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Localism (politics)

Localism describes a range of political philosophies which prioritize the local. Generally, localism supports local production and consumption of goods, local control of government, and promotion of local history, local culture and local identity. Localism can be contrasted with regionalism and centralized government, with its opposite being found in the unitary state.

Localism can also refer to a systematic approach to organizing a central government so that local autonomy is retained rather than following the usual pattern of government and political power becoming centralized over time.

On a conceptual level, there are important affinities between localism and deliberative democracy. This concerns mainly the democratic goal of engaging citizens in decisions that affect them. Consequently, localism will encourage stronger democratic and political participatory forums and widening public sphere connectivity.[1]

History

Localists assert that throughout the world's history, most social and economic institutions are scaled at the local level, as opposed to regional, interregional, or global (basically until the late 19th to the early 20th centuries).[citation needed] Through ongoing forms of colonialism, imperialism and industrialisation local scales become less central.[citation needed] Most proponents of localism position themselves as defending aspects of this way of life;[citation needed] the phrase "relocalization" is often used in this sense.[citation needed]

In the 20th century, localism drew heavily on the writings of Leopold Kohr, E.F. Schumacher, Wendell Berry, and Kirkpatrick Sale, among others. More generally, localism draws on a wide range of movements and concerns and it proposes that by re-localizing democratic and economic relationships, social, economic and environmental problems will be more definable and solutions more easily created. They include anarchism, bioregionalism, environmentalism, the Greens, and more specific concerns about food, monetary policy and education. Political parties of all persuasions have also occasionally favored the devolution of power to local authorities. In this vein Alan Milburn, a Labour Party MP, has spoken of "making services more locally accountable, devolving more power to local communities and, in the process, forging a modern relationship between the state, citizens and services"[2]

Beginning in the 1970s, a particularly visible strain of localism in the United States was a movement started by Alice Waters to buy locally produced products. This movement originated with organic farming and likely gained impetus because of growing dissatisfaction with organic certification and the failing economic model of industrial agriculture for small farmers. While the advocates of local consumption draw on protectionist arguments, they also appealed primarily to an environmental argument: that pollution caused by transporting goods was a major externality in a global economy, and one that "localvores" could greatly diminish. Also, environmental issues can be addressed when decision-making power is held by those affected by the issues instead of power sources that do not understand the needs of local communities.

Political philosophy

Localism as a philosophy is related to the principle of subsidiarity.

In the early 21st century, localists have frequently found themselves aligned with critics of globalisation. Variants of localism are prevalent within the Green movement. According to an article in International Socialism, localism of this sort seeks to "answer to the problems created by globalisation" with "calls to minimise international trade and to seek to establish economies based on ‘local’ self-sufficiency only."[3]

Some localists believe that society should be organised politically along community lines, with each community being free to conduct its own business in whatever fashion its people see fit. The size of the communities is defined such that their members are both familiar and dependent on each other, a size something along the lines of a small town or village.[citation needed]

In reference to localism, Edward Goldsmith, former editor of The Ecologist magazine, claims: "The problems facing the world today can only be solved by restoring the functioning of those natural systems which once satisfied our needs, i.e. by fully exploiting those incomparable resources which are individual people, families, communities and ecosystems, which together make up the biosphere or real world"[4]

Tip O'Neill, a longtime Democratic Speaker of the House in the US Congress, once famously declared that "All politics is local".[5] He eventually wrote a book by that name: All Politics Is Local: And Other Rules of the Game.

Localism and populism

Wayne Yeung[6] questions the assumption that localism is a sub-school of European-American populism. Yeung raised an example in which localism is a cultural or civic value rather than a value that supports ethnic understanding in Hong Kong identity politics.

