A monograph that draws from research in the social and natural sciences to argue what the important building blocks are for social cohesion and cooperation. Drawing from legal and political history, grounded in fieldwork in various countries as well as academic scholarship. An expert on the writing of constitutions argues that the path to a thriving society begins with forgetting about them: "Not James Madison but Bob Dylan or Annie Lennox should be our guide" (Mark Tushnet). In 2009, constitutional scholar C. L. Skach went to Iraq to help revise the constitution. She survived a missile barrage in the Green Zone—an event that proved a breaking point in her thinking about constitutions. In short: they don’t really work. In How to Be a Citizen, Skach calls to move beyond constitutions. She argues that just as complex natural systems spontaneously generate order, we can, too. Looking to pandemic gardens, Reggio-Emilia schools, and community-driven safety patrols, she envisions not government by force, but society that is local, cultivated, and true. Grounded in six principles as simple as a call to spend time on a park bench, this book shows how community spaces, education, and markets can be reshaped to nurture cooperation and encourage flourishing.   Equal parts personal, philosophical, and practical, How to Be a Citizen invites us to see society not as something imposed by law, but rather something we create together.

SKACH, C.L. (2024). How to Be a Citizen: Learning to Be Civil Without the State. New York : Basic Books.

How to Be a Citizen: Learning to Be Civil Without the State

SKACH, CINDY LYNN
2024

Abstract

A monograph that draws from research in the social and natural sciences to argue what the important building blocks are for social cohesion and cooperation. Drawing from legal and political history, grounded in fieldwork in various countries as well as academic scholarship. An expert on the writing of constitutions argues that the path to a thriving society begins with forgetting about them: "Not James Madison but Bob Dylan or Annie Lennox should be our guide" (Mark Tushnet). In 2009, constitutional scholar C. L. Skach went to Iraq to help revise the constitution. She survived a missile barrage in the Green Zone—an event that proved a breaking point in her thinking about constitutions. In short: they don’t really work. In How to Be a Citizen, Skach calls to move beyond constitutions. She argues that just as complex natural systems spontaneously generate order, we can, too. Looking to pandemic gardens, Reggio-Emilia schools, and community-driven safety patrols, she envisions not government by force, but society that is local, cultivated, and true. Grounded in six principles as simple as a call to spend time on a park bench, this book shows how community spaces, education, and markets can be reshaped to nurture cooperation and encourage flourishing.   Equal parts personal, philosophical, and practical, How to Be a Citizen invites us to see society not as something imposed by law, but rather something we create together.
2024
261
9781541605534
SKACH, C.L. (2024). How to Be a Citizen: Learning to Be Civil Without the State. New York : Basic Books.
SKACH, CINDY LYNN
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/970618
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