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The Communitarian Model of Citizenship

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Title: The Communitarian Model of Citizenship


1
The Communitarian Model of Citizenship
2
Any questions about the last lecture?
3
Quiz
  • Etzioni wants to restore balance between what two
    things?

4
Recall week 2
  • What are the three characteristics of social
    liberalism that I suggested would be the target
    of criticism by other schools of thought?
  • passive approach to citizenship as status
  • relative emphasis on state welfare
  • aligns autonomy with individualism

5
Communitarians will target
  • all three characteristics, especially 3 and 1!

6
Beyond Left and Right
  • Etzioni (1996, 7) push contemporary political
    debates about citizenship and social provisioning
    beyond the intellectual shackles of the
    left/right ideological divide.
  • Who does this sound like?

7
Individualists vs. Order enforcers
  • 1996, 7
  • Individualists
  • libertarians,
  • liberals,
  • laissez-faire conservatives, and
  • civil libertarians
  • All focus on the need for autonomy

8
Individualists vs. Order enforcers
  • 1996, 7
  • Order enforcers
  • Social conservatives
  • Relatively less concerned with autonomy,
    focusing more on the need to shore up the moral
    order and use the state to do so if necessary.

9
Relatively new term but long history
  • Communitarianism draws on the ideas of
  • Aristotle,
  • Thomas Aquinas,
  • St. Augustine,
  • Burke and
  • Hegel,
  • Etzioni 1996, 39 reasserts communitarian ideas
    and ideals that have been part of our
    intellectual heritage for a long time, but which
    have been overshadowed by the rise of egoist
    aspirations.

10
Common denominator
  • a strong opposition to the assumptions about
    autonomy present in social liberalism.

11
Recall Rawlss assumption of mutual disinterest
  • Rawls 13, 127
  • Negotiators have no relations premised (at least
    in part) on affection or other sentiments that
    may motivate individuals to prioritize
    satisfaction of the pursuits of others on par, if
    not above, their own.
  • Implication?
  • The autonomous agent in the original position is
    an entirely self-sufficient, rights-claiming
    individual.

12
Communitarian Punch line
  • Social liberals and others neglect the social
    nature of individual agency.
  • They fail to acknowledge adequately the
    interdependence that underpins individual
    autonomy.
  • ? whereas social liberalism advances the politics
    of rights, communitarianism responds by urging
    renewed interest in the politics of the common
    good.

13
Communitarianism is reactionary
  • Etzioni (1996, 40) reacts to the excesses of
    egoism and the evolution of the so-called me
    generation that is allegedly less mindful of
    moral order, social tradition and custom.
  • Laments a generation that espouses commitments to
    dutiless rights.

14
A corrective to excessive individualism (1996,
40).
  • The correction does not pose a challenge to
    specific entitlements or to the idea of rights
    more generally.
  • Rather communitarianism seeks to restore balance
    to an era of overheated individualism.

15
Etzionis remedy
  • 1996, 42
  • a temporary moratorium on the minting of new
    rights in order to restore balance between
    individual autonomy and obligation to communal
    order, rather than maximize one over the other.

16
Not just re-emphasizing paid work duties
  • Balance demands far more.
  • Requires renewed commitment by every citizen to
    nurture the social preconditions for individual
    rights.
  • Etzioni (1996, 43)
  • paying taxes
  • serving in neighbourhood crime watches
  • attending to their children
  • caring for their elders.
  • No government alone can provide the needed
    services.

17
What does the communitarian mean about social
preconditions for autonomy?
  • Wasnt that precisely what social liberals were
    on about in the first place in talking about
    social citizenship?
  • What our working definition of social
    citizenship?
  • Dont Rawls and Marshall already have that
    covered?

18
Communitarians want to go deeper when
investigating social preconditions
  • They want to query liberal assumptions about the
    relationship between autonomy and atomism
  • Enter Charles Taylor (1992) first published in
    1979
  • FYI Taylor resists the term communitarianism

19
Atomism
  • Taylor used term loosely to characterize theories
    that
  • employ a vision of society as in some sense
    constituted by individuals for the fulfilment of
    ends which were primarily individual (29).
  • assert the primacy of individual rights (30).
  • affirm the self-sufficiency of man sic alone,
    outside of a polis/community (32).
  • synonym for individualism?