Jane Wills argued that an increasing numbers of populist politicians are endorsing localism as a framework for public policy.[7] She defined populism as a form of politics that involves people speaking in a register that is authentic to the experiences and needs of those people.[7] In other words, most likely Populist Party policies would contradict parties that support the elites.[7] She also used the term "anti-politics" to describe localist politicians because they stand against mainstream politics.[7] She used the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) as an example of a party adopting localism into their policies. Mainstream politicians from the Conservative, Labour and Liberal Democrat parties were threatened by the rise of UKIP.[7]

Localism and developing countries

Many localists are concerned with the problems of developing countries. Many advocate that developing countries should aim to rely on their own goods and services to escape from what they see are the unfair trade relations with the developed world. George Monbiot claims this idea does not recognise the fact that, even if developing countries often get a raw deal in trade relations, refusing to trade at all would be a significant blow, as the countries need the revenue generated by trade.[8]

Some localists are also against immigration from poor countries to rich ones. One of the problems they claim results from such immigration is the drain on the intellectual resources of poor countries, so called brain drain. For example, in the past decade, Bulgaria is estimated to have lost more than 50,000 qualified scientists and skilled workers through emigration every year. About a fifth of them were highly educated specialists in chemistry, biology, medicine and physics.[9][10]

International relations

Some localists are against political intervention and peace keeping measures. They believe that communities should find solutions to their own problems and in their own time, in whatever fashion they decide. They believe that all societies are capable of achieving long term peace once given the opportunity to do so.

Localist activism

Localism usually describes social measures or trends which emphasise or value local and small-scale phenomena. This is in contrast to large, all-encompassing frameworks for action or belief. Localism can therefore be contrasted with globalisation, and in some cases localist activism has parallels with opposition to corporate-led globalization. Localism can be geographical, but there are also transnational linkages. Localist movements are often organized in support of locally owned, independent businesses and nonprofit organizations. Although the focus of this aspect of localist activism is on "buy local," "support local food," and "bank local" campaigns, some organizations and businesses also combine the goal of increased local ownership with environmental sustainability and social fairness goals.[11][12]

Examples of localism are:

  • Support for local food networks, such as farmers' markets, community-supported agriculture, community gardens, farm-to-table programs, food cooperatives, and restaurants that serve local food. The slow food movement, using diverse, seasonal, natural food in reaction to multinational merchandising of food which is uniform, produced using industrial methods, and called fast food.
  • Support for locally family businesses, small craftsmans and farmers, traditional and local communities of small owners (craft guilds, farming circles and other), community banks and credit unions, such as the following organizations: American Independent Business Alliance, Business Alliance for Local Living Economies, the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, and Move Your Money. "The Benefits of Doing Business Locally" 2015-07-03 at the Wayback Machine an essay by Jeff Milchen, American Independent Business Alliance co-founder, covers many arguments for local business ownership and patronage.
  • Localism in media to support a diverse news media in the face of increasing corporate control. The US Federal Communications Commission made use of this term when seeking input on its rules, stating "promoting localism is a key goal of the Commission’s media ownership rules."[13]
  • Localism in government structures, which can include:
    • Tertiary government where small community councils make relevant decisions, with some degree of independence from local or national government.
    • Workers' councils, where the employees of a particular workplace discuss and negotiate with their employer, rather have this done by a national union which may be remote from local issues.
    • Federalism and devolution.
  • Religion (Protestant):
    • Exclusive localism holds that there can't be more than one legitimate institutionally visible church at one given location, the variation of which varies but is usually held to be either a city or a neighbourhood.
    • Localism is more generally the congregationalist idea that each local church should be autonomous, only extended to reject any formal association of churches. It is specially relevant among Baptists, where localists reject the forming of Conventions.
  • Religion (Churches of Christ):
    • The congregationalist idea of local autonomy is a cornerstone of restoration movement fellowships that identify as churches of Christ or Independent Christian Churches/Churches of Christ. Founders of the movement declared their independence from various denominations, seeking a fresh start to restore the New Testament church, and abandoning creeds. The names "Church of Christ," "Christian Church" and "Disciples of Christ" were adopted by the movement because they believed these terms to be biblical and not man made.
    • A converging of Christians across denominational lines in search of a return to a hypothesized original, "pre-denominational" Christianity.[14][15]: 108  Participants in this movement sought to base doctrine and practice on the Bible alone, rather than recognizing the traditional councils and denominational hierarchies that had come to define Christianity since the 1st century.[14][15]: 82, 104–105  Members of the Churches of Christ believe that Jesus founded only one church, that the current divisions between Christians are not God's will, and that the only basis for restoring Christian unity is the Bible.[14] They typically prefer to be known simply as "Christians", without any further religious or denominational identification.[16][17][18]: 213  They see themselves as recreating the New Testament church established by Christ.[19][20][21]: 106 
  • Churches of Christ generally share these theological beliefs:[14]
    • Refusal to hold to any formalized creeds or statements of faith, preferring instead a reliance on the Bible alone for doctrine and practice;[21]: 103 [22]: 238, 240 [23]: 123 
    • Autonomous, congregational church organization without denominational oversight;[22]: 238 [23]: 124 
    • Local governance[22]: 238  by a plurality of male elders;[23]: 124 [24]: 47–54 
    • One of the largest divisions within churches of Christ was due to controversy of foreign missionary work. Opponents of what they dubbed "Institutionalism" argued against it both as a drain on local congregations and as sinful if done in cooperation with other congregations. This belief extended to cooperative support of orphanages, homes, large-scale radio and TV programs and ministries.[25]
    • The Restoration Movement is so averse to association with other congregations that they renounce the term "protestant" distancing their churches from any association to any denomination; even one they would have to "protest" and evolve from.

