Class One: Sustainable Communities
& the Elements of a Good Society
Readings:
Chapter 1 of Etzioni's (1996) The New
Golden Rule.
Web
Readings:
Institute For
Communitarian Policy Studies at George Washington University:
What Communitarians Believe
Communitarian
Vision
Communitarian View of a
Civil Society
Communitarian Rights
& Responsibilities
The
Politics of Virtue-Is Not Political at
All
Some
Diversity
Topics: Voluntary Order & Bounded Autonomy (A
Communitarian Agenda) / Methodological Notes/ Rearranging the
Intellectual-Political Map / Thick Social Order - Fully Respectful
of Autonomy / The Need for Thick Social Order / Communitarian
Order: Largely Voluntary / Social Conservative Order: Virtue
Focused / Pervasive Versus Core; Imposed Versus Voluntary /
Autonomy Fully Respectful of Order / Individualists &
Unbounded Autonomy / Socially Constructed Autonomy / Autonomy in
the Good Society / Implications For Practice & Policy
Format: Discussion, Presentation, Web
Research
Homework:
Go to
the Web site above for the Institute for Communitarian Policy
Studies at George Washington University and in 5 single space
pages describe:
- What
Communitarians Believe
- What
the Communitarian vision entails
- What
Communitarians mean by the term "Civil Society,"
- What
Communitarians mean when they refer to "rights and
responsibilities."
Please
attach your homework assignment to the course web board. (5 single
spaced pages)
Class Two: Order &
Autonomy
Readings:
Chapter Two of
Etzioni's (1996) The New Golden
Rule.
Web
Readings:
The
Golden Rule
The Golden Rule
Across Cultures
Topics: A Diversity of Communitarian Amalgas / The
Inverting Symbiotic Relationship / Exhibit I: Individualism - Core
Vlae or Malaise? / Exhibit II: Strong Rights Undermine/Presume
Strong Responsibilities / Exhibit III: Deregulation / In a Dynamic
Perspective / The Causes & Limits of Social Swings / Responses
& Breakdowns / Implications for Practice & Policy / The
Limits of Communitarian Policing & Regulation / Implications
of the Four Criteria for Privacy / The Right Not to Self
Incriminate / Notching Liberalization
Format: Discussion, Presentation, & Web
Research.
Homework:
Go the the
Communitarian Network on the web http://www.gwu.edu/~ccps/rcplatform.html
and read the Responsive
Communitarian Platform. In two pages, outline how the tenets
of this platform relates to issues of social order &
autonomy. (2 single spaced pages)
Class Three: The Rise & Fall of
America
Readings:
Chapter Three
of Etzioni's (1996) The New Golden
Rule
Web
Readings:
The
Problem With Communitarianism
Community,
Yes, But Whose?
The
New Urbanism and the Communitarian Trap by David Harvey
The Nature of
Political Correctness, Phillip Atkinson
Topics: Weber Versus Regeneration of the Moral Order
/ The American Condition: Preliminary Notes / Baseline Fifties:
The Old Regime - Orderly, but How Moral? / The Pendulum Swings:
1960 - 1990, Moral Order Deteriorates, Autonomy Expands, But So
Does Anarchy / The Link Between Autonomy & Anarchy / New
Swing: The 1990s Curl Back / Other Societies / Oversteering /
Implications for Practice & Policy /
Homework:
Based
upon the web readings, briefly critique in two single space pages
the "problems and issues associated with Communitarianism. In
another 2 pages, describe the "nature" of political
correctness and identify the strengths and weaknesses of such a
pursuit. (Total of 4 single spaced pages)
Class Four: Sharing Core Values
Readings:
Chapter Four of
Etzioni's (1996) The New Golden
Rule
Web
Readings:
Community
Networking Movement
Community
Networking: Underlying Principles
Topics: Basic Definitions of Core Values / Historical
Perspective of Values / Context of the Debate / Sources of Values
(Cultural Not Personal) / Limits of Deliberations / Danger of
Culture Wars / Value Talks / Rules of Engagement for Value Talks /
Megalogues / Stages / Directions for Practice & Policy /
Virtual Dialogues / Limiting Plutocratic Tendencies
/
Homework:
Go to
the "Access
Sacramento" website and briefly describe what "Access
Sacramento" is all about. You will find your way to this site by
clicking upon "community networks." (2 single spaced pages)
