Advanced Search
Print - Close Window
www.greenwood.com/catalog/C8128.aspx
All Greenwood Products
The Triumph of the Flexible Society The Connectivity Revolution and Resistance to Change
(Click to Enlarge)
Book Code: C8128
ISBN: 0-275-98128-2
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98128-0
224 pages, tables
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 11/30/2003
List Price: $49.95 (UK Sterling Price: £27.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • Comprehensive graduate collections.
    —Choice
    July 2004
  • Endorsement From Claudio M. Loser
    The Inter-American Dialogue:
    Provides the reader with a remarkable analysis of the challenges that the new 'information-related' technologies present in today's world. Manuel Hinds, an eminent Latin American policymaker in his own right, describes the difficulties of our current global environment, enriched by a fascinating historical perspective. Mr. Hinds's strong belief in the values of democracy and of the market economy is inspiring. Yet, it presents a major challenge to policy and opinion makers alike: how to use the technological revolution to improve society at large, without incurring the tragic mistakes of the past.
Description: Hinds takes offers a fresh perspective on the social, political, and economic disturbances now affecting our world. This book looks at those disturbances not as separate problems, but rather as the coherent symptoms of a deep technological revolution that is changing the shape of society on the scale of the Industrial Revolution: the Connectivity Revolution, the basis of the New Economy. Analyzing the resistance to change that erupted violently in response to that last major economic upheaval, Hinds shows how Communism, Nazism, and fundamentalism owe their triumphs not to the prevalence of poverty or oppression but to the rigidity of societies threatened by profound social changes prompted by rapid technological progress. Demonstrating that their rigidity was caused by the same kind of state intervention in the economy that is now being proposed to stop globalization, he argues persuasively that only a horizontal, flexible society can smoothly manage change in such a way that the pain of transformation--and therefore, the risk of giving birth to new varieties of destructive regimes--is minimized.
Table of Contents:
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Resistance to Change, Stagnation, and Destructiveness
  • The New Economy
  • The Economic Disruptions
  • Riches and Stagnation
  • Cold-Blooded Destructiveness
  • The Resurgence of Fundamentalism
  • The Inversion of Reality
  • Divisiveness and Social Interest
  • The Road Ahead
  • The Challenge
  • The False Solutions
  • Politics and the New International Order
  • The Problem of Social Cohesion
  • Forever Flowing
  • Bibliography
  • Index
LC Card Number: 2003052900
LCC Class: HM851
Dewey Class: 303
All rights reserved. Copyright © 1999-2008 Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
88 Post Road West, Westport CT 06881, (203) 226-3571