what you get here

This is not a blog which opines on current events. It rather uses incidents, books (old and new), links and papers to muse about our social endeavours.
So old posts are as good as new! And lots of useful links!

The Bucegi mountains - the range I see from the front balcony of my mountain house - are almost 120 kms from Bucharest and cannot normally be seen from the capital but some extraordinary weather conditions allowed this pic to be taken from the top of the Intercontinental Hotel in late Feb 2020

Saturday, April 3, 2021

How do we get a better world?

Bulgaria goes to the polls tomorrow – a country I wrote about last autumn. A journalist friend gives a good indication of the choice here. This post wants to explore the fundamental question of why, these days, people – particularly the younger generation – should bother going to the polls? Politicians have become fair game in the new millennium – but, for those who cared to look, the warning signs about democracy were evident a long time ago. In 1977, after almost a decade of helping local community activists and of studying the new literature of community development, I wrote a critical article about the claim of the British political system to be open and pluralist  

The modern political party was designed to perform the following functions…

- recruit political leaders

- represent community grievances, demands etc.

- implement party programmes - which may or may not be consistent with those community demands.

- extend public insight - by both media coverage of inter-party conflict and intra­party dialogue - into the nature of govern­mental decision-making (such insights can, of course, either defuse or inflame grievances!)

- protect decision-makers from the temptations and uncertainties of decision­-making. 

Of these five functions, it performs only the first with any effectiveness. Community development represents almost the opposite of everything that a modern political party stands for - is a critique, that is, not just of certain operational deficien­cies of liberal democracy but of its very essence. The modern political party has itself a hierarchical structure and expects others to have the same features. Its members accept this discipline because of their belief in the greater good which, it is assumed, will materialise from the occupation by their leaders of political power and/or the implementation of a particular pro­gramme. And modern parties share, to a greater or lesser extent, a belief in the capability of modern forms of government. structure (and of industrial organisation) viz, that plans and programmes conceived in essen­tially private processes imposed on society by traditional hierarchical structures will achieve specified aims with negligible negative byproducts.

Political parties are about achievement - even if that is only the overthrow of their rivals' dogma (or their own!). They are organised to achieve something - be that power or specific changes in policy. Community development, on the other hand, is about a process. Its theory, in a sense, is one of “permanent revolution" which despite its own gentleness and emphasis on trust and sharing, has to live with the uncomfortable recognition that societies based on modern technology -whatever their form of ownership - will subject minorities to more or less subtle forms of repression and exploitation.

Of the functions listed earlier, those badly performed by local government are the representative, the programmatic and the educational: of these it is perhaps the lack of the educational that is the more serious and where certainly recent com­munity development theory and practice in Britain have performed well

A recent post charged the political class with treating the public like idiots   

 “You have, for the past few decades, made the following assumptions about your fellows –

- They need to be worked hard - but given bread and circuses

- Told what to do and measured by how well they do it

- Given a choice at elections only of those who represent an ever-circulating elite

- you therefore feel that you no longer need to bother even going through the motions of serving up promises and manifesto programmes

- the public is so stupid and so easily distracted that they will believe any of your lies

- you can do whatever you want, safe in the knowledge that you have a servile media which knows that its basic task is to keep the public entertained” 

Countries like Bulgaria and Romania came to democracy in the worst of times – when the very notion of governing was being treated with scorn in the West and “the market” was seen as the answer to everyone’s problems. I vividly remember being invited to speak at a training school in Romania for Young Politicians in the mid 1990s and finding it infested with young americans zealously teaching their counterparts how to market themselves. But absolutely nothing was said about the tasks and responsibilities of governing – let alone the moral aspects. 

Why is it that politics is the one activity – at least in the West - which has managed to resist the call for professionalization?? In China, the political class is thoroughly trained and its progress through the layers of municipalities and companies closely monitored…. 

A recent book was, hopefully, a small sign that some people at least recognise the need for new skill-sets in governmentThat is, of course, part of a wider argument which people like Mariana Mazzucato have been pursuing for a more positive role for government.

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