Class Five: The Moral Voice
Readings:
Chapter Five of
Etzioni's (1996) The New Golden
Rule
Web
Readings:
Virtuous
Reality: Character-Building in the Information Age by Jeb Bush
& Brian Yablonski
Topics: Beyond Sharing: The Need to Convince / The Moral
Voice Introduced / The Inner (Personal) Moral Voice / The Moral
Voice of the Community / Inner & Community Voices / Critiques
& Responses / Within History: America Loses Much of Its Moral
Voice / There Should (Not) be a Law / A Comparative Perspective /
Implications for Practice & Policy for Building Communities
(Nourish Communities) / Graduated Responses / Alternative Dispute
Resolution (ADR) Techniques / Making Lawyers (More) Officers of
the Court
Homework:
Visit the
site above containing the article by Bush &
Yablonski. Briefly summarize the essentials of the arguments
presented in their essay. (2 single spaced pages)
Class Six: Implications of Human
Nature
Readings:
Chapter Six of
Etzioni's (1996) The New Golden
Rule
Web
Readings:
Bowling Alone: America's Declining
Social Capital
The Cultural
Creation of Citizens, Thomas Bridges
Topics: The Debate About Human Nature / The Sanguine
View / The Dour View / Human Nature as Eternal Struggle / Starting
Gate: Barbarian at Birth / The Pivotal Role of Internalization /
Reinforcing Social Formations: The Moral Infrastructure / The
Extent of Intractability & Its Implications / Public Schools
as Character Building Agents / Character Building: Practices &
Policies / The Community As Moral Agent / Layered
Loyalties
Homework:
Go
to
"Of the
State of Nature" by John Locke and the "Introductory" of John Stuart Mills'
"On Liberty."
Briefly describe how Mill and Lock view "human nature" and the appropriate
role of government. (5 single spaced pages).
Class Seven: Pluralism Within
Unity
Readings:
Chapter Seven
of Etzioni's (1996) The New Golden
Rule
Web
Readings:
Civic
Friendship, Communitarian Solidarity and the Story of
Liberty
Topics: Order & Autonomy Among Communities /
Melting Pot, Rainbow or Mosaic? / High Heterogeneity , Weak
Societal Integration / Coping with Rising Diversity / Diversity
& the Need for a Framework / The Framework: Thin or Thick?
Procedural or Substantial? / Core Element I: Democracy as a Value
(Not Only a Procedure) / Core Element II: The Constitution &
Its Bill of Rights / Core Element III: Layered Loyalties / Core
Element IV: Neutrality, Tolerance, or Respect / Core Element V:
Limiting Identity Politics / Core Element VI: Society-Wide
Dialogues / Core Element VII: Reconciliation / A Core Language? /
Implications for Practice & Policy
Homework:
In two
single spaced pages describe how civic friendship differs from
communitarian solidarity. (2 single spaced pages)
Class Eight: The Final Arbiters of
Community Values
Readings:
Chapter Eight
of Etzioni's (1996) The New Golden
Rule
Web
Readings:
Dorothy
Day on Personalism versus
Communitarianism
Topics: Values are Not Broccoli: The Need for
Accountability / The First Criterion: Community As Arbiter /
Internal Democracy (A Political Process) / Consensus Building (A
Social Process) / Community-Based Relativism & Particularism /
The Second Criterion: Societal Values as Moral Frameworks / A
Third Criterion: Cross - Cultural Moral Dialogues / Procedural
Dialogues / Dialogues of Convictions / Fourth Criterion: Global
Community / Cross-Cultural Relativism / Empirical & Moral
Globalists / Human Rights / Cross Societal Moral Voice /
Compelling Moral Causes / The Basic Virtues: (Like Life &
Health) / The Moral Voice Revisited: Virtuous Versus Errant /
Particularism & Universalism / Social Versus Personal Virtues
/ Ultimate Versus Expedient / Corollary & Secondary Values /
Must One Be Religious to be Communitarian? /
Homework:
Explain
the difference between communitarianism and personalism according
to Dorothy Day. (2 single spaced pages)
Spring
Break! March 11-17
Class Nine: Reinventing
Eden
Mid - Term Exam (1
hour)
Readings:
Carol
Merchant's "Reinventing Eden: Western Culture as a Recovery
Narrative." In William Cronon's Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the
Human Place in Nature.
