Politics stoutly resists efforts to meet dire threats to human survival, such as climate change, industrial poisons, and "natural" disasters. This book seizes on new discoveries of nature's interconnective ways to demand politics and government without violence, fair and equal access to the ballot box, dialogue across differences, and electoral action from the ground up by an independent political party.
Politics stoutly resists efforts to meet dire threats to human survival, such as climate change, industrial poisons, and "natural" disasters. This book seizes on new discoveries of nature's interconnective ways to demand politics and government without violence, fair and equal access to the ballot box, dialogue across differences, and electoral action from the ground up by an independent political party.
John Rensenbrink is professor emeritus of government and legal studies at Bowdoin College and cofounder of the US Green Party and the Maine Green Independent Party.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: Re-thinking Nature Demands Re-Thinking Politics Part I: Why Politics Has a Bad Name: The Past Tells a Troubled Story Chapter 1: The Tragedy of Politics Chapter 2: From City-State to the Bourgeois Republic Chapter 3: Shatter the Bourgeois Republic or Improve It? Heroic Dialectics versus Liberal Reform Chapter 4: Politics and Violence: Why Max Weber Had it Wrong Part II: We Are Part of Nature: Being Related, Not Being Separate Chapter 5: The Body and Its Mind Chapter 6: Relationship Already Is Chapter 7: Concrete Other: The Core Relationship Chapter 8: Action Part III: How Being Related is Transforming Economic, Social, and Cultural Life: Is Politics Next? Chapter 9: Economy Chapter 10: Race Chapter 11: Sexuality Chapter 12: Religion Chapter 13: University Part IV: Ecological Wisdom and the Renewal of Politics Chapter 14: Politics Gets Interesting: The Return of the Local Chapter 15: Is World Governance in Our Future? Chapter 16: Planet Home: Uniting Local and Global Part V: Getting There From Here, Who Will Do It? How Will It Happen? When? Chapter 17: We the People Chapter 18: Past Strategies for Fundamental Change Chapter 19: Aligning Action Movements Chapter 20: Green Party Chapter 21: Fundamental Change: When?
Introduction: Re-thinking Nature Demands Re-Thinking Politics Part I: Why Politics Has a Bad Name: The Past Tells a Troubled Story Chapter 1: The Tragedy of Politics Chapter 2: From City-State to the Bourgeois Republic Chapter 3: Shatter the Bourgeois Republic or Improve It? Heroic Dialectics versus Liberal Reform Chapter 4: Politics and Violence: Why Max Weber Had it Wrong Part II: We Are Part of Nature: Being Related, Not Being Separate Chapter 5: The Body and Its Mind Chapter 6: Relationship Already Is Chapter 7: Concrete Other: The Core Relationship Chapter 8: Action Part III: How Being Related is Transforming Economic, Social, and Cultural Life: Is Politics Next? Chapter 9: Economy Chapter 10: Race Chapter 11: Sexuality Chapter 12: Religion Chapter 13: University Part IV: Ecological Wisdom and the Renewal of Politics Chapter 14: Politics Gets Interesting: The Return of the Local Chapter 15: Is World Governance in Our Future? Chapter 16: Planet Home: Uniting Local and Global Part V: Getting There From Here, Who Will Do It? How Will It Happen? When? Chapter 17: We the People Chapter 18: Past Strategies for Fundamental Change Chapter 19: Aligning Action Movements Chapter 20: Green Party Chapter 21: Fundamental Change: When?
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