Liberty after liberalism : civic republicanism in a global age /
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Author / Creator: | Quill, Lawrence, 1971- |
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Imprint: | Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. |
Description: | ix, 178 p. ; 23 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/5816340 |
Table of Contents:
- Preface
- 1. Introduction: From Polis to Cosmopolis
- 1.1. Introduction: Republican Liberty and political space
- 1.2. Republicanism in context
- 1.3. Republicanism: Relevant debates
- 1.4. A dead hypothesis?
- 1.5. Overview of the argument
- 2. The Transformation of Political Space
- 2.1. Political Space in the early republic
- 2.2. The problem of size
- 2.3. The irrelevance of republican citizenship?
- 2.4. Conclusion
- 3. The State We Are (No Longer) In
- 3.1. The liberal political space
- 3.2. Protective, developmental and bureaucratic spaces
- 3.3. The virtues of being a liberal citizen
- 3.4. After the liberal state?
- 3.5. Conclusion
- 4. Republicanism Revisited
- 4.1. Bringing the state back in
- 4.2. The polis within the state
- 4.3. Re-imagining political community
- 4.4. Citizen-nomads and citizen-ships
- 4.5. Conclusion
- 5. On the Ancient and Modern Origins of Cosmopolitanism
- 5.1. Cosmo-political space
- 5.2. The cosmopolitan citizen
- 5.3. A new politics of cosmopolitanism?
- 5.4. Conclusion
- 6. The Case for Political Education
- 6.1. Liberalism: Educating for minimal autonomy
- 6.2. Republicanism: Educating for citizenship
- 6.3. Cosmopolitanism: Educating for world citizenship
- 6.4. Conclusion
- 7. The World Turned Upside Down
- 7.1. The anti-political space of empire
- 7.2. A different citizen?
- 7.3. Public irony and political hope
- 7.4. Conclusion
- 8. Conclusion: After Liberalism?
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index