- •Передмова
- •Unit 1 politics. Political science Defining Politics
- •Different Views of Politics
- •Bismarck thought that politics was an academic subject.
- •Politics as the Art of Government
- •What Is Politics?
- •Unit 2 study of politics Approaches to the Study of Politics
- •Traditional Scholarship
- •Social Science and Politics
- •Radical and Postmodernist Criticism
- •Concepts, Models and Theories
- •Unit 3 types of state Politics without the State: Tribal Societies
- •Feudalism
- •States without Nations: Kingdoms
- •States without Nations: Empires
- •Politics between States. Globalization
- •Unit 4 human nature and politics Relationship between Human Nature and Politics
- •Is the State Necessary?
- •Why Should I Obey the State?
- •The Nature of Authority
- •Rights: Natural, Human, Legal
- •Inalienable Rights
- •What are Human Rights?
- •Does Democracy Need the News?
- •Constitutions
- •Uk Constitution
- •Unit 5 political system of the united kingdom and the usa British Constitution
- •Political Party System
- •Major Parties in the uk
- •The Labour Party.
- •8 Draw a similar chart for Ukrainian political parties. Place the parties on the spectrum, match the names of Ukrainian political parties to ideologies. Parliamentary Electoral System
- •The House of Lords
- •The House of Commons
- •Composition of the Government
- •Political System of the United States of America
- •The United States Senate
- •Elections
- •Presidential Elections
- •Primary Elections Explained
- •Unit 6 political systems and regimes Traditional Systems of Classification
- •Regimes of the Modern World
- •Liberal Democracy
- •Economics and Government
- •Areas of Government. Social and Economic Policies
- •Ideology
- •Ideology and Policy
- •Political Spectrum. Role of Government
- •The Old Right: Monarchism
- •Problems with Monarchy
- •The Radical Right: Nazism and Fascism
- •Marxism
- •Leninism and Stalinism
- •Radicalism
- •Radical Theism: Catholic, Protestant and Islamic
- •Ecology as Political Radicalism
- •Feminism as Political Radicalism
- •Liberalism
- •Conservatism. Thatcherism and Neo-Conservatism
- •Defining Democracy
- •Бібліографія
- •Bealey f. The Blackwell Dictionary of Political Science: a User's Guide to Its Terms / Frank Bealey. – London: Wiley-Blackwell, 1999. – 396 p.
- •How Do Human Rights Affect Our Life?
- •Impact Cards
- •Human Rights and Responsibilities
- •Relations between Leninism and Stalinism
Feminism as Political Radicalism
The idea of (рівні права) for women is not new. Plato envisaged women participating on an equal basis in (керівництво державою). In 1792 Mary Wollstonecraft wrote about female emancipation. By the beginning of the twentieth century the Women’s Suffrage movement had become a major (політичним питанням) in Britain. Feminists believe that women were given the (право голосу), but it has not brought equality of pay, status or (можливості) for women. Most (радикальні феміністки) think that revolution must begin in the private lives.
‘The personal is the political’ is the slogan of many radical feminists. Feminist ideas can be seen as variation on (ліберальних ідей) on the rights to self-development. The mainstream of the women’s (руху) is mainly a series of autonomous self-help groups responding to the personal and political situation of their members.
Liberalism
Liberalism may be understood in a broad or in a narrower sense. In the broad sense, liberal ideas form the basis of a constitutional consensus in most of the mainstream parties in the states of the European Union, the United States and many other ‘liberal democracies’. In the narrower sense, liberalism is a doctrine of democratic parties distinguished from more conservative/Christian democrat parties on the right and socialist parties on the left. The Liberal International is a formal expression of this and includes the US (mainly New York) Liberal Party and the UK Liberal Democrats. Most Liberal parties would be viewed on the centre–left of the political spectrum.
The earliest phase in the development of liberal ideas is the establishment of the idea of constitutional government based upon individual rights. The United States constitution is a good example. It incorporates ideas such as government based on the consent of the governed, the constitution as a government of laws not of men. In the second phase, nineteenth-century liberal in Britain, and on the Continent, liberals increasingly were seen as the party of the new modernizing manufacturing elite opposed to conservative landed gentry. In both Europe and North America liberals were the party of political reform and universal suffrage. A distinctive feature of liberalism has been an emphasis on political freedom, in the national self-determination and in the freedom of speech, choice of occupation and way of life.
A third phase in the development of liberalism was marked by the writings of the English idealists including F. H. Bradley [1846–1924], Bernard Bosanquet [1848–1923], Josiah Royce [1855–1916]. Much of this idealist writing developed the idea that the state exists to guarantee a system of rights that will give individuals an opportunity for moral development.
The third phase of ‘social’ liberalism is associated in Britain with the political careers, speeches and writings of Lloyd George, John Maynard Keynes and Lord Beveridge. Lloyd George, as Chancellor of the Exchequer in the pre-First World War liberal government introduced old age pensions, state welfare schemes and progressive taxation.
1 Give Ukrainian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
Consensus, distinguished from, establishment, universal suffrage, national self-determination, welfare scheme, taxation.
2 Complete the sentences.
The earliest phase in the development ...
Liberalism may be understood ...
In both Europe and North America ...
In the narrower sense ...
It incorporates ideas ...
Much of this idealist writing ...
A third phase in the development ...
3 Comprehension questions.
What does liberalism mean? What kind of doctrine is liberalism?
How did liberalism develop?
What parties are associated with liberalism? Where are those parties situated on political spectrum?
What is the distinctive feature of liberalism?
What philosophers and political scientists developed the doctrine of liberalism?
4 Say if the following statements are true according to the text.
Liberal ideas form the basis of a constitutional consensus in ‘liberal democracies’: the European Union, the United States.
Liberalism is a doctrine of democratic parties distinguished from more conservative parties on the left.
Today most Liberal parties would be viewed on the centre–left of the political spectrum.
Liberal ideas focus on individual rights as the basis for constitutional government.
Political reform and universal suffrage were important for liberals in Europe and North America.
A distinctive feature of liberalism has been an emphasis on economic freedom.
National self-determination and the freedom of speech are among the values of liberal democrats.
