Community and COVID-19: Japan, Sweden and Uruguay/ Amitai Etzioni

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2021Subject(s): Online resources: In: Survival: Vol.63, No.1, February - March 2021, pp.53-76 (106)Summary: This article deals with nations, defined as communities invested in the state. A society can be relatively liberal-communitarian if the state fosters rather than undermines communal bonds; it undergirds rather than seeks to curtail the observation of rights; it looks to minimise its role, relying more on activating communal processes, though it may increase its role in a crisis; and communities and their members trust the government and do not view it as violating their liberties.
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This article deals with nations, defined as communities invested in the state. A society can be relatively liberal-communitarian if the state fosters rather than undermines communal bonds; it undergirds rather than seeks to curtail the observation of rights; it looks to minimise its role, relying more on activating communal processes, though it may increase its role in a crisis; and communities and their members trust the government and do not view it as violating their liberties.

S-AMERICA, COVID-19, JAPAN

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