Putnam, Robert D. Professor of Public Policy, Harvard University
Print publication date: 2002 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online:
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-515089-6
doi:10.1093/0195150899.003.0004
 

Theda Skocpol
This chapter examines why voluntary associations in the United States were special, and how these fostered a special degree and kind of popular democratic engagement. Voluntary associations involved popular participation and mobilized people of different occupational and class backgrounds into the same or parallel groups. These served as schools of democratic citizenship by providing a large number of citizens with opportunities for active participation and democratic leverage.
Keywords: United States, voluntary association, democratic engagement
doi:10.1093/0195150899.003.0004
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