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The Limits Of Social Cohesion: Conflict And Mediation In Pluralist Societies



The Limits Of Social Cohesion: Conflict And Mediation In Pluralist Societies
The Limits of Social Cohesion: Conflict and Mediation in Pluralist Societies is a book that examines normative conflicts in eleven different societies located in different parts of the world and at different levels of economic development. The book finds that there are common characteristics of such conflicts worldwide, and that the same institutions can either polarize or mediate normative confli... more details
Key Features:
  • Examines normative conflicts in eleven different societies located in different parts of the world and at different levels of economic development
  • Finds that there are common characteristics of such conflicts worldwide, and that the same institutions can either polarize or mediate normative conflicts
  • Contains reports from some of the leading scholars dealing with normative conflict


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Features
Author Peter L. Berger et. al.
Format Paperback
ISBN 9780813367194
Publication Date 23/04/1999
Publisher Westview Press Inc
Manufacturer Westview Press Inc
Description
The Limits of Social Cohesion: Conflict and Mediation in Pluralist Societies is a book that examines normative conflicts in eleven different societies located in different parts of the world and at different levels of economic development. The book finds that there are common characteristics of such conflicts worldwide, and that the same institutions can either polarize or mediate normative conflicts. The book also contains reports from some of the leading scholars dealing with normative conflict.

Normative conflicts center on fundamental disagreements over issues of public morality and the identity of a society. In thinking about normative conflicts on a global scale, two principal questions arise. First, are there common characteristics of such conflicts worldwide? Second, which institutions polarize such conflicts and which can serve to mediate them? This pathbreaking book, edited by renowned sociologist Peter Berger, examines both questions through findings gained from a study of normative conflicts in eleven societies located in different parts of the world and at different levels of economic development. On both points, the findings have proved surprising. Although there are, of course, normative conflicts peculiar to individual societies, two features emerged as common to most of the societies examined: one concerns disputes over the place of religion in the state and in public life; the other is a clash of values between a cultural elite and the broad masses of the population. Often the two features coincide. For instance, in many countries the elite is the least religious group within the population, and therefore, resentments against the elite are often mobilized under religious banners. On the institutional question, the study started out with a bias toward the institutions of so-called "civil society"-that is, the institutions that stand between the personal life of individuals and the vast mega-structures of a modern society. The finding is that the same institutions can either polarize or mediate normative conflicts. The conclusion suggests one must ask not just what sort of institutions one looks to for social cohesion, but what ideas and values inspire these institutions. Comprising reports from some of the leading scholars dealing with normative conflict, this book is an important contribution to understanding the cultural fault lines that threaten social cohesion.
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