See also

References

  1. ^ Ercan, S.A.; Hendriks, C.H. (2013). "The democratic challenges and potential of localism: Insights from deliberative democracy". Policy Studies. 31 (4): 422–440. doi:10.1080/01442872.2013.822701. S2CID 153558023.
  2. ^ Milburn, Alan (2004), Localism: The need for a new settlement (speech), Demos.
  3. ^ Tomas, Mark. "Feedback: Transport and climate change – a reply to James Woodcock". International Socialism. No. 109.
  4. ^ , archived from the original on 2006-05-14.
  5. ^ Politic, River Deep, October 2000.
  6. ^ Yeung, Wayne. “From Populism to Localism.” New Bloom. Updated on April 15, 2016
  7. ^ a b c d e Wills, Jane. “Populism, localism and the geography of democracy.” In Geoforum, Volume 62 (June 2015), pp. 188–189.
  8. ^ George Monbiot (September 9, 2003), "The myth of localism", The Guardian.
  9. ^ Michaud, Hélène (April 2005), , Radio Netherlands, archived from the original on 2006-01-17, retrieved 2006-01-30.
  10. ^ Edward J. Feser and Stuart H. Sweeney, Out-migration, population decline, and regional economic distress, Washington, DC: Economic Development Administration, 1998.
  11. ^ Hess, David J. (2009). . Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262512329. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-07-22.
  12. ^ DeYoung, Raymond, & Princen, Thomas (2012). The Localization Reader: Adapting to the Coming Downshift. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262516877.
  13. ^ FCC Localism Hearing to be Held in Washington, DC, on October 31st (PDF), United States: FCC.
  14. ^ a b c d Batsell Barrett Baxter, Who are the churches of Christ and what do they believe in? Available on-line in an . Archived from the original on June 16, 2006. Retrieved 2011-10-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), and here 2014-02-09 at the Wayback Machine, here 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine and here 2007-10-11 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ a b C. Leonard Allen and Richard T. Hughes, "Discovering Our Roots: The Ancestry of the Churches of Christ," Abilene Christian University Press, 1988, ISBN 0891120068
  16. ^ "The church of Jesus Christ is non-denominational. It is neither Catholic, Jewish nor Protestant. It was not founded in 'protest' of any institution, and it is not the product of the 'Restoration' or 'Reformation.' It is the product of the seed of the kingdom (Luke 8:11ff) grown in the hearts of men." V. E. Howard, What Is the Church of Christ? 4th Edition (Revised), 1971, p. 29
  17. ^ Batsell Barrett Baxter and Carroll Ellis, Neither Catholic, Protestant nor Jew, tract, Church of Christ (1960) ASIN B00073CQPM. According to Richard Thomas Hughes in Reviving the Ancient Faith: The Story of Churches of Christ in America, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1996, ISBN 978-0802840868), this is "arguably the most widely distributed tract ever published by the Churches of Christ or anyone associated with that tradition."
  18. ^ Samuel S. Hill, Charles H. Lippy, Charles Reagan Wilson, Encyclopedia of Religion in the South, Mercer University Press, 2005, ISBN 978-0865547582) 854 pages
  19. ^ "On the cornerstone of the Southside Church of Christ in Springfield, Missouri, is this inscription: 'Church of Christ, Founded in Jerusalem, A.D. 33. This building erected in 1953.' This is not an unusual claim; for similar wording can be found on buildings of churches of Christ in many parts of the United States. The Christians who use such cornerstones reason that the church of Jesus Christ began on Pentecost, A.D. 33. Therefore, to be true to the New Testament, the twentieth-century church must trace its origins to the first century." Page 1, Robert W. Hooper, A Distinct People: A History of the Churches of Christ in the 20th Century, Simon and Schuster, 1993, ISBN 978-1878990266, 391 pages
  20. ^ "Traditional Churches of Christ have pursued the restorationist vision with extraordinary zeal. Indeed, the cornerstones of many Church of Christ buildings read 'Founded, A.D. 33.' " p. 212, Samuel S. Hill, Charles H. Lippy, Charles Reagan Wilson, Encyclopedia of Religion in the South, Mercer University Press, 2005
  21. ^ a b Stuart M. Matlins, Arthur J. Magida, J. Magida, How to Be a Perfect Stranger: A Guide to Etiquette in Other People's Religious Ceremonies, Wood Lake Publishing Inc., 1999, ISBN 978-1896836287, 426 pages, Chapter 6 – Churches of Christ
  22. ^ a b c Carmen Renee Berry, The Unauthorized Guide to Choosing a Church, Brazos Press, 2003, ISBN 1587430363
  23. ^ a b c Ron Rhodes, The Complete Guide to Christian Denominations, Harvest House Publishers, 2005, ISBN 0736912894
  24. ^ V. E. Howard, What Is the Church of Christ? 4th Edition (Revised) Central Printers & Publishers, West Monroe, Louisiana, 1971
  25. ^ Randy Harshbarger, "A history of the institutional controversy among Texas Churches of Christ: 1945 to the present," M.A. thesis, Stephen F. Austin State University, 2007, 149 pages; AAT 1452110

