Emancipation and hope
By: BRAITHWAITE, Jonh.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Thousand Oaks : SAGE, March 2004The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science 592, p. 79-98Abstract: This article concludes that the best way to trigger the reciprocal relationship between hope and emancipation is to innovate with institutions that jointly build hope and emancipation. Handouts to the poor without nurturing optimis to empower themselves to solve their own problems are not the solution. Neither is a psycologism that builds hope without concrete support and the flow of resources needed for structural change. Cognitive change in how people imagine a better world, microinstitutional change (illustrated here with the "Emancipation Conference" ), and macro-structural change must be strategically integrated for emancipatory politics to be credibleThis article concludes that the best way to trigger the reciprocal relationship between hope and emancipation is to innovate with institutions that jointly build hope and emancipation. Handouts to the poor without nurturing optimis to empower themselves to solve their own problems are not the solution. Neither is a psycologism that builds hope without concrete support and the flow of resources needed for structural change. Cognitive change in how people imagine a better world, microinstitutional change (illustrated here with the "Emancipation Conference" ), and macro-structural change must be strategically integrated for emancipatory politics to be credible
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