Benjamin R. Barber, "Time, Work, and Leisure in a Civil
Society"
Benjamin
R. Barber, one of the most distinguished political theorists of our time,
is the author of the international bestseller, Jihad vs McWorld: How
Globalism and Tribalism are Reshaping the World (1995), the classic
Strong Democracy (1984), and, most recently, The Truth of
Power: Intellectual Affairs in the Clinton White House (2001), in
which he draws on the six years he spent as an informal adviser to the
president to show the limited influence intellectuals have on the shaping
of public policy. The challenge for democratic leaders in the twenty-first
century, Barber believes, will be to find ways for civil society to fulfill
its responsibility to mediate between public and private, between community
and individual, and between the power of public communities and the liberty
of private individuals, a challenge made all the more difficult in a time
when citizens and governments tend to confuse the freedom to shop with
electoral democracy.
In
the wake of the attacks of September 11, 2001, Barber's argument, first
made in Jihad Vs McWorld, that the two greatest threats to democracy
at the end of the twentieth century were religious fundamentalism and
economic and cultural globalization now seems prophetic. If democracy
is to survive into the twenty-first century and thrive as a form of mass
political organization, Barber has argued recently, the United States,
Britain, and their allies cannot simply defeat terrorism militarily; rather,
these nations will all "have to open a second civic and democratic front
aimed, not against terrorism 'per se,' but against the anarchism and social
chaos - the economic reductionism and its commercializing homogeneity
- that have created the climate of despair and hopelessness that terrorism
has so effectively exploited."
Barber is currently Kekst Professor of Civil Society at the University
of Maryland and one of the principal organizers of The Democracy Collaborative,
an international consortium of the world's leading academic centers and
citizen engagement organizations concerned with studying and promoting
civil society. "Time, Work, and Leisure in a Civil Society," the concluding
chapter in Barber's A Place for Us: How to Make Society Civil and
Democracy Strong (1998), reflects on the crucial role that free time
plays in nurturing a citizenry committed to avoiding the excesses of fundamentalism,
on the one hand, and global capitalism, on the other.
Barber, Benjamin R. "Time, Work, and Leisure in a
Civil Society." A Place For Us: How to Make Society Civil and Democracy
Strong. (Hill and Wang, 1998), 124-147.
Digital image comes from the The University of Maryland's
School for Public Policy website.
Biographical information drawn from materials available at the Walt
Whitman Center site.
Citation taken from Benjamin Barber's "Ballots
versus Bullets." Financial Times, Oct. 20, 2001.
Links to Explore:
Is
Democratization a Response to Terrorism? An interview with Benjamin
Barber conducted by Mark Schmitt is Director for Program of Governance
and Public Policy at the Open Society Institute on Nov. 1, 2001.
The Walt Whitman Center: founded
in 1989 by Benjamin Barber, The Whitman Center works to encourage "Walt
Whitman's ideal of a vigorous citizenry engaged in the culture and politics
of a free society." Site includes a link to The
State of Electronically Enhanced Democracy, a report Benjamin Barber,
Kevin Mattson, and John Peterson.
Democracy
and Cyberspace: First Principles :summaries of a talk delivered by
Ira Magaziner at the Democracy
and Digital Media conference and responses by Benjamin Barber and
Joshua Cohen regarding the role that the Internet has to play in a democratic
society.
The League of Women Voters: a site devoted
to encouraging participation in democracy.
Questions for Learning:
-
Would you say that The Walt Whitman
Center, which Benjamin Barber founded in 1989, works to promote
the sort of "active citizenry" that he discusses in "Making
Civil Society Real"? What practical role can such a center, located
in a university, play in creating a civil society? What role does
this center play in the lives of the undergraduates at the university?
-
At the Democracy
and Digital Media conference, Benjamin Barber had a chance to
respond directly to the argument that the government has no place
in trying to regulate information technology. After you've read Ira
Magaziner's argument and the exchanges with Barber, Joshua Cohen,
and the moderator Mitchell Resnick, what would you say about the quality
of the exchange? Does the discussion exemplify the virtues of a civil
society as Barber describes it? What are the benefits of having such
discussions in public? And what are the limits of such discussions?
-
The League of Women Voters is just
one of many national organizations concerned with keeping citizens
informed and promoting voter turnout. Can virtual meeting places such
as this one serve the function of getting citizens to register and
vote? As you explore the site, who would you say the site is designed
for?
Questions for connecting:
-
How do Barber's ideas about education and his reflections upon his
own schooling experiences compare to the ideas expressed by Drucker?
Consider Drucker's remark that, "One of the major reasons for
the steady decline in the capacity of the schools to do their job
-- that is, to teach children elementary knowledge skills -- is surely
that since the 1950s the United States has increasingly made the schools
the carriers of all kinds of social policies: the elimination of racial
discrimination, of discrimination against all kinds of minorities,
including the handicapped, and so on." How do Barber's views
on multicultural curriculum compare to Drucker's view that "making
the school the organ of social policies has, without any doubt, severely
impaired its capacity to do its own job"?
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