Postmodern Politics for a Planet in Crisis: Policy, Process, and Presidential VisionThis book argues that the planetary crisis, which has been produced by modernity, demands a postmodern politics, especially in the United States, the chief embodiment and exporter of modernity. What is needed is an America that promotes a new world order that is genuinely new one based on a concern for the human race as a whole, and on a sustainable relationship between the human species and the rest of the biosphere. John B. Cobb, Jr., Richard Falk, David Ray Griffin, Wes Jackson, Frank Kelly, Frances Moore Lappé, Joanna Macy, Douglas Sloan, Jim Wallis, and Roger Wilkins write about various dimensions of this postmodern politics, including its educational aims, morality, time-consciousness, and ecological sensibility, its agricultural and other environmental policies, its truly democratic process, and a postmodern presidency. This book provides the most complete prescription yet for the kind of presidential leadership we need and the kind of transformation in the body politic necessary to evoke and complement such leadership. |
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Contenido
1 | |
PART | 17 |
The Vision Thing the Presidency and the Ecological | 67 |
PART | 143 |
Toward a Postmodern | 163 |
A Postmodem Presidency for a Postmodern World | 181 |
l0 Searching for a President with a Global Vision | 209 |
Notes on Contributors and Centers | 221 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Postmodern Politics for a Planet in Crisis: Policy, Process, and ... David Ray Griffin,Richard A. Falk Vista previa limitada - 1993 |
Postmodern Politics for a Planet in Crisis: Policy, Process, and ... David Ray Griffin,Richard A. Falk Vista previa limitada - 1993 |
Términos y frases comunes
agriculture American become called campaign candidates capacity century challenge child citizens conception concerns countries culture David Ray Griffin democracy democratic destruction dominant earth ecological crisis economic energy environment environmental especially essay example experience feeling fossil fuels freedom future global warming greenhouse greenhouse effect human Hunter Lovins idea imagination important industrial influence institutions involved issues Jim Wallis Joanna Macy knowing living means ment millions modern presidency modern world modern worldview modernist moral national security nature nomic nuclear Oppenheimer and Boyle ozone hole ozone layer percent person planet policies political leaders possible postmod postmodern politics postmodern president postmodern vision postmodern world presidential leadership problems produce proposals Reagan reality reflection require responsibility Richard Falk Rudolf Steiner sense social society Soviet spiritual sustainable things thinking threat tion United values Waldorf Education Washington Wendell Berry York