A Study on the Concept to Establish of Sport Welfare: Focusing on ‘The Third Way' Political Ideology by Anthony Giddens

2018 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 83-101
Author(s):  
Hye-jin Jeong ◽  
Hong-sik Kim
2003 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 237-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Geyer

Focusing on the work of Anthony Giddens, this article reviews his vision of the Third Way and argues that it reflects a new and fundamental ‘complexity’ shift within the social sciences. His ability to partially recognise and integrate this shift into his thinking gives the Third Way much of its power and coherence. However, his unwillingness to accept the shift's full implications and his determination to find the one new way for the left blinds him to its more contingent and complex implications. By coming to terms with the development of complexity theory in the natural and social sciences, this article will attempt to go beyond the Third Way and argue that there is not one, two or three ways, but hundreds.


Politica ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 356
Author(s):  
Stefan Hermann

Norman Fairclough, New Labour, New Language?, London: Routledge, 2000, 178 s., $16.99; Anthony Giddens, The Third Way and its Critics, Cambridge: Polity Press, 2000, 189 s., $15.96; Anthony Giddens, Runaway World. How Globalisation is Reshaping Our Lives, London: Profile Books, 1999, 104 s., $14.36; Anthony Giddens and Will Hutton (eds.), On the Edge. Living with Global Capitalism, London: Jonathan Cape, 2000, 241 s., $19.96.


Author(s):  
Michał Niebylski

The aim of this article is to study the philosophical, ideological and political roots of the Third Way concept. The analysis of these aspects should capture the genuine sources of the new faces of European social democracy and prove the thesis that this model is influential in West Europe as well as in Poland. The article asks the question: is the Third Way a political ideology with its own distinctive ‘core’, a loose fusion of different ideologies, or a strategy within an ideological tradition? Moreover, the article is an attempt to examine on what level the formula of the Third Way assume ‘going out’ of the disputes between the left and the right. Finally, the paper examines the correlation between politics of Third Way and the redefinition of political conflict in the Poland after 1989.


2000 ◽  
pp. 692-704
Author(s):  
Daniel Singer

There are fashionable terms that are at once misleading and revealing. The “third way” is one of them. There was a time when this concept had a genuine meaning. Back in the 1950s, for the so-called “revisionists” in Eastern Europe it spelled the search for democratic socialism that had nothing to do with its Stalinist perversion but was not a return to capitalism either. For some radical dissidents in the West it had the same signi?cance: it was their way of telling Moscow and Washington “a plague on both your houses” during the period of the Cold War. But that con?ict is over, the neo-Stalinist empire has collapsed and capitalism is triumphant. In its new reincarnation, the “third way” does not even envisage the dismantling of capitalism. All it proposes is to put a coat of varnish on top. As applied by its chief practitioner, the British prime minister, Tony Blair, and as interpreted by his guru, Anthony Giddens, the model has been described, unkindly though not unfairly, as that contradiction in terms—“Thatcherism with a human face.”


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Togliani ◽  
I Breoni ◽  
V Davì ◽  
N Mantovani ◽  
A Savioli ◽  
...  

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