ABSTRACT

From food banks to migrant welcome committees, and community organisers to internet based campaigners, civil society is central to the North Atlantic social landscape. Theology and Civil Society advances our understanding of what civil society is and offers a theologically informed re-imagining of our shared social life.

Prefaced by a foreword by the Rev. Dr Rowan Williams, this book explores contemporary manifestations of the kind of collective action observed in civil society since the 1800s. It then examines civil society as the sum of modern associations which mediate our relationships to the market and the state, but which cannot be identified fully with either the market or the state. Finally, three different perspectives on civil society are presented using insights from theologians such as John Milbank and Georg Hegel.

This is a pertinent topic for contemporary society, and it is explored expertly here by an international panel of contributors. As such, it is an important volume for any scholar of Theology and Religious Studies and their interactions with Sociology and Politics.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part I|57 pages

Civil society as a sphere of association

chapter 1|26 pages

Faith in action

Lessons from Citizens UK’s work in East London

chapter 2|15 pages

Perspectives of change

Faith-based organisations and climate change action

chapter 3|13 pages

When political theology takes an ecclesial turn, who is left out in the cold?

Revisiting Manchester’s Oxford Road with Graham Ward

part II|53 pages

Civil society as a sphere of mediation

chapter 4|13 pages

Politics in the cyber-city

chapter 5|17 pages

Foundation, but foundation only

Considerations regarding Hegel’s account of religion, the modern state and civil society

chapter 6|19 pages

Theology and exclusion

From charity to advocacy to deep solidarity

part III|60 pages

Theo-political re-imaginings of civil society

chapter 7|17 pages

Liberalism and the pre-modern

A theological appreciation of the politics of Jo Grimond

chapter 8|14 pages

‘With the pertinacity of bloodhounds’

Hegelian comments on an old text of Fr. Daniel Berrigan’s

chapter 9|22 pages

Embedding state and market institutions in civil society

Faith, fraternity and the building of an ethical economy

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion