Nation-building and Citizenship: Studies of Our Changing Social OrderWiley, 1964 - 314 pages Historical study and social theory of traditions of public sector and private sector authority, government, public administration, political leadership, social structure and social change during the formation and economic development of countries of Western Europe, with comparisons of USSR, Japan and India. Tables. References as footnotes. |
Contents
Studies of Our Changing Social Order | 1 |
PART | 31 |
Transformations of Western European Societies Since the Eighteenth | 55 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
achieved administrative Alexis de Tocqueville analysis aristocratic bureaucratic caste citizens citizenship civil servants community development comparative concepts concerning Constitution contrast cultural daimyo discussion dominant duties economic elections elite emphasizes England equality estates European exercise feudal Five-Year Plan formal functions Germany governmental groups Ibid ideas ideology Imperial Germany independence Indian individual industrial institutions interests Japan Japanese jurisdiction labor leaders lower classes M. N. Srinivas Max Weber medieval political Meiji Restoration ment modern nation-state organization Panchayati Raj panchayats participation Party passim patrimonial Plan plebiscitarian political community population position principle privileges problems Prussia public authority public cooperation public officials Rajasthan reference regime Reinhard Bendix relations representative responsibility Revolution rule ruler rural samurai secular social structure society status tion Tocqueville Tokugawa Shogunate trade unions tradition transformation University Press urban village village panchayats Western Europe workers