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Polity: Political Culture and the Nature of Politics

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Students of politics frequently confuse politics with current events and the activities of political actors. Lost in this view is a deeper understanding of politics that emphasizes the need for governmental management of many facets of social life. It proceeds first by illustrating the need for civil organization in complex social settings and then by examining the way political culture informs the nature and degree of the political organization appropriate for a polity. Focusing specifically on U.S. political culture, the work explores American political inheritance in order to expose the enduring ideals and fundamental commitments of American political life. This permits a review of American liberalism with its characteristic emphasis upon individual freedom and basic human equality. The nature of constitutionalism and democracy are also explored in order to examine their fit with traditional American liberal ideals. But politics is also about change, and the work concludes with a discussion of the challenges the U.S. must face as the demands of political management generate pressures that might seem to erode or compromise the ideals of American political culture.

256 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2007

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220 reviews6 followers
March 12, 2016
This is an excellent introduction to the foundation ideas (Lockean liberalism) of this country and an exploration of how well it fits with the modern bureaucratic state that we've developed as we've become a more complex society. It is nicely bookended with references to Orwell's 1984, but his illustrative literary references extend to One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and Dilbert as well.
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