20
Assert primacy of rights if
  • Taylor, 30
  • take as the fundamental principle of their
    political theory the ascription of certain rights
    to individuals unconditionally
  • But deny the same status to a principle of
    belonging or obligation.

21
What is a principle of belonging?
  • Taylor, 30
  • one that states our obligation as men sic
  • to belong to a society of a certain type, or
  • to obey authority a certain type.

22
Treating individual rights as starting point for
theory has tremendous appeal today
  • Taylor, 31
  • But it was not always so
  • The very idea of starting an argument shoe
    foundation was the rights of the individual would
    have been strange and puzzlingabout as puzzling
    as if I were to start with the premiss that the
    Queen rules by divine right.

23
Why does the primacy of rights assumption hold
such appeal?
  • Taylor, 31
  • Because of the hold that atomism has on all of us.

24
Communitarian response
  • Taylors punch line, p. 32
  • Human beings are social animals to borrow a
    phrase from Aristotle.
  • Man is a social animal, indeed a political
    animal, because he is not self-sufficient alone,
    and in an important sense is not self sufficient
    outside a polis.

25
Taylor step 1.
  • 34 Take individualist theories on their own
    terms
  • these theories give absolutely central
    importance to the freedom to choose ones own
    mode of life, when defining what is properly
    human.

26
Taylor step 2.
  • 35 Highlight implication of individualist
    theories primary commitment
  • By exalting choice or self-determining freedom
    as the defining human capacity, the theories
  • demand that we become beings capable of choice,
  • that we rise to the level of
    self-consciousness and autonomy where we can
    exercise choice.
  • that we not be fettered by fear, sloth,
    ignorance, or superstition in some code imposed
    by tradition, society, or fate which tells us
    what choices we should make.

27
Taylor step 3.
  • 35 highlight second implication the doctrine
    of the primacy of rights has to be concerned with
    the human social condition because.
  • It is possible to imagine that human beings may
    not be self-sufficient in terms of their ability
    to develop the capacity for meaningful choice of
    the sort that individualists prescribe.
  • The doctrine is at risk if it can be shown that
    human beings cannot develop their potential for
    choice outside of certain kinds of societies.

28
Taylor step 4 the social thesis.
  • 35 state intent to develop argument that shows
    individuals cannot develop their potential for
    meaningful choice outside of certain societies.
  • Make explicit if he can convince us of this,
    then he supplies proof that we ought to belong to
    or sustain society of this kind.
  • ? shows us that we are implicitly committed to
    a an obligation to belong, one that is as
    fundamental as our assertion of rights.

29
Taylor step 5.
  • 35 tell us why
  • if he can convince us of this argument, then he
    supplies proof that we ought to belong to or
    sustain society of the kind that is necessary to
    cultivate the capacity for meaningful choice.
  • ? shows us that those who value freedom of
    choice are implicitly committed to a an
    obligation to belong, one that is as fundamental
    as our assertion of rights.

30
Taylor step 6.
  • 39 identify key assumption in his argt. that
    individuals cannot develop their potential for
    choice outside of a polis
  • Our theory is prioritizing something about human
    nature of which we are assured by simply being
    alive.
  • -the characteristic has to be developed and
    can fail to be developed!

31
Taylor step 7.
  • 39-40 acknowledge not everyone has thought this
  • Hobbes defined individuals as human beings that
    desire, that feel pain and pleasure.

32
Taylor step 8.
  • 40 identify implication of Hobbess assumption
  • for beings that desire, feel pain and pleasure,
    the most important rights are
  • right to life
  • right to desire-fulfillment
  • right to freedom from pain

33
Taylor step 9.
  • 40 assert these really arent the rights that
    most interest those who assert the primacy of
    rights
  • They are more interested in asserting the right
    of freedom to
  • choose, rather than accept, life plans
  • dispose of possessions according to values that
    are not imposed
  • form ones own convictions
  • act on those convictions, within reason
  • And these are capacities that we must develop
    and we can only do so in societies of a certain
    kind

34
Taylor step 10.
  • 42 tell us what he doesnt mean
  • He isnt just saying that we need to grow up in
    families
  • that we need to be nurtured as children
  • that we flourish as adults only in relationships
    with others
  • This is all true but has nothing to do with the
    obligation to belong in a political society.

