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Visions of Utopia in Switzerland

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Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Wien. Occasional Papers in Swiss Studies. Vol. 3 General Joy Charnley and Malcolm Pender Centre for Swiss Cultural Studies. The constitutional reform of 1848, which created the present political structures and legal system of Switzerland, bordered on the ideal in the regulation of human affairs, but has been adjusted over the years in the light of changing circumstances. Arguably, the political arrangements which enable the cultures of Switzerland to live together in relative harmony can be viewed in the year 2000, when Europe remains scarred by repression and violence between ethnic and language groups, as being closer to Utopia than arrangements obtaining in other places. The essays in this third volume of Occasional Papers in Swiss Studies discuss differing notions of Utopia from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries in relation to Switzerland and the often chastening confrontation of these notions with reality. Following on the constitutional reform put in place in 2000, Visions of Utopia in Switzerland aims to set in context the current debate about the kind of society Switzerland wishes to become - isolationist or open to Europe, narrowly traditional or widely multicultural. Joy 'J'aime bien ma Suisse': Some Italian Reactions to the Schwarzenbach Initiative of 1970 - Bernard The Total Defence A Dark Vision of the Political and Military Elite - Armin When Citizens become Institutional Conditions for the Democratic Accountability of New Public Management in a Direct Democracy - Malcolm Unrealised Visions of the Max Frisch and DieSchweiz - Fabienne Jewish Refugees in Switzerland during the Second World War - Brigitte Looking back to the Designs for an Ideal Society in the Swiss Enlightenment.

113 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2001

About the author

Joy Charnley

15 books
Dr. Joy Charnley is Lecturer in French at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow. She has co-edited several books on Swiss literature, including "Twenty-Five Years of Emancipation? Women in Switzerland 1971-1996," published in 1998. She had edited five volumes of the Occasional Papers in Swiss Studies (1998-2003). She has published on Yvette Z’Graggen, Alice Rivaz, Anne-Lise Grobéty, and Anne Cuneo.

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