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God and Karate on the Southside - Bridging Differences, Building American Communities (Hardcover)
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God and Karate on the Southside - Bridging Differences, Building American Communities (Hardcover)
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Recent demographic changes have sparked debate about the civic
health of American democracy. Democracy requires people of
different backgrounds to be disposed toward working together, and
it requires "little-noticed meeting places" where neighbors
interact with each other, share their thinking, and address common
problems. As issues of ethnic and social diversity become
increasingly foregrounded, social scientists find pervasive social
distrust and civic withdrawal in racially and ethnically
heterogeneous communities, whether in big cities (Los Angeles) or
small (Yakima, WA). In this book, Yi argues that increasing
diversity can revitalize social and civic connectedness if our
institutions rise up to the challenge of finding common ground and
shared enterprise for people of different backgrounds. He
highlights two types of organizational actors in the USA. One type
renews and adapts longstanding religious, cultural, and civic
traditions to a dynamic, multiethnic society. The second type
attempts to introduce Americans to the many religious and cultural
traditions from outside the United States. These tendencies point
to a dynamic, "many-stranded" model of liberal-plural democracy,
which fosters and benefits from a variety of group affiliations and
types of engagement. Organizations that combine internal,
authoritative community with external, plural outreach, such as
some evangelical mega-churches and karate schools, connect people
across racial and economic divides. In these bridging
organizations, people find a sense of unity among diversity; they
get to know each other as individuals, rather than as
representatives of disliked groups. Using fieldwork on churches,
karate schools, and other organizations in a racially mixed,
Chicago Southside neighborhood as well as a broader analysis of
race and religion in the 1972-1998 General Social Survey, Yi
combines classical democratic theory with compelling personal
stories and rigorous empirical analysis. God and Karate in the
Southside is the first
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