Civism: Cultivating Citizenship in European HistoryThis book explores the relationship between citizenship and civism through a general survey of European history. It begins with an exploration of the dynamics of citizenship and civism in the formative Neolithic and classical societies, followed by an exploration of the middle ages, renaissance, reformation, and the enlightenment. The latter half of the book focuses on the rise of the modern nation-state following the French Revolution. The chapters spanning the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries focus on the development of citizenship and civism in Britain, France, Germany, and Russia. |
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Page 317
... Soviet Union had adopted two constitutions in which the Congress of Soviets served as the representative body for the state . The new constitution was drafted by a Constitutional Commission elected by an All - Union Congress of Soviets ...
... Soviet Union had adopted two constitutions in which the Congress of Soviets served as the representative body for the state . The new constitution was drafted by a Constitutional Commission elected by an All - Union Congress of Soviets ...
Page 365
... Soviet Union in 1989. While Stalin recognized that the war had bequeathed the Soviets an unprecedented opportunity for ex- pansion , a sense of pessimism seemed to overcast the West . During the early years of the Cold War , the western ...
... Soviet Union in 1989. While Stalin recognized that the war had bequeathed the Soviets an unprecedented opportunity for ex- pansion , a sense of pessimism seemed to overcast the West . During the early years of the Cold War , the western ...
Page 392
... Soviet government and contained moral lessons associated with the revo- lution , the founding of the state , and socialism . Section II focused on the Constitution and Constitutional law and the workings of the multinational state , the ...
... Soviet government and contained moral lessons associated with the revo- lution , the founding of the state , and socialism . Section II focused on the Constitution and Constitutional law and the workings of the multinational state , the ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Citizenship and Civism | 7 |
Civism in Formative Societies | 27 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
able According activities addition allowed attempted authority basis became become began British called central century Church citizen citizenship civic civil civism classical concept concern consequence constitution continued course created culture democracy democratic differences economic effect elements emerging Empire established Europe European existence expressed forces formation France French German goal groups growing helped human idea ideal immigration important included individual influence institutions instruction interests issue Italy leaders liberal living means military moral movement nation-state nationalistic nature organized Party political principles problems reforms relationship religious Republic responsibility result Roman rule Russian schools sense serve social socialist society Soviet status teachers tion traditional understanding Union universal values views West western youth