Теории модернизации в глобализационном измерении: некоторые итоги дискуссии.
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ГУТОРОВ, Владимир. Теории модернизации в глобализационном измерении: некоторые итоги дискуссии.. In: Moldoscopie, 2016, nr. 2(73), pp. 7-29. ISSN 1812-2566.
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Moldoscopie
Numărul 2(73) / 2016 / ISSN 1812-2566 /ISSNe 2587-4063

Теории модернизации в глобализационном измерении: некоторые итоги дискуссии.
CZU: 321.01+316.42+33

Pag. 7-29

Гуторов Владимир
 
Санкт-Петербургский государственный университет
 
Proiecte:
 
Disponibil în IBN: 16 noiembrie 2016


Rezumat

The purpose of this article is to summarize the diverse aspects of scientific discussion revolving around the notion itself and complicated questions of the modern theory of modernization. One of the main point of discussion is the new relationship between once so dissimilar conceptions like modernization, demo-cratization and globalization. These conceptions have been brought together in the end of the XXth century and since that time usually discussed interconnected, often maintaining a heterogeneous sense.The terms “modernization” and “glo-balization” have come to be emotionally charged in public discourse. For some, they imply the promise of an international civil society, conducive to a new era of peace and democratization. For others, they imply the threat of an American economic and political hegemony, with its cultural consequence being a homo-genized world. Nevertheless, some distinct characteristics defining the general tendencies of the modernization processreally exist. The main tendency is the changing meaning of modernity, or the emergence of “alternative modernities”. There is also the increasingly significant phenomenon of alternative globaliza-tions that is, cultural movements with a global outreach originating outside the Western world and indeed impacting on the latter. The second trend is related to a crisis in the legitimacy of the nation-state tradition forcing to review the problem of the role of democracy in the modern world. S.M.Lipset's observation that democracy is related to economic development, first advanced in 1959, has generated the largest body of research on any topic in political science. Yet there are two distinct reasons this relation may hold: either democracies may be more likely to emerge as countries develop economically (S.P.Huntington, R.Inglehart), or they may be established independently of economic develop-ment but may be more likely to survive in developed countries. The basic as-sumption of the theory of modernization, in any of its versions, is that there is one general process of which democratization is but the final stage. Moderniza-tion consists of a gradual differentiation and specialization of social structures that culminates in a separation of political structures from other structures and makes democracy possible. But now a prevailing view, according to which the emergence of democracy is not a by-product of economic development (G.O’Donnell).The protagonists of this approach do not believe that the fate of democratic rule would be determined exclusively by current levels of economic development. They maintained that, albeit within constraints, democratization was an outcome of actions, not just of economic conditions as like as historical past (A.Giddens, R.M.Unger).

Cuvinte-cheie
modernization, development, state, economic growth, political processes, globalization, political theory, public discourse,

democ-racy