Sources

  • McKibben, Bill. Eaarth. New York: Time /Henry Holt, 2010.[ISBN missing]
  • Business & the Environment. Sep 2011, Vol. 22 Issue 9, pp. 1–4
  • Curtis, Fred (2003). "Eco-localism and Sustainability". Ecological Economics. 46 (1): 83–102. doi:10.1016/S0921-8009(03)00102-2.
  • Pugh, Michael, ('Centralism versus localism? Democracy versus efficiency? The perennial challenges of Scottish local government organisation', History & Policy.

External links

  • James Howard Kunstler's view of "Localism"
  • "The Localization Reader" – De Young and Princen's view on the process of "localization."

localism, politics, localism, describes, range, political, philosophies, which, prioritize, local, generally, localism, supports, local, production, consumption, goods, local, control, government, promotion, local, history, local, culture, local, identity, loc. Localism describes a range of political philosophies which prioritize the local Generally localism supports local production and consumption of goods local control of government and promotion of local history local culture and local identity Localism can be contrasted with regionalism and centralized government with its opposite being found in the unitary state Localism can also refer to a systematic approach to organizing a central government so that local autonomy is retained rather than following the usual pattern of government and political power becoming centralized over time On a conceptual level there are important affinities between localism and deliberative democracy This concerns mainly the democratic goal of engaging citizens in decisions that affect them Consequently localism will encourage stronger democratic and political participatory forums and widening public sphere connectivity 1 Contents 1 History 2 Political philosophy 2 1 Localism and populism 3 Localism and developing countries 4 International relations 5 Localist activism 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksHistory EditLocalists assert that throughout the world s history most social and economic institutions are scaled at the local level as opposed to regional interregional or global basically until the late 19th to the early 20th centuries citation needed Through ongoing forms of colonialism imperialism and industrialisation local scales become less central citation needed Most proponents of localism position themselves as defending aspects of this way of life citation needed the phrase relocalization is often used in this sense citation needed In the 20th century localism drew heavily on the writings of Leopold Kohr E F Schumacher Wendell Berry and Kirkpatrick Sale among others More generally localism draws on a wide range of movements and concerns and it proposes that by re localizing democratic and economic relationships social economic and environmental problems will be more definable and solutions more easily created They include anarchism bioregionalism environmentalism the Greens and more specific concerns about food monetary policy and education Political parties of all persuasions have also occasionally favored the devolution of power to local authorities In this vein Alan Milburn a Labour Party MP has spoken of making services more locally accountable devolving more power to local communities and in the process forging a modern relationship between the state citizens and services 2 Beginning in the 1970s a particularly visible strain of localism in the United States was a movement started by Alice Waters to buy locally produced products This movement originated with organic farming and likely gained impetus because of growing dissatisfaction with organic certification and the failing economic model of industrial agriculture for small farmers While the advocates of local consumption draw on protectionist arguments they also appealed primarily to an environmental argument that pollution caused by transporting goods was a major externality in a global economy and one that localvores could greatly diminish Also environmental issues can be addressed when decision making power is held by those affected by the issues instead of power sources that do not understand the needs of local communities Political philosophy EditLocalism as a philosophy is related to the principle of subsidiarity In the early 21st century localists have frequently found themselves aligned with critics of globalisation Variants of localism are prevalent within the Green movement According to an article in International Socialism localism of this sort seeks to answer to the problems created by globalisation with calls to minimise international trade and to seek to establish economies based on local self sufficiency only 3 Some localists believe that society should be organised politically along community lines with each community being free to conduct its own business in whatever fashion its people see