Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
Order and Anarchy
Civil Society, Social Disorder and War
Order and Anarchy re-examines the role of violence in human social evolution.
Robert Layton (Author)
9780521857710, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 25 May 2006
204 pages
22.2 x 14.4 x 1.7 cm, 0.39 kg
'Layton's large themes - the conditions of civil society, the sources of social order and of its breakdown, the biological and cultural arguments surrounding warfare - are all handled with a rare economy and considerable theoretical rigour. This is a bold and challenging work that will attract much attention from social scientists and others.' Krishan Kumar, William R. Kenan Jr Professor of Sociology, University of Virginia
Through the study of civil society, the evolution of social relations, and the breakdown of social order, Order and Anarchy re-examines the role of violence in human social evolution. Drawing on anthropology, political science, and evolutionary theory, it offers a novel approach to understanding stability and instability in human society. Robert Layton provides a radical critique of current concepts of civil society, arguing that rational action is characteristic of all human societies and not unique to post-Enlightenment Europe. Case studies range from ephemeral African gold rush communities and the night club scene in Britain to stable hunter-gatherer and peasant cultures. The dynamics of recent civil wars in the former Yugoslavia, Chad, Somalia and Indonesia are compared to war in small-scale tribal societies, arguing that recent claims for the evolutionary value of violence have misunderstood the complexity of human strategies and the social environments in which they are played out.
Acknowledgements
1. Civil society and social cohesion
2. Self-interest and social evolution
3. The breakdown of social order
4. Warfare, biology and culture
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Political science & theory [JPA], Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC], Social theory [JHBA]
