Trust, Democracy, and Multicultural Challenges / Patti Tamara Lenard.
Par : Lenard, Patti Tamara.
Éditeur : University Park, PA : Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012Description : xi, 193 p. : cov. ill. ; 24 cm.ISBN : 9780271052533; 0271052538.Sujet(s) : Democracy -- Social aspects | MulticulturalismClassification CDD :306.2Type de document | Site actuel | Collection | Cote | Numéro de copie | Statut | Date d'échéance | Code à barres |
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Livres | CR Julien-Couture RC (Teaching) General Stacks | Non-fiction | MUL LEN (Parcourir l'étagère) | 1 | Disponible |
Parcourir CR Julien-Couture RC (Teaching) Étagères , Localisation: General Stacks , Code de collection: Non-fiction Fermer l'étagère
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction: trust, democracy, and multicultural challenges -- 1. Trust defined -- 2. Trust as a foundational democratic value -- 3. Distrust, mistrust, and democracy -- 4. Public culture and trust -- 5. Trust and ethnocultural diversity in multicultural democracies -- 6. Severely divided societies, trust, and the struggle for democracy -- 7. Guiding trust building in democracies -- Conclusion: the challenges of multiculturalism.
"Banning minarets by referendum in Switzerland, publicly burning Korans in the United States, prohibiting kirpans in public spaces in Canada - these are all examples of the rising backlash against diversity that is spreading across multicultural societies. Trust has always been precarious, and never more so than as a result of increased immigration. The number of religions, races, ethnicities, and cultures living together in democratic communities and governed by shared political institutions in rising. The failure to construct public policy to cope with this diversity - to ensure that trust can withstand the pressure that diversity can pose - is a failure of democracy. The threat to trust originates in the perception that the values and norms that should underpin a public culture are no longer truly shared. Therefore, societies must focus on building trust through a revitalized public culture. In Trust, Democracy, and Multicultural Challenges, Patti Tamara Lenard plots a course for this revitalization. She argues that trust is at the center of effective democratic politics, that increasing ethnocultural diversity as a result of immigration may generate distrust, and therefore that democratic communities must work to generate the conditions under which trust between newcomers and "native" citizens can be built, so that the quality of democracy is sustained." (Book Cover)
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