Citizenship Begins at Home: The New Social Contract and Working Families
Document Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
12-2001
Editor(s)
Henry Tam
ISBN
9780745625799
Publisher
Wiley
Language
en-US
Abstract
Progressive politics has been concerned with rolling back prejudices, improving democratic accountabilities, and promoting the common good for over a century. In recent years, however, many academics, as well as politicians, have started to call for a new way to take progressive ideas forward.
But how much of this rhetoric is underpinned by a coherent political vision? Are the policies associated with advocates of the ‘New Middle' or ‘Third Way' consistent with the promise of a fairer society? What are the principles which should shape the progressive reform agenda of the 21st century?
In this book, Henry Tam brings together a distinguished team of social and political theorists from America and Europe to address these questions. Discussion is centred around the growth of corporate power, the alienation of citizens from political discourse, the key progressive ideals needed to guide effective reforms and possible policy options.
Finally, the team argues that globalization is creating new forms of instability and injustice which can only be rectified by action across national boundaries. Together they set out how progressive politics should respond to the social, economic and environmental challenges of the global age.
Recommended Citation
Linda C. McClain,
Citizenship Begins at Home: The New Social Contract and Working Families
,
in
Progressive Politics in the Global Age
95
(Henry Tam ed.,
2001).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.bu.edu/faculty_scholarship/2798