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The three ages of government : from the person, to the group, to the world

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Abstract For much of history, people have been treated as subjects to those with political and economic power and wealth. It is only in the last 250 years that people (in some parts of the world) have become c...itizens as opposed to subjects. This change happened in a very short period, between 1780 and 1820, when the foundation for democracy was laid. This was also the basis upon which a century later, local governments responded to rapid industrialization, urbanization, and population growth. During the twentieth century, all democratic governments came to perform a range of tasks, functions, and services that had no historical precedent. In the thirty years following the Second World War, Western democracies created welfare states that, for the first time in history, significantly reduced the gap between the wealthy and the rest. Many of the reforms of that postwar period have been rolled back since then because of the belief that government should be more 'businesslike'. The changes in the role of government in society have been massive in the past 250 years, and so little is known about why. Jos C.N. Raadschelders examines the questions that citizens should have about their connections to government, why there is a government, what it does, how it does it, and why we can no longer do without government. What is Government? rises above stereotypical thinking about government.show more
Table of Contents Introduction: What is government
Understanding government in society: The past fifty years
Government today
What positions can state and government occupy in society?
What roles can government play in society? Government's political revolution
Trends in the role of government in society
How the study of public administration contributes to understanding government
Why study this?
Government in society: The conceptual and historical context for understanding government
Opening Salvo: On the torture of holistic scholarship
Government as artifice of bounded rationality: Simon and Vico
Social ontology for understanding institutional arrangements
Hierarchies of knowledge: From simple to complex phenomena
Government as function of instinct, community, and society
Institutional changes and the triple whammy
Changes at the constitutional level
Changes at the collective level
Changes at the operational level
Enter the triple whammy: Industrialization, urbanization, and rapid population growth
The stage is set for the remainder of this book
Instinct and intent: Origins and elements of human governing behaviors
The nature-nurture issue: From dichotomy to balanced complex
Sociality among the great apes and humans: Similarities and differences
Similarities
Differences
Physical and social features of the Hominin tribe
Human instinct and intent
How we differ from primates: Governing among and of hunter-gatherers
Conflicting impulses underlying governing arrangements
Concluding comments: Relevance to understanding what government is
Tribal community: Governing humans in ever larger, sedentary groups
The growth, dispersion, and concentration of the human species
The agricultural revolution: Fraud or inevitable?
Small and large-scale governing arrangements: Four main phases of socioeconomic development, three structuring constants, and and two governing revolutions
The rise and fall of governing arrangements: Self-governing capacity as the default
The political-administrative revolution since the 1780s : A very brief recap
The triple whammy plus high-speed communication technology
From government as instrument to government as container: The role and position of the individual
Citizen and government in a global society: Globalization and the deep current of rationalization
What is globalization? What is a global society?
The impact of globalization on people as citizens and as public officeholders
The impact of globalization on the structure and functioning of government
The impact of globalization on the role and position of government
Understanding globalization: The deep current of rationalization and its manifestation(s)
How can citizens and governments deal with globalization and the perversions of rationalization?
Governing as process: Negotiable authority and multisource decision-making
The role and position of career civil servants in democratic political systems
The nature of public authority
Negotiable authority as key to understanding what democratic government is today
The nature of public decision-making
Multisource decision making as standard in democratic government
The governing we can take for granted
Citizens and government have come a long way in a very short time
Democracy: Thriving by self-restraint, vulnerable to human instinct, tribal community, and global society
The position and role of government in society
The influence of human instinct
The influence of tribal community
The influence of global society
Democracy as ideal and as vulnerable: Challenges from human behavior
Democracy as ideal political system
Declining trust in government
Rent-seeking behavior by private actors: Business principles in the public realm
Personality politics and populism: The enduring power of emotions
Na-na-na-na-boo-boo politics: The price of polarization and partisanship
The need for continuous civics education
Democracy and bureaucracy: The delicate interplay of fairness and efficiency
Democracy, self-restraint, and true guardians.
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Created Date 2023.09.29
Modified Date 2024.01.30