fit The size of the communities is defined such that their members are both familiar and dependent on each other a size something along the lines of a small town or village citation needed In reference to localism Edward Goldsmith former editor of The Ecologist magazine claims The problems facing the world today can only be solved by restoring the functioning of those natural systems which once satisfied our needs i e by fully exploiting those incomparable resources which are individual people families communities and ecosystems which together make up the biosphere or real world 4 Tip O Neill a longtime Democratic Speaker of the House in the US Congress once famously declared that All politics is local 5 He eventually wrote a book by that name All Politics Is Local And Other Rules of the Game Localism and populism Edit Wayne Yeung 6 questions the assumption that localism is a sub school of European American populism Yeung raised an example in which localism is a cultural or civic value rather than a value that supports ethnic understanding in Hong Kong identity politics Jane Wills argued that an increasing numbers of populist politicians are endorsing localism as a framework for public policy 7 She defined populism as a form of politics that involves people speaking in a register that is authentic to the experiences and needs of those people 7 In other words most likely Populist Party policies would contradict parties that support the elites 7 She also used the term anti politics to describe localist politicians because they stand against mainstream politics 7 She used the United Kingdom Independence Party UKIP as an example of a party adopting localism into their policies Mainstream politicians from the Conservative Labour and Liberal Democrat parties were threatened by the rise of UKIP 7 Localism and developing countries EditMany localists are concerned with the problems of developing countries Many advocate that developing countries should aim to rely on their own goods and services to escape from what they see are the unfair trade relations with the developed world George Monbiot claims this idea does not recognise the fact that even if developing countries often get a raw deal in trade relations refusing to trade at all would be a significant blow as the countries need the revenue generated by trade 8 Some localists are also against immigration from poor countries to rich ones One of the problems they claim results from such immigration is the drain on the intellectual resources of poor countries so called brain drain For example in the past decade Bulgaria is estimated to have lost more than 50 000 qualified scientists and skilled workers through emigration every year About a fifth of them were highly educated specialists in chemistry biology medicine and physics 9 10 International relations EditSome localists are against political intervention and peace keeping measures They believe that communities should find solutions to their own problems and in their own time in whatever fashion they decide They believe that all societies are capable of achieving long term peace once given the opportunity to do so Localist activism EditLocalism usually describes social measures or trends which emphasise or value local and small scale phenomena This is in contrast to large all encompassing frameworks for action or belief Localism can therefore be contrasted with globalisation and in some cases localist activism has parallels with opposition to corporate led globalization Localism can be geographical but there are also transnational linkages Localist movements are often organized in support of locally owned independent businesses and nonprofit organizations Although the focus of this aspect of localist activism is on buy local support local food and bank local campaigns some organizations and businesses also combine the goal of increased local ownership with environmental sustainability and social fairness goals 11 12 Examples of localism are Support for local food networks such as farmers markets community supported agriculture community gardens farm to table programs food cooperatives and restaurants that serve local food The slow food movement using diverse seasonal natural food in reaction to multinational merchandising of food which is uniform produced using industrial methods and called fast food Support for locally family businesses small craftsmans and farmers traditional and local communities of small owners craft guilds farming circles and other community banks and credit unions such as the following organizations American Independent Business Alliance Business Alliance for Local Living Economies the Institute for Local Self Reliance and Move Your Money The Benefits of Doing Business Locally Archived 2015 07 03 at the Wayback Machine an essay by Jeff Milchen American Independent Business Alliance co founder covers many