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The Communitarian Vision
mericans
have been struggling during the 1990s to restore the integrity of our basic institutions
and turn back disturbing trends toward crime, social disorder, and family breakdown. The
past decade has been an era of important social reforms: in the public schools, in the
criminal justice system, in family policy. In states and localities across the nation,
citizens have fought for greater emphasis on character, individual responsibility, and
virtues and values in the public square. Partly as a result, on a host of "leading
social indicators"rates of violent crime, rates of youth crime, levels of
teenage pregnancy, even student test scoresthe nation is showing incremental but
significant improvements.
Communitarian ideas and policy approaches have been playing a major role in this growing
movement of cultural and institutional regeneration. Communitarian thinkers are in the
forefront of the Character Education movement, which is fostering a return to the teaching
of good personal conduct and individual responsibility in thousands of public schools
around the country. Likewise, communitarians have been played a role in the new
community-based approaches to criminal justice, which are showing solid success in
restoring neighborhood order and achieving real reductions in violent crime. In the area
of family policy, communitarians have worked for policies to strengthen families and
discourage divorce. They have led in devising fresh, incentive-based policies designed to
discourage a casual approach to marriage and to promote "children-first"
thinking and family stability--while at the same time preserving the rights of women and
men.
In contrast to conventional "right" or "left" approaches to social
policy, communitarians emphasize the need for a balance between rights and
responsibilities. Communitarians believe that strong rights presume strong
responsibilities and that the pendulum of contemporary society has swung too far in the
direction of individual autonomy at the expense of individual and social responsibility.
One key to solving contemporary Americas social problems is replacing our pervasive
"rights talk" with "responsibility talk."
In finding solutions to our social problems, communitarians seek to rely neither on costly
government programs nor on the market alone, but on the powerful "third force"
of the community. By reawakening communities and empowering communities to assert their
moral standards, communitarians seek to hold individuals accountable for their conduct.
Communitarianism is essentially an optimistic approach to issues of public policy. While
mindful of human tendencies to act in self-interested ways, Communitarians believe that it
is possible to build a good society based on the desire of human beings to cooperate to
achieve community goals that are based on positive values. This has been the essential
optimistic view that has animated Americans throughout our history. New times raise new
issues, but the communitarian focus on the values of the good society provides a vital
guide to maintaining the good society.
Innovative, deadlock-breaking policy ideas that promote a fresh consensus around positive
social action--such has been the hallmark of the communitarian movement over the past
decade.
Learn more about communitarianism and become a part of one of the most innovative
movements working to renew and revitalize American society.
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Communitarian Vision
Rights and Responsibilities
Marriage and Family
Schools and Education
Criminal Justice
Diversity and Reconciliation
Civil Society
Faith-Based Social Services
The Economy
The Political Process |