ABSTRACT

Examining the historical and social trajectories involved in the continuous development of civil society, this volume reveals the contextual nature of the process. Through empirical studies focusing primarily on Denmark and covering the period from 1849 to the present day, it analyses the manner in which civil society has been practised and transformed over time. Presenting a new theoretical framework informed by a relational and processual perspective, the book sheds new light on familiar questions pertaining to civil society, the production of its boundaries and spaces of action, and the means by which these spaces can become causal factors. A fresh intervention in the study of a concept that has been central in defining ideas of solidarity and the common good, and to which researchers and politicians look for solutions to the great challenges of our time, Civil Society: Between Concepts and Empirical Grounds will appeal to scholars of sociology, politics, history and philosophy with interests in civil society.

part 1|80 pages

Setting the Scene

chapter 3|22 pages

The “long history” of civil society in Denmark and Western Europe

Civil society – in the shadow of the state (eighteenth to the twenty-first century)

chapter 4|11 pages

Different states, different shadows

The particular exceptionalism of civil society in the United States

part 2|106 pages

The Emergence of the Danish Civil Society

chapter 6|14 pages

Christianity, state, and voluntarism

Protestant processes of privatization and deprivatization

chapter 8|17 pages

Past and present futures of democracy

The Danish peasants’ movement as democracy instigator and cultural mythologizer

chapter 9|14 pages

Eclipsed by the welfare state

Understanding the rise and decline of the Danish Workers’ Cooperation, 1871–2000

chapter 11|15 pages

Civic action as temporal process-in-relations

Towards an events-based approach

part 3|15 pages

Epilogue

chapter 18812|13 pages

Epilogue

Civil society as process and valuation