This title reflects the general theme of the 2010 IACR annual conference that was held in Padova, Italy, the aim of which was to provide a fresh view on some cultural and structural changes involving Western societies after the world economic crisis of 2008, from the point of view of Critical Realism.
Global society is often regarded as disrupting identities and blurring boundaries, one which entails giving up ideas of structure and fixity. Globalization supposedly introduces a liquid era of fluidity where everything is possible, and anything goes. Nevertheless, its current dynamics are developing into a harder reality: wars, economic crisis, the haunting risk of pandemics, the ever worsening food supply crisis, and the environmental challenge. These social facts call for a dramatic shift in the optimistic cosmopolitan mood and the thought that we can build and rebuild ourselves and our world as we please, at least for the most developed countries. The challenges we face produce new forms of social life and individual experience. They also require us to develop new frameworks to analyze emergent contexts, institutional complexes and morphogenetic fields, and new ways to understand human agency and the meaning of emancipation.
The book broadly falls into three parts:
The first, Social Ontology and a New Historical Formation, deals with mainly social ontological issues, insofar as they are connected to social scientific and public issues in the emerging society of the XXI century.
The second, Being human and the adventure of agency, is concerned with the way human beings adapts to the new world of our times, and comes up with innovative models of agency and socialization.
The third, The constitutionalization of the new world, explores critical realist perspectives, as compared to system-theoretical ones, on the issue of global order and justice.
In all of this, the challenge is to engage with this new world in a meaningful way, a task for which a realist mind set is badly needed. Critical realism provides a strong theoretical framework that can meet the challenge, and the book explores its contribution to making sense of, and coming to terms with, this historical formation.
About the Author:
Margaret S. Archer is Professor at the Centre for Social Ontology, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. She has written and edited several books for Routledge, including Conversations About Reflexivity.
Andrea Maccarrini is Associate professor of Sociology at the University of Padova