Since the emergence of the dissident parallel polis in Eastern Europe, civil society has become a new superpower, influencing democratic transformations, human rights, and international co-operation; co-designing economic trends, security and defense; reshaping the information society; and generating new ideas on the environment, health, and the good life. This volume seeks to compare and reassess the role of civil society in the rich West, the poorer South, and the quickly expanding East in the context of the twenty-first centurys challenges. It presents a novel perspective on civic movements testing John Keanes notion of monitory democracy: an emerging order of public scrutiny and monitoring of power.
Bron Tayloris Professor of Religion and Nature at the University of Florida, and a Carson Fellow at the Rachel Carson Center in Munich.
Introduction
Lars Tr?g?rdh and Nina Witoszek
Chapter 1.The Dawn of Monitory Democracy
John Keane
Chapter 2.Civil Society in the Age of Crisis
John Clark
Chapter 3.Digital Deprivation: New Media, Civil Society and Sustainability
Paddy Coulter and Cathy Baldwin
Chapter 4.Monitory versus Managed Democracy: Does Civil Society Matter in Contemporary Russia?
Kathryn Stoner-Weiss
Chapter 5.Monitory Democracy and Ecological Civilization in the Peoples Republic of China
James Miller
Chapter 6.Tenuous Spaces: Civil Society in Burma/Myanmar
David Steinberg
Chapter 7.Kenyas Green Belt Movement: Contributions, Conflict, Contradictions, and Complications in a Prominent ENGO
Bron Taylor
Chapter 8.A New Direction in Transnational Civil Society: The Politics of Muslim NGO Coalitions
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