent elsewhere) is that public spheres have ceased to operate, or perhaps even exist, as people of different views imprison themselves in mutually exclusive social media bubbles and information sources. Traditionally independent and citizen-controlled media have also been outcompeted by much larger and wealthier commercial platforms such as Facebook which have contributed to the problem.

      Face-to-face engagement is important for another reason too: the need to re-democratize the world of associational life so that it becomes less dominated by technocrats, bureaucrats, and wealthy donors and more responsive to the concerns and priorities of ordinary citizens. The decline of membership-based organizations and the rise of professional advocacy and service-providing groups has been an important feature of recent civil society history. This process has produced mixed results in the struggle against inequality and discrimination, but one development is clear and unambiguously damaging: the disappearance of opportunities within civil society for people of different political views and identities to debate, strategize, and organize together. This is a significant factor behind the rise of cultural and political polarization.

      It would be unfair to say that this problem has been caused by the “professionalization” of the nonprofit sector and the rise of billionaire philanthropists with unprecedented spending power like Bill Gates and the Koch brothers, but it is certainly true that popular influence over the direction of the voluntary sector has waned over the last 30 years, and that the ecosystems of the nonprofit sector in most countries have become increasingly unbalanced as resources have flowed overwhelmingly to larger charities and more established causes.7 There is a pressing need to rebuild broad-based, nationally federated, independent, and internally democratic networks and associations that can act as meeting grounds and conduits for grassroots voices, leadership development, and accountability from the bottom up.

      Taken together, these four trends pose major challenges to the theory and practice of civil society in all of its guises, though they also open up some important opportunities – in the shape, for example, of new social movements that have arisen in response to the strengthening of nationalist political forces, or the increasing dissatisfaction with the condition of associational life that one sees among many younger activists. I explore these opportunities in chapter 2. It is also clear that these trends feed off each other: authoritarianism and polarization are natural bedfellows which both benefit from and accentuate the fracturing of the public sphere. The decline of voluntary associations which bring people of different views and backgrounds together is a consequence of that fracturing but also another cause. The more civil society is eroded, the less it can do its job; and the less it does its job, the weaker it becomes. Faced by these interlocking and deeply entrenched problems and developments, what can be done?

      Reviving civil society in the face of repression, polarization, and inequality is both a personal and a political (or institutional) challenge. Do we want to build an authentic civil society or not? If we disagree on what that means, do we want to be part of a democratic dialogue to find out? And since dialogues at present are neither civil nor democratic, are we at least committed to building the conditions in which everyone can participate so that we can start a different conversation with each other instead of shouting from our separate bunkers? Anything that brings people closer together rather than forcing them apart will help; anything that generates honest conversation instead of fake news and propaganda can move us


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