Civil society/Related Articles: Difference between revisions

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imported>Chris Day
m (Civil society/Related articles moved to Civil society/Related Articles: Moved back due to a technical issue. The subpage name must be exactly right, including the use of CAPS otherwise the subpages template will not recognise it.)
imported>Larry Sanger
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== Related topics ==
== Related topics ==
{{r|Civil rights movement}}
{{r|Civil rights movement}}
{{r|First great awakening}}
{{r|First Great Awakening}}
{{r|Fourth great awakening}}
{{r|Fourth Great Awakening}}
{{r|Progressive era}}
{{r|Progressive Era}}
{{r|Second great awakening}}
{{r|Second Great Awakening}}
{{r|Social policy}}
{{r|Social policy}}
{{r|Social reform}}
{{r|Social reform}}
{{r|Third great awakening}}
{{r|Third Great Awakening}}

Revision as of 07:59, 4 September 2007

Main Article
Talk Template:Default button 3
Catalogs #
Timelines #
Debate Guide #
 
Template:Cell styleA list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Civil society.

Parent topics

  • Charity [r]: From the Latin, caritas, the non-erotic love of others; modern connotations stress efforts to aid or help others. [e]
  • Community [r]: Generally, a group of organisms sharing an environment. In human communities the shared environment may be defined by mutual interests, pooled resources, common beliefs, shared pursuits, perceived needs, or other common traits or characteristics, and may be associated with a shared identity which in the case of physical communities may include a sense of place. [e]
  • Education [r]: Learning, teaching, research and scholarship activities for the purpose of organizing, presenting and acquiring knowledge, skills or social norms. [e]
  • Philanthropy [r]: Action for the love (or good) of humankind; can refer narrowly to fundraising or broadly to "private action for the public good". [e]
  • Religion [r]: Belief in, and systems of, worshipful dedication to a superhuman power or belief in the ultimate nature of existence. [e]
  • Science [r]: The organized body of knowledge based on non–trivial refutable concepts that can be verified or rejected on the base of observation and experimentation [e]
  • Social economy [r]: A term long associated with European labor and leftist organizations and connotations of democratic forms of economic organization. Currently used in Canada, Europe and the United Nations to refer to a category similar to, but somewhat broader than, the U.S. conception of a nonprofit sector. Usually included in the social economy are associations, cooperatives, foundations and mutuals. [e]

Subtopics

Civil society catalogs

Related topics