Freedom: Reassessments and Rephrasings
Jose V. Ciprut is a social systems scientist and an international political economist. His expertise is in national development, regional security, international relations, and the global political economy. As independent scholar and seminar director, he is the convening editor also of
New interdisciplinary perspectives on the theory and practice of freedom, with field-specific studies.
Some philosophers conceive freedom as a state; others view it as an ideal. A songwriter sees it as a way of life: “Like a bird on a wire, like a drunk in a midnight choir, I have tried in my way to be free.” The embattled statesman and the political idealist perceive causal links among personal freedoms, societal democracy, and global peace. In this cross-disciplinary volume, the contributors reassess and rephrase the conceptualizations and theorizations of freedom and their applicability to daily life. Framed by historical contexts, their field-specific studies help reconcile theory and practice. Their shared and unique ideational framework can be paraphrased in six words, a question mark, and a (muted) exclamation point: Freedom? Beware what you wish for (!).
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