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Selected Papers from the 2003 SVU North American Conference, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 26-28 June 2003 Civil Society, the State, and Political Culture Mojmír Povolný, Appleton, Wisconsin My first encounter in the Czech Republic with the issue of civil society took place on the occasion of a Sunday noon program on Czech TV called „Debata.“ I was in Brno on that day but I do no longer remember the year. The subject of the debate was civil society. There might have been some four or five participants in the debate but the principal discussants were President Václav Havel and Prime Minister Václav Klaus. Havel was the first to speak and in a brief statement advocated the development of a civil society as a task facing the nation after the fall of the communist regime. Klaus dismissed the idea of a civil society, proclaimed it to be an artificial construction, and opposed to it his concept of democratic society in which the individual was related to the state through the intermediary of political parties and free elections. Since I do not recall the year of that debate I do not know whether it took place before or after Havel had elaborated his view of a civil society in his „New Year’s Address to the Nation“ on January 1, 1994 (see Václav Havel, The Art of the Impossible: Politics and Morality in Practice, trans. by Paul Wilson and others. New York: Alfred Knopf, 1997, pp.142-151). Besides its political significance this speech is probably the most elaborate statement of Havel’s theory of a civil society. Against Havel’s insistence Klaus would argue that he used the notion of a civil society as a society of citizens as opposed to a society organized on the grounds of ethnicity or on the grounds of social classes with all the consequences for the nature, structure and functioning of the state. Civil Society Blackwellova encyklopedie politického myšlení, ed. David Miller (Brno: CDK Proglas/Iota, 1995. str. 341-342) presents a summary history of the development of the idea of civil society. In the Rome of Cicero’s time the notion of “civilis societas” related not only to the state but to the conditions in a civilized political community -- its legal systems, citizens’ participation in the manifold “civil” life. John Locke postulated a civil society as one transcending both the society in the state of nature and the society organized under paternalistic authority. Both G.W.F. Hegel and Karl Marx regarded a civil society (buergerliche Gesellschaft), each from his own philosophical perspective, as an evolutionary stage in the history of mankind: Hegel as a loss of original solidarity, Marx as a structure serving the interests of the capitalist bourgeoisie. It is, however, surprising that the contributor of the item on “občanská společnost” (civil society) in this encyclopedia concludes his text with the following statement: “For authors in Hegel’s and Marx’s tradition the concept of a civil society has acquired the meaning of social, economic, and moral organization of modern Western industrial capitalist society which they consider apart from the state. In general the use of the concept of a civil society has lost its moral dimension and refers to nonpolitical aspects of the contemporary social order and hence it is for instance discussible whether there is any conflict or harmony between civil society and the state”. This ambiguous conclusion sides with both Havel and Klaus on the one hand but on the other hand its vagueness misses the essential point of the complex relationship between a civil society and the state, and contemporary political science would add the relationship of the two to political culture. -1- Selected Papers from the 2003 SVU North American Conference, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 26-28 June 2003 In essence and without elaborating in great detail on the structure of a civil society, it is represented by a network of voluntary associations that are independent of the state. They carry with them the Ciceronean element of “civilis societas” and the Lockean prerequisite of independence from some superior authority. It is a network of interaction and exchange created by individuals asserting their right to satisfy their specific needs and interests in their own way. The State This summary definition of a civil society raises the question of the relationship between a civil society and the state. Irrespective of what definition of the state we use, the principal element and characteristic in it will be the Weberian “monopoly of legitimate use of force” -legitimate enforcement of decisions applied to the entire community. This assertion takes me back to the discussion that we had in a panel at the last SVU Congress in Plzeň in 2002. The two participants from the Demokratický klub in Prague, Zdeněk Pavlík and Jan Friedlaender, held two opposite views on the relationship between a civil society and the state. Pavlík maintained that a civil society as defined above not only can but does coexist with any kind of state – democratic, aristocratic, authoritarian, totalitarian. I shared and share Friedlaender’s argument that a civil society can exist only in a state guaranteeing the freedom of the individual, freedom of speech, and freedom of association. The absence of these guarantees precludes a priori the emergence and the development of the essential elements of a civil society. Moreover, the existence of a civil society is not only the question of these guarantees. As Petr Pithart on one occasion of exchanges with Klaus and Havel in his above mentioned address asserted, a civil society prospers if the state not only tolerates a civil society but supports and cultivates, philosophically and politically and materially, the relationship between the elements of a civil society