The Garden
Ceres in the
Garden of the World The image of America as Garden dates back to
the earliest settlements. Two distinct perceptions of this New
World Garden developed. The Puritan image was of a garden to be
hewn out of the savage wilderness. Early settlers of Virginia
viewed the new continent as a pre-lapsarian garden, which the
colonizer need not change but from which he should profit, both
spiritually and materially. From these two points of view came
very different ideas concerning the role of the inhabitants of
this garden. Whereas the New England farmer found his vocation in
tilling the soil, the southern planter saw his in the education of
the mind.
The struggle
between the two ideals carried the greatest weight in the newly
settle territories just east of the frontier. Ultimately, the
outcome of the clash of the two myths and the models they put
forth would become the conflict between the free and slave states.
The failure of the Southern system to prevail can be traced to the
failure of its hold on the states forming in the Midwest. While
literature and public papers of the time offer examples of both
Jeffersonian agrarianism and apologism for slavery, Smith blames
the weakness of the plantation myth for the decline of the
institution. He writes "pro-slavery advocates of annexation failed
entirely to create symbols comparable to the free-soil symbol of
the yeoman. They were prepared to defend slavery as such with the
standard doctrines, and to state of familiar propositions of
manifest destiny, but they were not able to endow the westward
expansion of the slave system with imaginative color"(VL,152.)
Henry Nash Smith,
author of Virgin Land presents the myth of the garden in its
American form. The symbols are the yeoman farmer and the planter.
One tills the soil, deriving his virtue from contact with Nature
and through Nature communion with God. The other enjoys the
benefits of the luscious garden given to him by God, developing
virtues through intellectual, social, and spiritual pursuits.
These two myths do
battle in the nineteenth century for a hold on the American
imagination, with the yeoman emerging as victor. But while we can
easily identify the planter class, who exactly is the yeoman
farmer? He is the small independent farmer who lives a harmonious
existence, free from the burden of a landlord and from the
responsibility and taint of slaves (or, in the Southern version,
possessed of very few, with whom he works side by side.) He is the
model of self-sufficiency and the backbone of democracy. Yet he is
not alone. In fact the yeoman shares his rural landscape with his
degraded cousin, the poor white. There is not a single clear line
of division between these two figures. They often have similar
names and live under similar conditions; however that the two are
very different in the minds of the nineteenth-century American
population is very evident in literary representations of the two.
Web
Readings:
Virgin Land: (Read Chapter 11,
"Garden of the World" by Henry Nash Smith.
A
Brief History of The European Myth of the
Garden
America
as Garden During the Renaissance
Fredrick Jackson Turner:
Western Expansion and
the Turner Thesis
Fredrick
Jackson Turner & The Significance of the Frontier in American
History
The Problem of the West, By
Fredrick Jackson Turner
Additional
Readings
The Frontier
in American History by Fredrick Jackson Turner
The
Political Garden
The
Garden in Bloom
Topics: Native American & Puritan Agriculture
Origins Stories / The Garden of Eden Story / The Christian
Recovery Project / Greco-Roman Roots of the Recovery Narrative /
The American Heroic Recovery Narrative / Indians in the Recovery
Narrative / Female Nature in the Recovery Narrative / The City in
the Garden / Critiques of the Recovery Narrative / Chaos Theory
& Partnership Ethics /
Homework:
What
is the European myth of the garden and how did this vision
influence the colonization and development of America? (3 single
space pages)
Class Ten: The Trouble with the
Wilderness…"
Readings:
William
Cronon's "The Trouble with the Wilderness, or Getting Back to the
Wrong Nature." In William Cronon's Uncommon Ground: Rethinking
the Human Place in Nature.
Web
Readings:
Definition of
Wilderness
What is
Wilderness?
