To Empower People: From State to Civil Society - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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To Empower People: From State to Civil Society

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Title: To Empower People: From State to Civil Society


1
To Empower People From State to Civil Society
  • Peter L. Berger and Richard John Neuhaus

2
Central Problem
  • Desire for government services
  • Strong dislike of government and bureaucracy

3
Societal Conceptions
  • Megastructures
  • Private Life
  • Mediating Structures

4
Examples of Megastructures
  • The State
  • Corporations, Big Business
  • Educational Bureaucracy
  • Organized Professions

5
Problems with the Megastructures
  • Alienating to individuals.
  • Not helpful in providing meaning, fulfillment, or
    identity to the individual.
  • Viewed as unreal or malignant

6
Problems with Private Life
  • Isolating
  • Cannot be relied upon unstable

7
Examples of Mediating Structures
  • Neighborhood
  • Family
  • Church
  • Voluntary Association

8
Value of Mediating Structures
  • Bridge gap between private life and
    megastructures
  • Give stability to private life
  • Provide meaning and value to megastructures If
    meaning is lost, democracy suffers.
  • Provide moral basis to political order, so order
    is secured through consent not coercion

9
Liberalism
  • Tends to be blind to the functions of mediating
    structures
  • Greater concern for the individual and a just
    public order
  • Defends private rights from the mediating
    structures (hostile to the idea that religion has
    public rights and public functions)

10
Conservatism
  • Held mediating structures in high regard before
    the 18th century
  • Now has a tendency to revoke modernity
  • Sensitive to the alienations of big government,
    but blind to the same effects of big business

11
Proposition 1
  • Mediating structures are essential for a vital
    democracy
  • If mediating structures didnt generate and
    maintain values, the State would. When values are
    determined top-down, the government is
    authoritarian, not democratic.

12
Proposition 2
  • Public policy should protect and foster mediating
    structures.

13
Proposition 3
  • Public policy should utilize mediating structures
    for the realization of social purposes.
  • Risk of government cooption of mediating
    structures
  • Goal is to expand government services without
    increasing government oppressiveness

14
Empowerment
  • Feeling of powerlessness caused by faceless
    controlling institutions with different values
    than the individual
  • Easier for the affluent to resist the
    encroachment of the megastructures
  • Policy based on the mediating structures aims to
    empower poor people to do the things the more
    affluent can already do

15
Neighborhood
16
Good Neighborhoods
  • Safe
  • Sanitary
  • Chosen freely
  • Have varying degrees of social cohesion.

17
Bad Neighborhoods
  • Bad neighborhoods can be
  • Ignored
  • Dismantled and redistributed
  • Threatening to non-poor
  • Doesnt make poor less poor, just moves them
    around
  • May make the poor feel worse, since their poverty
    will show in starker contrast by new proximity to
    non-poor
  • Transformed

18
Policy Goals
  • Sustain diversity of neighborhoods.
  • Counter destruction of neighborhoods caused by
    court judgments that treat all communities alike

19
Challenges
  • Neighborhoods empowered to impose their values on
    individuals can be coercive and cruel
  • Government intervention necessary to protect
    elementary human rights (race).
  • Conflict between individual and communal rights
    due to the unjust extension of policies deriving
    from racial dilemma.

20
Racism as community characteristic
  • Focus public policy on neighborhood-defined
    neighborhood development to bring up poor
    communities.
  • As they achieve middle class goals, racism will
    be reduced or separated from other discrimination
    and will be more easily prosecuted.
  • Achievement of individuals doesnt necessarily
    mean theyll move out of poor neighborhoods.
  • Media, churches, schools, government, etc. must
    continue and intensify efforts to educate against
    racial bias.

21
Specific Recommendations
  • Return tax money in non-categorical ways to be
    spent as neighborhoods deem necessary
  • Since we cant force private financial
    institutions to make money available to poor
    neighborhoods,
  • We need a new version of the Federal Housing
    Administration
  • Property tax regulations should be changed to
    encourage home improvement.
  • Strengthen neighborhoods by giving them more
    responsibility for law enforcement.
  • Funding for part-time employment of parents to
    police schools and public places.
  • Open up unused airwaves to regional, ethnic, and
    elective groups to fight media homogenization
  • Taxation policies and postal regulations should
    support neighborhood newspapers

22
Family
23
Redefined, but not in decline
  • High divorce rate, but also high remarriage rate
  • Includes foster parents, lesbian and gay parents,
    etc.

24
Policy Goal 1
  • Recognize family as an institution
  • Society has a vested interest in how values are
    transmitted to the next generation.
  • Weak families produce uprooted individuals, which
    make for ideal recruits for authoritarian
    movements.

25
Policy Goal 2
  • Oppose policies that expose the child directly to
    state authority without the mediation of the
    family
  • Experts have relevant and helpful expertise
  • Experts do not love or have long-term open ended
    commitment to individual children

26
Policy Goal 3
  • Restore some control of education and economics
    that has been stripped away by modernization

27
Education
  • State has a coercive monopoly on education.
  • Low-income parents have the least say about what
    happens to their kids in school.
  • Personnel of the education establishment are
    upper middle class.
  • They teach their upper middle class values.
  • Disparage the ways of life of the poor
  • Teach contempt for the parents and self-contempt.
  • Best way to break up the monopoly is to allow
    choice
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