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We are not born citizens but must be educated and trained to be citizens. This is the central tenet of The New Citizenship, which builds on the participatory democratic vision of the 1960s. Arguing that civic effort must go beyond merely voting, Craig Rimmerman examines grassroots mobilization, community activism, service learning, and the Internet as potential tools for confronting the breakdown of civility in U.S. politics.
At the heart of The New Citizenship are the questions: Why do so many Americans fail to participate in their communities' affairs? What role should the citizenry pay in our political system? In addressing these concerns, the text both evaluates the dilemma of participation, civility, and stability at a time when civic indifference is a national problem and outlines its sources, suggesting ways in which Americans can conquer their apathy toward government.
Rimmerman also identifies alternative forms of participation (besides voting) seized upon by the citizenry to register discontent with its representative government. Considerable attention is devoted to the attitudes and values of college students as they approach their roles within the larger political system.
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Previews available in: English
Edition | Availability |
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1
The New Citizenship: Unconventional Politics, Activism, and Service (Dilemmas in American Politics)
January 25, 2005, Westview Press
Paperback
in English
- 3 edition
0813343097 9780813343099
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2
The new citizenship: unconventional politics, activism, and service
2001, Westview Press
in English
- 2nd ed.
0813398029 9780813398020
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3
The new citizenship: unconventional politics, activism, and service
1997, Westview Press
in English
0813322669 9780813322667
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Book Details
First Sentence
"IN HIS COLLECTION OF INTERVIEWS with Civil Rights movement participants car out between 1974 and 1976, journalist Howell Raines (1977) includes Hart Turnbow's reflection on the meaning of the vote for African American Mississippians in the 1960s."
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