ABSTRACT

Harmony has become a major challenge for modern governance in the twenty-first century because of the multi-religious, multi-racial and multi-ethnic character of our increasingly globalized societies. Governments all over the world are facing growing pressure to integrate the many diverse elements and subcultures which make up modern pluralistic societies. This book examines the idea of harmony, and its place in politics and governance, both in theory and practice, in Asia, the West and elsewhere. It explores and analyses the meanings, mechanisms, dimensions and methodologies of harmony as a normative political ideal in both Western and Asian philosophical traditions.

The book argues that in Western political thought - which sees politics as primarily concerned with resolving social conflicts and protecting individual rights - the concept of harmony has often been neglected. In contrast, since earliest times harmony or ‘he’ has been a profound theme in Confucian thought, and current leaders of many East Asian governments, and the Chinese government, have explicitly declared that the realisation of a harmonious society is their aim. The book also assesses how harmony is pursued, jeopardized or deformed in the real world of politics, based upon empirical analysis of a variety of different cultural, social and political contexts, including: China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, Denmark, Latin America and the Scandinavian countries.

It shows how harmony as an organizing concept can help to promote new thinking in governance, and overcome problems of modern-day governance like distrust, adversarial conflicts, hyper-individualism, coercive state intervention, and free-market alienation. It also discusses the potential problems posed by the pursuit of harmony, in particular in the grave threat of totalitarianism, and considers how these risks could best be mitigated.

part I|11 pages

Introduction

part II|58 pages

Governance for harmony in East–West traditions

part III|115 pages

The quest for harmony in government in Asia

chapter 5|30 pages

Harmony, conformity or timidity?

Singapore's overachievement in the quest for harmony

chapter 6|21 pages

Harmony in government–society governance

Problems, challenges and prospects in Malaysia

chapter 8|20 pages

Governance for harmony

Challenges for public service delivery reform in China and Vietnam

chapter 9|28 pages

Restoring governability in Hong Kong

Managing plurality and joining up governance

part IV|161 pages

The quest for harmony beyond Asia

chapter 10|21 pages

Open politics and disharmony

chapter 11|18 pages

Disharmony and civil society

A view from Latin America

chapter 12|15 pages

Consensual but not Confucian

Resolving the paradox of consensual politics in Scandinavia

chapter 13|21 pages

Harmony through network governance?

chapter 15|33 pages

Propriety, law and harmony

A functional argument for the rule of virtue

chapter 16|14 pages

Xunzi's vision of society

Harmony by justice

chapter 17|19 pages

Concordia versus pax

The impact of Eastern governance for harmony on Western peace concepts