From the pundits to the polls, nearly everyone seems to agree that US politics have rarely been more fractious, and calls for a return to “civil discourse” abound. Yet it is also true that the requirements of polite discourse effectively silence those who are not in power, gaming the system against the disenfranchised. What, then, should a democracy do? This book makes a case for understanding civility in a different light. Examining the history of the concept and its basis in communication and political theory, William Keith and Robert Danisch present a clear, robust analysis of civil discourse. Distinguishing it from politeness, they claim that civil argument must be redirected from the goal of political comity to that of building and maintaining relationships of minimal respect in the public sphere. They also take into account how civility enables discrimination, indicating conditions under which uncivil resistance is called for. When viewed as a communication practice for uniting people with differences and making them more equal, civility is transformed from a preferable way of speaking into an essential component of democratic life. Guarding against uncritical endorsement of civility as well as skepticism, Keith and Danisch show with rigor, nuance, and care that the practice of civil communication is both paradoxical and sorely needed. Beyond Civility is necessary reading for our times.
Litigators face ethical issues on a daily, if not hourly, basis. When faced with these issues, how do you best advocate for your client? For example: When do you raise settlement and how do you effect the best settlement possible?
This book offers the first comprehensive philosophical examination of the free speech ‘battles’ of the last decade, arguing for a critical republican conception of civility as an explanatory and prescriptive solution.
Even if people want to perform well, they can't. Ultimately incivility cuts the bottom line. In Mastering Civility, Christine Porath shows how people can enhance their influence and effectiveness with civility.
Unless this is thoroughly understood, the backlash on civility issues will continue because what may be considered as civil behavior in one environment may easily be considered as uncivil in some.
As Rosenberg argues, libel law had definite social objectives: to preserve the reputations of the “best men”; Rosenberg, Protecting the Best Men. 74. Wharton (ed.), State Trials of the United States, 670–677; Miller, Brief Retrospect, ...
Out of this assumption that our task is to work toward restoration of the broken relationships, the theologically informed mediator is strongly inclined toward the right side of the following diagram, to reach beyond civility and ...
Just as The Road Less Traveled provided hope and guidance for individuals seeking growth, this major new work by M. Scott Peck, M.D., offers a needed prescription for our deeply ailing society.
Four Quakers were publicly executed (Marmaduke Stephenson, William Robinson, Mary Dryer, and William Ledra) in Massachusetts, and many more were imprisoned or had their death sentences reduced to public flogging and ostracism.
Ethics and Civility in the Courtroom and Beyond
At once civil lyric and lament crying beyond civility, spiraling with kinetic intensity, a 21st century feminist book-length aria