This edited collection brings together enterprising pieces of
new research on the many forms of organization in East and
Southeast Asia that are sponsored or mandated by government, but
engage widespread participation at the grassroots level. Straddling
the state-society divide, these organizations play important roles
in society and politics, yet remain only dimly understood. This
book shines a spotlight on this phenomenon, which speaks to
fundamental questions about how such societies choose to organize
themselves, how institutions of local governance change over time,
and how individuals respond to and make use of the power of the
state.
The contributors investigate organizations ranging from
volunteer-based organizations that partner with government in
providing services for homeless children, to state-managed networks
of neighborhood- or village-level associations that perform
representative as well as administrative functions and seeks to
answer a number of questions:
- When do the "vertical," top-down imperatives of the state
stifle "horizontal" solidarities, and when might the two work in
harmony?
- Are useful social and administrative purposes served by this
type of fusion?
- Does it amplify or merely muffle citizens? voices?
- What does it tell us about existing accounts of community,
social capital, "synergy," "complementarity," "subsidiarity," and
related concepts?
Representing seven countries: China, Japan, Vietnam, Thailand,
Indonesia, Taiwan, and Singapore this volume will be of interest to
undergraduates, postgraduates and academics in Asian studies,
political science, sociology, anthropology, development, history,
nonprofit studies.
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