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Early Modern Concepts for a Late Modern World - by Thomas O Hueglin (Hardcover)

Early Modern Concepts for a Late Modern World - by  Thomas O Hueglin (Hardcover)
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Last Price: 85.00 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p> <i>Who was Althusius, and why is the work of a seventeenth- century political theorist important in modern times?</i> </p> <p> Johannes Althusius (1557-1638) was a political theorist and a combative city politician who defended the rights of small communities against territorial absolutism. He designed a system of politics in which sovereignty would be shared and jointly exercised by a plurality of collectivities, spatial as well as social, on the basis of mutual consent and social solidarity. </p> <p> <i>Early Modern Concepts for a Late Modern World</i> places Althusius in the context of his times and explains the main features of his political thought. It also suggests, perhaps most significantly, why his theories continue to resonate today. Hueglin's use of sources is thorough and scrupulous. He has worked in depth in Germanic scholarship and this access to German-language sources, some of which are almost unknown to the English-speaking world, provides a new interpretation of Althusius' theory. </p> <p> With its emphasis on pluralized governance, negotiated compromise instead of majority rule, and the inclusion of the economic sphere into the political, Althusius' theory belongs to a countertradition in Western political thought. Although it was written at the beginning of the modern age of sovereign politics, it applies to today's search for a post-sovereign system of politics. </p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>``Althusius provided the first full-scale theoretical model for the division of power between levels of government. He presented a specific type of federalism and subsidiarity, in which non-territorial groups had a constituted role, based on a particular historical experience of community. Hueglin has done a magnificent job in unearthing Althusius' original views, analyzing them in the historical and intellectual environment of his age, and in suggesting where these link up with our concerns in an increasingly post-statist world, and how they are related to twentieth-century federalist and pluralist doctrines. The result is a book of especial relevance for the postmodern world. Hueglin has combined meticulous scholarship with clarity of expression and originality of understanding. His book will enable statesmen and journalists, as well as academics and students, to deepen their understanding of community and power, and of the possible variety of federal systems, by exploring the way these were explicated by the fertile mind of Althusius in a different but far from alien culture.''--Antony Black<br><br>``The political theory of Althusius deserves a central place in the development of political thought, and Thomas Hueglin makes a compelling argument that we should pay more attention to it. He skillfully builds an intellectual bridge from the early modern epoch to our own late modern times, and his careful historical contextualization and close reading of the original Latin text succeed beautifully in demonstrating Althusius' contemporary relevance while avoiding undue modernizations. I am very happy that an excellent book-length treatment of the first modern theory combining consociationalism and federalism is now available.''--Arend Lijphart<br><br>``This is a critically important, scholarly and exceptional well presented contribution to the study of federalism, political democracy, and the history of western government.''--James A. Cox<br><br>``We are constantly told we need new ideas to find solutions to the challenges posed by post-modern, post-national politics. Thomas Hueglin's fascinating study gives us a window on new thinking with a difference: the radical, practical political prescriptions of an early seventeenth-century statesman grappling with the concepts of community, citizenship, federalism and subsidiarity before the sovereign state has asserted its hegemony. Some 400 years later Hueglin shows us with impeccable scholarship how relevant Althusius' views have become for constructing a post-sovereign global order.''--Stephen Clarkson<br>

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