<P>In <I>Globalization Challenged</I>, George Rupp, president of the International Rescue Committee, outlines the steps necessary to engage the contemporary conflict between traditional religious belief and Western secularism. </P><P>According to Rupp, the key objective is to build a community that
Globalization Challenged: Conviction, Conflict, Community
β Scribed by George Rupp; Jagdish Bhagwati; Jeremy Waldron; Wayne Proudfoot
- Publisher
- Columbia University Press
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 128
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In Globalization Challenged, George Rupp outlines the steps necessary to engage the contemporary conflict between traditional religious belief and Western secularism. Though he acknowledges the threat of "resurgent fundamentalism," Rupp also criticizes secularists who fail to allow for the role of religion and its ideological equivalents to influence public policy. Rupp reinforces his argument with dramatic accounts of recent events in Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Sudan. He focuses on the ways local conflicts fuel instability worldwide, even as the processes of globalization at times accentuate those conflicts. Essential reading for understanding the roots of today's geopolitical tensions, Globalization Challenged asks that we shed our complacency, recognize the legitimate role of conviction, and affirm a sense of community that extends from the very particular to the more and more inclusive.
In Globalization Challenged, George Rupp, president of the International Rescue Committee, outlines the steps necessary to engage the contemporary conflict between traditional religious belief and Western secularism.
According to Rupp, the key objective is to build a community that is inclusive without denying the validity of particular commitments. While he acknowledges the threat of "resurgent fundamentalism," Rupp also criticizes secularists who fail to recognize or acknowledge the role of religion and its ideological equivalents in influencing public policy. All views, he asserts, are subject to comparative appraisal. The challenge is to develop ways to evaluate different approaches responsibly, leading to a greater understanding of one's own convictions as well as the positions of others.
Rupp reinforces his critical and theoretical analysis with dramatic accounts of recent events in Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Sudanβplaces where the International Rescue Committee operates. He then addresses the role of globalization in fueling instability worldwide. Inadequately regulated privatization has compromised health care, education, and social programs in many countries, whereas an inclusive community would encourage a more equitable distribution of resources.
Essays by Jagdish Bhagwati, Jeremy Waldron, and Wayne Proudfoot expand Rupp's arguments, and in a final chapter Rupp responds to the issues they raise. Essential reading for anyone who hopes to understand the roots of today's geopolitical tensions, Globalization Challenged asks that we shed our complacency, recognize the legitimate role of conviction, and take actions to shape a more just and inclusive society.
β¦ Table of Contents
CONTENTS
PREFACE
PART I: CONVICTION, CONFLICT, COMMUNITY
1. CONVICTION IN AN AGE OF GLOBALIZATION
CONVICTION IN A PLURALISTIC WORLD
THE NEED FOR COMPARATIVE APPRAISAL
PUBLIC RELIGION AND SELF-CRITICAL SECULARISM
A CRITIQUE OF CURRENT TRENDS
GLOBALIZATION AND COMMUNITY
2. LOCAL CONFLICT, GLOBALMIGRATION
UPROOTED PEOPLE ON THE MOVE
RESETTLEMENT HERE AND ABROAD
SUDAN AS AN INSTANCE
THE EXAMPLE OF AFGHANISTAN
LESSONS LEARNED
3. GLOBALIZATION AND THE CHALLENGE OF INCLUSIVE COMMUNITY
GLOBALIZATION AND ITS CRITICS REVISITED
THE CASE OF THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO
INDIVIDUALISM, WESTERN LIBERALISM, AND WORLD RELIGIONS
CONVICTION IN THE CONTEXT OF INCLUSIVE COMMUNITY
PART II: CRITICAL RESPONSES TO GLOBALIZATION CHALLENGED
4. ARGUING FOR PLURALISM -JAGDISH BHAGWATI
CONVICTION VERSUS RELATIVISM
THE ETHICS OF ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION
INTERNATIONAL FLOWS OF HUMANITY
5. SECULARISM AND THE LIMITS OF COMMUNITY -JEREMY WALDRON
PRESCRIPTIVE SECULARISM AND RELIGIOUS FAITH
COMMUNITY AND INCLUSION
RELIGIOUS CONVICTION AND POLITICAL ARGUMENT
A POLITICS OF MODERATE CONVICTION
6. RELIGIOUS CONVICTIONS AND GLOBAL JUSTICE -WAYNE PROUDFOOT
RELIGIOUS CONVICTIONS AND PUBLIC DISCOURSE
COSMOPOLITANISM AND THE IRC
INDIVIDUAL AND COMMUNITY
CRITICAL STUDY OF RELIGION
PART III: GLOBALIZATION CHALLENGED- AGAIN
7. ANOTHER LOOK AT CONFLICT COMMUNITY, AND CONVICTION
GLOBAL PROCESSES/LOCAL IMPACTS
THE CHALLENGE OF INCLUSIVE COMMUNITY
COMMITMENT IF NOT CONVICTION
INDEX
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