American political thought / edited by Kenneth M.Dolbeare and Michael S.Cummings
Material type:
- 9780872899728
- 320.0973 AME 6th ed
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 320.0973 AME 6th ed (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 147510 |
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320.0954 MAH India | 320.0954 POL Political thought in Modern India/ edited by Thomas Pantham and Kenneth L. Deutsch | 320.0954 VAJ Righteous republic : the political foundations of modern India | 320.0973 AME 6th ed American political thought / edited by Kenneth M.Dolbeare and Michael S.Cummings | 320.0973 FOU Foundations of American political thought/ edited by Raymond Polin and Constance Polin | 320.0973 MIR 4th ed. Democratic debete | 320.1 BAR Critique of the state |
In the wake of a precedent-setting presidential election and in the midst of a deepening economic recession, Dolbeare and Cummings challenge students to examine and understand their own political beliefs in historical context. Just as the 2008 elections brought race, gender, and age to the fore, the U.S. government&BAD:rsquo;s response to the Wall Street collapse highlights class issues and suddenly makes socialism relevant again. Dolbeare and Cummings ask students to examine how the world today fits with the basic ideals of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, as well as with the accepted tenets of private and free enterprise, the rule of law, institutional checks and balances, and the people&BAD:rsquo;s right to revolt against oppression. Rooted firmly in the economic conditions of each era, the editors&BAD:rsquo; commentary highlights issues of class and the clash of economic interests, while utilizing three organizing themes to help students understand the readings: the social and historical foundations of American political thought,the key transformations in American political thought and practice, and the individual and collective political identity of Americans. Each reading helps students to examine and understand their own political beliefs in historical context. In addition to adding a few key contributions from earlier times, the editors look purposefully toward contemporary thought, selecting readings that reflect on renewed citizen engagement, political change, and the impact of economic crisis on our notions of globalization. Are we seeing the disintegration of the conservative alliance? Can progressive change happen in a bipartisan or non-partisan fashion? Linking the transformations we are now witnessing to the ideas of the founders in a completely new Part 7, students can see the relevance that words written more than 200 years ago have for today&BAD:rsquo;s political world.
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