1 / 18

Civil Society Plan for Today

Civil Society Plan for Today. Distinguishing among civil society definitions and their pros/ cons. Becoming familiar with roles that authors claim civil society plays in democratization. Debating type of structure of civil society necessary to promote democracy.

Download Presentation

Civil Society Plan for Today

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Civil SocietyPlan for Today • Distinguishing among civil society definitions and their pros/ cons. • Becoming familiar with roles that authors claim civil society plays in democratization. • Debating type of structure of civil society necessary to promote democracy.

  2. Emblematic images of civil society in Democratization: • Prior to/ during transition: protests to push authoritarian regimes out of power. • Video of opposition protests in Belarus, March 2006 (Ukrainian TV footage) • Following transition: professionalized organizations with narrower specialization, sometimes seeing role in democracy. • Video on Maria Rikhvanova, Russian environmental activist.

  3. Defining Civil Society

  4. Defining Civil Society • Civil society as a collective noun: • NGOs • Political parties? (e.g. Fish def’n.) • Religious organizations? • State-funded organizations?

  5. Defining Civil Society • Civil society as a space. • John Hall: Civil society a social space for human experimentation with identities. • Larry Diamond: “Realm of organized social life…”

  6. Larry Diamond • Different from society in general – citizens acting collectively in public sphere. • Intermediary between private life and the state. • Publicly oriented rather than private ends.

  7. Defining Civil Society • Civil society as values or norms.

  8. Robert Putnam • Values of trust, tolerance, mutual cooperation. • Not necessarily political advocacy organizations. • Building “social capital.”

  9. Roles of Civil Society in Democratization

  10. Roles of Civil Society • More important after than during transition. • Weak civil society doesn’t mean breakdown, but hinders consolidation and deepening of democracy (Howard).

  11. Roles of Civil Society (Directly for democracy) • Stimulates political participation by citizens. • Develops democratic attitudes: tolerance, moderation, compromise. • Creates alternative channels for representing interests. • Trains new political leaders. • Disseminates information to citizens. • Strengthens the state.

  12. Other Roles of Civil Society (Indirect) • Improves socioeconomic development. • Creates social equity – helping the poorest.

  13. Structure of Civil Society How much can/ should the state be involved in civil society?

  14. Pluralist vs. Corporatist Civil Society (Schmitter)

  15. Two types of corporatism • “State corporatism”: state defines and controls organizations in society. • Mainly mechanisms for state to control & restrict public participation. • State coopts, guides, dominates interest groups.

  16. Two types of corporatism • “Democratic corporatism”: interests formed from societal level up & aggregated at top level to negotiate with government. • e.g. Sweden

  17. Pro-Pluralist Arguments (Diamond) • Civil society’s fundamental nature is diversity; monopoly contradicts this. • Pluralism works to minimize social conflict. • Corporatist arrangements especially dangerous for new democracies.

  18. Pro-Corporatist Arguments (Schmitter, Black) • Is pluralism even plausible in many countries? • Pluralist civil society can descend into factionalism with little civic trust. • State can be compromised by pluralist civil society. • Infiltration by selfish private interests. • Incoherence from acting as a “cash register.”

More Related