arguments for local business ownership and patronage Localism in media to support a diverse news media in the face of increasing corporate control The US Federal Communications Commission made use of this term when seeking input on its rules stating promoting localism is a key goal of the Commission s media ownership rules 13 Localism in government structures which can include Tertiary government where small community councils make relevant decisions with some degree of independence from local or national government Workers councils where the employees of a particular workplace discuss and negotiate with their employer rather have this done by a national union which may be remote from local issues Federalism and devolution Religion Protestant Exclusive localism holds that there can t be more than one legitimate institutionally visible church at one given location the variation of which varies but is usually held to be either a city or a neighbourhood Localism is more generally the congregationalist idea that each local church should be autonomous only extended to reject any formal association of churches It is specially relevant among Baptists where localists reject the forming of Conventions Religion Churches of Christ The congregationalist idea of local autonomy is a cornerstone of restoration movement fellowships that identify as churches of Christ or Independent Christian Churches Churches of Christ Founders of the movement declared their independence from various denominations seeking a fresh start to restore the New Testament church and abandoning creeds The names Church of Christ Christian Church and Disciples of Christ were adopted by the movement because they believed these terms to be biblical and not man made A converging of Christians across denominational lines in search of a return to a hypothesized original pre denominational Christianity 14 15 108 Participants in this movement sought to base doctrine and practice on the Bible alone rather than recognizing the traditional councils and denominational hierarchies that had come to define Christianity since the 1st century 14 15 82 104 105 Members of the Churches of Christ believe that Jesus founded only one church that the current divisions between Christians are not God s will and that the only basis for restoring Christian unity is the Bible 14 They typically prefer to be known simply as Christians without any further religious or denominational identification 16 17 18 213 They see themselves as recreating the New Testament church established by Christ 19 20 21 106 Churches of Christ generally share these theological beliefs 14 Refusal to hold to any formalized creeds or statements of faith preferring instead a reliance on the Bible alone for doctrine and practice 21 103 22 238 240 23 123 Autonomous congregational church organization without denominational oversight 22 238 23 124 Local governance 22 238 by a plurality of male elders 23 124 24 47 54 One of the largest divisions within churches of Christ was due to controversy of foreign missionary work Opponents of what they dubbed Institutionalism argued against it both as a drain on local congregations and as sinful if done in cooperation with other congregations This belief extended to cooperative support of orphanages homes large scale radio and TV programs and ministries 25 The Restoration Movement is so averse to association with other congregations that they renounce the term protestant distancing their churches from any association to any denomination even one they would have to protest and evolve from See also EditCommunitarianism Atomization Accountable autonomy Agrarianism Autonomism left wing ideology Autonomism political doctrine Communalism Decentralisation Distributed manufacturing Distributism Global justice Glocalization Indigenism Internationalization and localization Irredentism Knowledge transfer List of micro regional organizations Localism Act 2011 UK law Localism in Thailand Localism in Hong Kong Nationalism Nativism politics New localism Open Source Ecology OSE Parochialism Posse Comitatus organization Secession Self determination Think globally act locally TribalismReferences Edit Ercan S A Hendriks C H 2013 The democratic challenges and potential of localism Insights from deliberative democracy Policy Studies 31 4 422 440 doi 10 1080 01442872 2013 822701 S2CID 153558023 Milburn Alan 2004 Localism The need for a new settlement speech Demos Tomas Mark Feedback Transport and climate change a reply to James Woodcock International Socialism No 109 De industrialising society archived from the original on 2006 05 14 Politic River Deep October 2000 Yeung Wayne From Populism to Localism New Bloom Updated on April 15 2016 a b c d e Wills Jane Populism localism and the geography of democracy In Geoforum Volume 62 June 2015 pp 188 189 George Monbiot September 9 2003 The myth of localism The Guardian