35
Taylor step 11.
  • 43 point out to us that
  • the ability to conceive of alternatives,
    determine what we want from evaluating between
    alternatives, and selecting what values will
    command our allegiance is not available to
    someone
  • Whose life horizons are so narrow that he can
    conceive only one way of life.
  • Who is riveted by fear of the unknown to one
    familiar life-form.
  • Who has been so formed in suspicion and hate of
    outsiders that he can never put himself in their
    place.
  • .

36
Taylor step 12.
  • 43-44 point out to us that
  • individuals surely learn about some life course
    options in our own single family
  • But it takes an entire civilization to articulate
    a really rich range of options, that include art,
    philosophy, theology, science, commerce, social
    organizations, etc.

37
Taylor step 13.
  • 44 argue that not just any civilization will
    do.
  • We live in a world in which there is public
    debate about moral and political questions and
    other basic issues. We constantly forget how
    remarkable that is, how it did not have to be so,
    and may one day no longer be so.
  • What would happen to our capacity to be free
    agents if this debate should die away?

38
Taylor step 14.
  • 44-46 be explicit about what kind of
    civilization is required.
  • liberal civilization of the sort we identify
    imperfectly with modern democracies

39
Taylor step 15.
  • 47 state his conclusion, part a)
  • since the free individual can only maintain his
    identity within a society/culture of a certain
    kind, he has to be concerned about the shape of
    this society/culture as a whole.
  • ie. Whether s/he acknowledges it or not, it is
    important to the individual that certain
    activities and institutions flourish in society.
  • ? S/he has an obligation to contribute to the
    ongoing success of these activities/institutions
    an obligation to belong.

40
Taylor step 16.
  • 47 state his conclusion, part b)
  • We exercise a fuller freedom if we can help
    determine the shape of this society and culture
    through discharging our obligations to nurture
    the institutions/activities necessary for freedom.

41
Bitter pill for Social Liberals to swallow
  • The communitarian critique charges that social
    liberals fail to fully contemplate the
    preconditions for liberty, despite the fact that
    they prioritize these conditions in their own
    work on social citizenship.

42
Full membership means?
  • Whereas the American Express model emphasizes
    access to the range of community entitlements as
    the condition for full membership status
  • the communitarian adds that full membership
    demands specific activities on the part of the
    citizen.
  • We are full members of a society only if we
    discharge sufficiently the social obligations
    necessary to sustain the community structures,
    values and social attachments that make possible
    our liberty.

43
Voluntary order Etzioni 1996, 12-13
  • Ideally, citizens would voluntarily perform the
    general duty of care they owe society.
  • We can sustain voluntary compliance through
    normative means, such as moral education that
    will engender a shared set of core values.
  • This education ? the tension between ones
    preferences and ones social commitments can be
    reduced by increasing the realm of duties one
    affirms as moral responsibilitiesnot the realm
    of duties that are forcibly imposed but the realm
    of responsibilities one believes one should
    discharge and that one believes one is fairly
    called upon to assume (ibid., 12).

44
Use state power to enforce/entice order when
necessary Etzioni 1993, 82-85
  • Etzioni agrees that it may be insufficient to
    express unequivocally societys moral opinion.
  • Recommends economic sanctions to require citizens
    to discharge responsibilities
  • exact financial penalty if fail to pay child
    support
  • offer incentives that would make staying married
    and attending to ones children more attractive.

45
Small group discussions
  • What do you make of Taylors social thesis the
    claim that those who prioritize freedom have an
    obligation to belong and sustain the
    institutions/activities necessary for freedom?

46
Change in Office hours
  • Thursdays
  • No longer 1-2.
  • Now 3-4 on Thurs.
  • Still have Monday for the hour following class.
    Plus by appointment, especially Mon, Wed and
    Thurs.
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