CIVICUS Civil Society News
Studying Civil Society Across the World: Exploring the Thorny Issues of Conceptualisation and Measurement
CIVICUS staff member publishes in Journal of Civil Society
The debate about the usefulness of the civil society concept for social analysis has reached a critical stage and calls for its abandonment are mounting. To prove its relevance for policy, practice and research, better operational concepts and more rigorous empirical research on civil society are required. This article examines the possibilities and pitfalls of cross-national civil society research as a crucial area of empirical civil society studies.
It explores the definition, conceptualisation, operationalisation and measurement of civil society through a critical examination of existing international efforts at comparative civil society analysis.
A functional approach to defining civil society and a two-dimensional operational concept of civil society, according to its (1) structural and (2) cultural features, are proposed as suitable tools to study the phenomenon cross-nationally.
The article also reviews the CIVICUS Civil Society Index as an innovative tool to assess the state of civil society and discusses the insights and challenges emerging from its current application in more than 50 countries. The paper concludes that international comparative civil society studies are both possible and necessary, but cautions that more attention needs to be paid to the development of appropriate operational concepts and measurement models.
Reference: Heinrich, Volkhart F. (2004): Studying Civil Society Across the World: Exploring the Thorny Issues of Conceptualisation and Measurement, in: Journal of Civil Society 1 (3), 211-228.
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