חדש על המדף

חדש על המדף

Struggling for Recognition:
The Psychological Impetus for Democratic Progress
Doron Shultziner לקטלוג
Struggling for Recognition: <br>The Psychological Impetus for Democratic Progress
"Struggling for Recognition" posits that the drive for personal recognition is a prime motivation in struggles leading to democratic progress. It underscores a fundamental aspect of human nature, that is, the drive for positive self-esteem and status and the aversion of negative self-esteem and subordination. This pursuit of recognition becomes the impetus for action and it functions in various ways in contentious politics, such as overcoming fear and overriding rational calculations that may hinder collective action. The book examines the mechanisms by which this disposition is triggered and converted into political pressures that eventually lead to democratic reforms.

Struggling for Recognition will be of interest to a wide range of scholars in political science, sociology, history and psychology, especially those researching social movements, social change, democracy, and democratic transitions. A unique multidisciplinary work, it will foster better understanding of the connections between different disciplines and will freshly illuminate key political events.

Doron Shultziner is a Visiting Lecturer in the Political Science Department, Gilo Center for Citizenship, Democracy, and Civic Education at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel. He specializes in bridging the gap between disciplines and advancing an integrative and interdisciplinary study of the psychological causes of social and political progress. He has written on the concept of human dignity and the pursuit of recognition.