Abstract
Within a span of fifteen years civic engagement has become a cottage industry in political science and political theory, but the term has now outlived its usefulness and exemplifies Giovanni Sartori's worry about conceptual “stretching.” This article traces civic engagement's ascension as a catch-all term for almost anything that citizens might happen to do together or alone, and illustrates the confusion that its popularity has occasioned. It proposes that civic engagement meet a well-deserved end, to be replaced with a more nuanced and descriptive set of engagements: political, social, and moral. It also examines the appeal ofengagementitself, a term that entails both attention and energy. Attention and energy are the mainsprings of politics and most other challenging human endeavors. But they can be invested politically, or in associative pursuits, or in moral reasoning and follow-through, and those types of engagement can, but need not, coincide. We should be asking whichkindsof engagement—which kinds of attention and energetic activity—make democracy work, and how they might be measured and promoted.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations
Reference83 articles.
1. Day Nancy . 1995. “Our Separate Ways.” People Weekly, September 25, 125–7.
2. Conceptual “Stretching” Revisited: Adapting Categories in Comparative Analysis
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126 articles.
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