The Wilderness Act
Topics:
Rethinking the
Wilderness / Natural versus Unnatural / The Meaning of Wilderness/
Biblical Parallels / Conservation Controversies in America /
Wilderness as a "Sacred" Concept / Doctrine of the Sublime /
Wordsworth & Thoreau / The Frontier Myth & Rugged
Individualism / The National Frontier Myth / Removing Indians to
Create Uninhabited Wilderness / The Concept of Wilderness as a
Quasi-Religious Foundation of Modern Values / Habits of Thinking
Flowing from the Concept of Wilderness / Endangered Species &
Unintended Consequences / The Unacceptability of Human Suicide in
Saving the Wilderness / The "Farm" as the Forefront for Saving the
Wilderness / Rethinking the Concept of
Wilderness
Homework:
Please
explain what the term "wilderness" means. Also, discuss the
major features of the Wilderness Act as well as present a brief
history of the legislation.(3 pages single spaced)
Class Eleven: On the Search for a Root
Cause
Readings:
Jeffery
Ellis's "On the Search for a Root Cause: Essentials Tendencies in
Environmental Discourse." In William Cronon's Uncommon Ground:
Rethinking the Human Place in Nature.
Web
Readings:
Human
Population Growth and Environmental Carrying Capacity David L.
Trauger, Director of Natural Resources Programs, Northern Virginia
Center, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Falls
Church, Virginia
Topics:
Controversy
Surrounding Global Warming: Politics in Action / The Debate over
Root Causes in the Politics of Environmentalism / Barry Commoner
& American Neo-Malthusians / The Commoner - Ehrlich Debate /
Battling for Control Over Environmental Policy / Bookchin's
Critique of Mainstream Environmentalists / Social Versus Deep
Ecology / Reconciling Differences
Homework:
In
Trauger's essay, what does he see is the root cause or causes of
the environmental crisis? (2 single spaced pages)
Class Twelve: Sustainable Communities
Readings:
Christopher
Rice's "What is Sustainability?" Western Social
Science Association, Fort Worth Texas, April,
22.
Web
Readings:
Sustainable Communities
Network
Ecological
Checklist (Frog Stick Checklist)
Topics: How Wal-Mart is Destroying America / Sustainability
& Sustainable Development / Sustainable Community Indicators /
Economic Models: Ricardo, Smith, Daly & Cobb / More Economic
Models: Keynes & Durning / The Evolution of Community /
Bio-Region as Community / Sustainable Practices / Does Community
Have a Value? / Sustainable Communities / Global Dependence &
Local Independence / Going Local /
Homework:
Go to
the Sustainable
Communities Network and find the case study entitled
"QUALITY INDICATORS FOR PROGRESS: Jacksonville,
Florida." and briefly describe how Jacksonville conceptualizes
indicators of a quality "sustainable"
community. (2 single spaced pages)
Class Thirteen: Our Virtue
Readings:
Alan Bloom's
"Our Virtue" In A. Bloom's The Closing of the
American Mind., New York, N.Y.: Simon &
Schuster
Web
Readings:
The
Closing of the American Mind: Our Virtue, Alan
Bloom
Topics:
Separateness / The
Eventual Downfall of the State of Nature Perspective / Hobbes
& Locke / Undermining the Family Relationship / Avoiding
Interdependence / Divorce as an Indicator of Separateness / "I
Love You" / Gratification & Love / Relationships Among Men
& Women / Feminism / The Unreliability of Men /
Homework:
Briefly
present the central tenet of Bloom's essay (Our Virture) and give
your personal thoughts on his position (for or against). (3 single
spaced pages)
Class Fourteen: Are You an
Environmentalist? Or Do You Work for a Living?
Readings:
Richard
White's "Are You an Environmentalist or Do You Work for a Living?:
Work & Nature." In William Cronon's Uncommon Ground:
Rethinking the Human Place in Nature.
Web
Readings:
Read Wendell
Berry's Essay on "Conserving Community" in
Another
Turn of the Crank
Wendell
Berry Web Site
Global
Problems, Local Solutions, Wendell
Berry
Topics: Are Environmentalists Opposed to Work? / Work &
Nature / Work, Nature & Play / Opposition to Environmentalism
/ Work & the Fall from Grace / Popular First White Men /
Masking the Work of First White Men / Work as a Link to Nature /
Demonization of Technology / Using History Without Being
Historical / Connecting with the Land Through Work / Examining All
Work / Is Nature Separate from Work? / Modern
Work
Homework:
Prepare for
your Final Exam.
Class Fifteen:Final Exam