Evaluating Culture
Well-Being, Institutions and Circumstance
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Palgrave Macmillan
Published:27th Jun '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
From which evaluative base should we develop policies designed to promote wellbeing among different cultural groups in varying circumstances? This book engages with needs and capabilities to advance normative functionalist assessment of the success with which cultural institutions promote eudaemonic wellbeing in given, determinate circumstances.
Johnson's book is a challenging and highly controversial defence of cultural evaluation. Its philosophical range is exceptionally wide, while its political engagement is informed and sophisticated. Focusing on the case of Aboriginal Australians, Johnson shows both the need for cultural evaluation and the dangers of intervention. This is a book which will be read with profit by anyone working on the politics of cultural diversity.
Sue Mendus, Department of Politics, University of York, UK
This book is remarkable in its ambition. By suggesting an objective basis on which cultures might be evaluated, it seeks to advocate interventions that prevent serious damage to human well-being. This provocative and insightful argument will stimulate significant debate as we grapple with a rapidly globalising world in which different cultures become increasingly intertwined.
Shane O'Neill, School of Politics, International Studies and Philosophy, Queen's University Belfast, UK
Evaluating cultures is one of the most complex and controversial tasks of our age. In examining how we should tackle it, Matthew Johnson's ambitious and carefully crafted study provides answers that are unusually bold in content and wide-ranging in scope. His book is essential reading for all who have to grapple with the phenomenon of culture and its significance for human wellbeing.
Peter Jones, School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, University of Newcastle, UK.
ISBN: 9780230296565
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 3796g
204 pages