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This book re-visits and re-thinks some recent defining events in Irish society. Some of these are high profile and occupy a prominent place in public consciousness, such as the announcement of the banking guarantee and the publication of the Ryan report into clerical child abuse, while others are 'fringe' events which attracted less attention, such as the launch of Indymedia.ie, or were widely discussed in popular culture, like the publication of Donal {acute}Og Cusack's autobiography or the opening of Dundrum Town Centre. The book critically explores issues of equality, belonging and rights as they impact on diverse communities in Ireland, be they older people, migrants or LGBT people. As focal points for each chapter, all of the events covered in the book provide rich insights into the dynamics of Irish society in the twenty-first century. All expose underlying and complex issues of identity, power and resistance that animate public debate. In so doing, the book ultimately encourages readers to question the sources of, limits and obstacles to change in contemporary Ireland. This book brings together in a single volume the experience, research and analysis of critical commentators from a diverse range of disciplines across the social sciences, and provides an important contribution to discourse about social, economic and cultural issues in today's Ireland. This makes for an original, timely and genuinely inter-disciplinary text.
Ireland --- Irish Free State --- History --- Irish identity. --- Irish society. --- capital accumulation. --- citizenship. --- cultural values. --- early twenty-first century. --- economic values. --- marriage. --- political change. --- resistance. --- same-sex couple. --- social actors. --- social movements. --- social structure. --- structural power.
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Civility is desirable and possible, but can this fragile ideal be guaranteed? The Importance of Being Civil offers the most comprehensive look at the nature and advantages of civility throughout history and in our world today. Esteemed sociologist John Hall expands our understanding of civility as related to larger social forces-including revolution, imperialism, capitalism, nationalism, and war-and the ways that such elements limit the potential for civility.Combining wide-ranging historical and comparative evidence with social and moral theory, Hall examines how the nature of civility has fluctuated in the last three centuries, how it became lost, and how it was reestablished in the twentieth century following the two world wars. He also considers why civility is currently breaking down and what can be done to mitigate this threat.The Importance of Being Civil is a decisive and sophisticated addition to the discussion of civility in its modern cultural and historical contexts.
Civil society. --- Social ethics. --- Social contract --- Ethics --- Social problems --- Sociology --- Adam Smith. --- Adolf Hitler. --- Europe. --- European Union. --- Iranian communism. --- Jesuit communist communities. --- Karl Marx. --- Raymond Aron. --- United States. --- authenticity. --- authoritarianism. --- autonomy. --- capitalism. --- civil behavior. --- civil nationalism. --- civil political culture. --- civil society. --- civility. --- commercial society. --- communism. --- comparative advantage. --- conflict. --- cooperative relations. --- democracy. --- difference. --- disagreement. --- disenchantment. --- diversity. --- division of labor. --- economic growth. --- economic success. --- economic theory. --- heterogeneity. --- homogeneity. --- human personality. --- immigrants. --- imperialism. --- individuation. --- industrial relations. --- international relations. --- international tensions. --- international trade rivalries. --- military independence. --- modern intellectuals. --- modern science. --- modern world. --- modernist ideas. --- moral development. --- nationalism. --- negative resisting power. --- normal societal relations. --- personal authenticity. --- political civility. --- political elites. --- political theory. --- positive sum game. --- premodern communism. --- prudence. --- realism. --- religious charisma. --- revolution. --- social actors. --- social conditions. --- social contracts. --- social identities. --- social life. --- socialism. --- societal experimentation. --- societal self-organization. --- state behavior. --- states. --- status competition. --- sufficiencies. --- trust. --- virtue. --- visions. --- war. --- warring groups. --- working classes.
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