and its own institutions. The best form of the state and the regime that can best meet this requirement is democracy. On the contrary, to Klaus, in whose eyes democracy is defined by the citizen being directly related to the state, democracy depends on a civil society and a civil society depends on democracy. Czechoslovak dissidents understood this political precondition of a civil society when the communist totalitarian state defined the relationship of its institutions and the individual citizen only in terms of those associations that were controlled or tolerated by the Party. The Party stood for the state and the state used these associations in Stalin’s terms as levers and transmission belts of its power. Václav Benda, one of the leading dissidents, opposed to this absence of a civil society in Communist Czechoslovakia his concept of polis which asserted that open and functional coexistence between the state and a civil society in our time is possible only in the framework of a democratic state as we understand it today. Political culture If the state is the legal order and institutions endowed with the authority of enforcement, a civil society is individuals voluntarily associated with each other for the purpose of satisfying their material, spiritual or moral needs and goals. But it is still the individual that a civil society -2- Selected Papers from the 2003 SVU North American Conference, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 26-28 June 2003 depends on. The individual is its essential building block. What is then important in this respect are the attitudes and orientations of the individual towards and about both himself and the political order in which he lives -- in technical terms, his political culture. In the Czech discussions about political culture, those among people who are not political scientists or political sociologists, like the journalists, commentators, politicians, the usual translation of this term is politická kultura to designate whether the politicians speak and behave kulturně (that is, in a properly cultured fashion). Instead, they should be using in this case the expression kultura politiky – culture of politics. In the discussion of the relationship between a civil society, the state, and political culture the obvious question is what political culture is the most conducive to the development of civil society and in what kind of political culture will it flourish best. In other words, what kind of individual political orientations are its backbone and the engine that drives it? The ideal conditions for a civil society in this respect are threefold. On the cognitive side, in the domain of what citizens know about public life, the most favorable conditions for a civil society obtain if the citizens are informed, not only about local conditions, institutions, and interests but well informed, and if they seek information about the entire community, their state and its government. On the ethical side lies the capacity of the citizens to pass moral judgment on those who are responsible for the conduct of what falls into the public domain. The more positive are those judgments and the more prevalent they are, the more will a civil society be supportive of the state and the more effective will the state be. Finally, the relationship between the individual in a civil society and the state and those who stand for the state is not only cognitive and ethical. It is also affective. If the citizens love their country and their state, if they appreciate their state’s institutions, and if they have affectionate feelings towards the individual actors in their public life, the relationship between a civil society and the state will be one of cooperation and mutual support and instead of tension and conflict. A Brief Note in Conclusion President Václav Havel was right and Prime Minister Václav Klaus was wrong in the debate about a civil society some ten years ago. Klaus was wrong theoretically because a democracy and a civil society go hand in hand together. One without the other is inconceivable. He was wrong historically, the movement toward a constitutional and relatively liberal monarchy in Austria-Hungary was accompanied by the relatively rapid development of a civil society in the historical lands of future Czechchoslovakia. And he was wrong politically, because the interwar Czechoslovak democracy was supported by the flourishing civil society as we identified it above. There is no question that the Communists after the February 1948 coup d´etat destroyed the civil society of prewar Czechoslovakia, because contrary to Zdeněk Pavlík´s argument a civil society and a communist dictatorship cannot coexist within the same society and state. Therefore, it was no local or historical accident when a new civil society began to grow in Czechoslovakia after the revolution of November 1989. However, the rebirth and the evolution of civil society in the Czech Republic has been slow and strenuous, for three reasons. First, -3- Selected Papers from the 2003 SVU North American Conference, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 26-28 June 2003 because a civil society cannot be created overnight na zelené louce (just out in some old field), but is a product of natural growth, both for the individual and the society. Second, because of the fatigue of the citizens or their excess ambitions, both provoked by the lifelong deprivations inflicted on them by the Communist regime. And third, because the people of Klaus´s persuasion have been disinclined to support it. But a civil society is, nevertheless, there, and it is new and growing. Havel´s encouraging statement of 1994 is as inspiring now as it was then: „Everything new and good that is beginning to flourish around us we need to cultivate with great care, to ware it daily and watch it closely.“ -4-