Michaud Helene April 2005 East West brain drain Radio Netherlands archived from the original on 2006 01 17 retrieved 2006 01 30 Edward J Feser and Stuart H Sweeney Out migration population decline and regional economic distress Washington DC Economic Development Administration 1998 Hess David J 2009 Localist Movements in a Global Economy Sustainability Justice and Urban Development in the United States Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 978 0262512329 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2012 07 22 DeYoung Raymond amp Princen Thomas 2012 The Localization Reader Adapting to the Coming Downshift Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 978 0262516877 FCC Localism Hearing to be Held in Washington DC on October 31st PDF United States FCC a b c d Batsell Barrett Baxter Who are the churches of Christ and what do they believe in Available on line in an Woodson Chapel Church of Christ Archived from the original on June 16 2006 Retrieved 2011 10 03 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link and here Archived 2014 02 09 at the Wayback Machine here Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine and here Archived 2007 10 11 at the Wayback Machine a b C Leonard Allen and Richard T Hughes Discovering Our Roots The Ancestry of the Churches of Christ Abilene Christian University Press 1988 ISBN 0891120068 The church of Jesus Christ is non denominational It is neither Catholic Jewish nor Protestant It was not founded in protest of any institution and it is not the product of the Restoration or Reformation It is the product of the seed of the kingdom Luke 8 11ff grown in the hearts of men V E Howard What Is the Church of Christ 4th Edition Revised 1971 p 29 Batsell Barrett Baxter and Carroll Ellis Neither Catholic Protestant nor Jew tract Church of Christ 1960 ASIN B00073CQPM According to Richard Thomas Hughes in Reviving the Ancient Faith The Story of Churches of Christ in America Wm B Eerdmans Publishing 1996 ISBN 978 0802840868 this is arguably the most widely distributed tract ever published by the Churches of Christ or anyone associated with that tradition Samuel S Hill Charles H Lippy Charles Reagan Wilson Encyclopedia of Religion in the South Mercer University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0865547582 854 pages On the cornerstone of the Southside Church of Christ in Springfield Missouri is this inscription Church of Christ Founded in Jerusalem A D 33 This building erected in 1953 This is not an unusual claim for similar wording can be found on buildings of churches of Christ in many parts of the United States The Christians who use such cornerstones reason that the church of Jesus Christ began on Pentecost A D 33 Therefore to be true to the New Testament the twentieth century church must trace its origins to the first century Page 1 Robert W Hooper A Distinct People A History of the Churches of Christ in the 20th Century Simon and Schuster 1993 ISBN 978 1878990266 391 pages Traditional Churches of Christ have pursued the restorationist vision with extraordinary zeal Indeed the cornerstones of many Church of Christ buildings read Founded A D 33 p 212 Samuel S Hill Charles H Lippy Charles Reagan Wilson Encyclopedia of Religion in the South Mercer University Press 2005 a b Stuart M Matlins Arthur J Magida J Magida How to Be a Perfect Stranger A Guide to Etiquette in Other People s Religious Ceremonies Wood Lake Publishing Inc 1999 ISBN 978 1896836287 426 pages Chapter 6 Churches of Christ a b c Carmen Renee Berry The Unauthorized Guide to Choosing a Church Brazos Press 2003 ISBN 1587430363 a b c Ron Rhodes The Complete Guide to Christian Denominations Harvest House Publishers 2005 ISBN 0736912894 V E Howard What Is the Church of Christ 4th Edition Revised Central Printers amp Publishers West Monroe Louisiana 1971 Randy Harshbarger A history of the institutional controversy among Texas Churches of Christ 1945 to the present M A thesis Stephen F Austin State University 2007 149 pages AAT 1452110Sources EditMcKibben Bill Eaarth New York Time Henry Holt 2010 ISBN missing Business amp the Environment Sep 2011 Vol 22 Issue 9 pp 1 4 Curtis Fred 2003 Eco localism and Sustainability Ecological Economics 46 1 83 102 doi 10 1016 S0921 8009 03 00102 2 Pugh Michael 30 June 2014 Centralism versus localism Democracy versus efficiency The perennial challenges of Scottish local government organisation History amp Policy External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Localism Foundation for Self Sufficiency in Central America Localism James Howard Kunstler s view of Localism The Localization Reader De Young and Princen s view on the process of localization Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Localism politics amp oldid 1145908177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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