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The Modern Social Conflict: The Politics of Liberty
 
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The Modern Social Conflict: The Politics of Liberty [Hardcover]

Ralf Dahrendorf (Author)

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Book Description

September 24, 2007

Revolutions are melancholy moments in history—brief gasps of hope that emerges from misery and disillusionment. This is true for great revolutions, like 1789 in France or 1917 in Russia, but applies to lesser political upheavals as well. Conflict builds into a state of tense confrontation, like a powder keg. When a spark is thrown, an explosion takes place and the old edifice begins to crumble. People are caught up in an initial mood of elation, but it does not last. Normality catches up.

Why do revolutions occur? In this completely revised edition of The Modern Social Conflict, Ralf Dahrendorf explores the basis and substance of social and class conflict. Ultimately, he finds that conflicts are about enhancing life chances; that is, they concern the options people have within a framework of social linkages, the ties that bind a society, which Dahrendorf calls ligatures. The book offers a concise and accessible account of conflict’s contribution to democracies, and how democracies must change if they are to retain their political and social freedom. This new edition takes conflict theory past the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and into the present day.

Upon publication of the original 1988 edition, Stanley Hoffmann stated, “Ralf Dahrendorf is one of the most original and experienced social and political writers of our time. . . . [this book] is both a survey of social and political conflict in Western societies from the eighteenth century to the present and a tract for a new ‘radical liberalism.’” And Saul Friedländer wrote, “Ralf Dahrendorf has written a compelling book . . . the brilliant contribution of a convinced liberal to the study of conflict within contemporary democratic society.”


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Hammering out a liberal policy of basic economic entitlements for all citizens should be number one on any modern democracy's political agenda, argues Dahrendorf, a political theorist at St. Antony's College, Oxford. But labeling the author a liberal would oversimplify his unorthodox thinking. For example, he suggests community service and redistribution of work as possible options for achieving greater equality. He criticizes World Bank foreign-aid projects that benefit the haves while leaving the have-nots in the lurch. The German-born Dahrendorf repeats his often-criticized thesis that Hitler's National Socialism cleared the way for Germany's modernization. The least convincing sections of his book argue that class conflict is a dead issue. The most original parts develop provocative views, such as his assertion that the Soviet Union and China are closer to autocracy than to totalitarianism.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

"Ralf Dahrendorf is one of the most original and experienced social and political writers of our time.... The Modern Social Conflict is both a survey of social and political conflict in Western societies from the eighteenth century to the present and a tract for a new 'radical liberalism.'"

—Comment on the first edition by Stanley Hoffmann in the New York Times

"Ralf Dahrendorf has written a compelling book which, no doubt, will stimulate considerable discussion. It is the brilliant contribution of a convinced liberal to the study of conflict within contemporary democratic society."

—Comment on the first edition by Saul Friedlander, of the University of California, Los Angeles

“Writing from a rich experience in both public service and public philosophy, Ralf Dahrendorf is well placed to describe the road political man has traveled since World War II and to weigh his prospects for the future. Drawing on Max Weber, Raymond Aron and others, and on his own analysis of developments in the Western democracies, he weaves a pattern in which the twin drives for ‘entitlements’ (civil rights and welfare) and ‘provisions’ (economic initiatives and growth) are often, but not necessarily, in conflict. A social democrat, he sees the declining vigor of traditional social democracy and the need for a new liberal agenda, a new ‘social contract’ and a ‘world civil society.’ Not utopian musing, it is uncommon practical wisdom.”

—Foreign Affairs


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