Citizenship and Civil Society: A Framework of Rights and Obligations in Liberal, Traditional, and Social Democratic Regimes

Citizenship and Civil Society: A Framework of Rights and Obligations in Liberal, Traditional, and Social Democratic Regimes

by Thomas Janoski
ISBN-10:
0521635810
ISBN-13:
9780521635813
Pub. Date:
02/13/1998
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
ISBN-10:
0521635810
ISBN-13:
9780521635813
Pub. Date:
02/13/1998
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Citizenship and Civil Society: A Framework of Rights and Obligations in Liberal, Traditional, and Social Democratic Regimes

Citizenship and Civil Society: A Framework of Rights and Obligations in Liberal, Traditional, and Social Democratic Regimes

by Thomas Janoski
$38.99
Current price is , Original price is $38.99. You
$38.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores
  • SHIP THIS ITEM

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Please check back later for updated availability.


Overview

Rights and obligations are confusing. When people really want or need something they call it a right. Can they simply attach this word to anything they want? Can people disregard obligations with impunity? This book argues that they can not. Rights and obligations are systematically related in important ways backed by the state. One must understand those relationships in specific ways to know what can or cannot be done with rights and obligations in public discourse and politics. They must create a web of interaction among citizens so that more long term social investments may be made.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780521635813
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 02/13/1998
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 332
Product dimensions: 6.06(w) x 9.06(h) x 0.98(d)

About the Author

Thomas Janoski is a world-recognized authority on political sociology and work, organizations, and inequality. He is an Emeritus Professor of Sociology at the University of Kentucky. He was the lead professor in creating the Management and Marketing Studies program at Duke University and Director of the Initiative in Political and Social Research (QIPSR) at the University of Kentucky. He has published widely on public policies in advanced industrialized societies concerning labor market and unemployment policies, as well as immigration and naturalization processes over decades and centuries. He has published 12 books, won three awards, and has three more books on the way. He received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, and wrote his dissertation under Professor Harold Wilensky, a prominent political sociologist. He also worked with the renowned Weberian Scholar Reinhard Bendix Weberian. He has taught political sociology, occupations and organizations, sociological theory, and comparative-historical methods at the University of Kentucky, Duke University, and the University of California-Berkeley. Over the years, he has given many lectures in Germany, Sweden, the Netherlands, Australia, Japan, and China.

Diverse Background: His father was a UAW member and worked at Dana Corporation loading auto frames. His mother took an hour-long bus ride to downtown Detroit to work afternoons as a telegraph operator for Western Union. He was the first in his family to go to college and paid his tuition by taking jobs in steel mills, chemical plants, coal gangs, boiler houses, and auto assembly lines in the Detroit area. After graduating from Michigan State University and receiving four previous draft notices, he was inducted into the Army with the fifth notice. Upon returning from Korea, he worked at the VA investigating schools and counseling heroin addicts. He then traveled around the world for two years on a low budget through Asia and Europe. Antonio Gramsci might say that he is an "organic intellectual" or one who writes about the more significant facets of his working-class background.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction to citizenship; 2. The framing of citizens' rights: expansion, clarification, and meaning; 3. Reconstructing obligations and patriotism: limitations, sanctions and exchange in a system of rights; 4. Citizen-selves in restricted and generalized exchange; 5. The balance of rights and obligations through nesting, civil society, and social culture; 6. Incremental change in citizenship over decades: power resources, state structures, ideology, and external forces; 7. Momentous change over centuries: from Wasps to Locomotives in the development and sequencing of rights; 8. Conclusions and implications; Bibliography.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews