Health of Nations: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
| Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
[[Category:Governance]] | [[Category:Governance]] | ||
[[Category:Health]] | |||
Latest revision as of 12:21, 26 February 2010
Book: Philip Allott, The Health of Nations: Society and Law Beyond the State, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
Summary
"The human world is changing. Old social structures are being overwhelmed by forces of social transformation which are sweeping across political and cultural frontiers. A social animal is becoming the social species. The animal that lives in packs and herds (family, corporation, nation, state...) is becoming a member of a human society which is the society of all human beings, the society of all societies." "The age-old problems of social life - religious, philosophical, moral, political, legal, economic - must now be addressed at the level of the whole species, at the level where all cultures and traditions meet and will contribute to an exhilarating and hazardous new form of human self-evolving." In this book Philip Allott explores the social and legal implications and potentialities of these developments in the light of the general theory of society and law which is proposed in his groundbreaking Eunomia: New Order for a New World." (http://www.sarigiannidis.gr/news/newsletter_Vol02_Issue03.php)