"A short book written with verve and brilliance. . . . He has written an exceedingly clever and disturbing
book on important issues, all that he writes is alive and much of what he says, even when it seems perversely provocative,
turns out to be penetrating and serious."
--Isaiah Berlin, 20th Century
"One of the most thoughtful products of the political dialogues of the London School of Economics since
the great days of Tawney, Dalton, Wallas and Hobhouse. Its sobriety, liberal spirit and toughness of mind are rare
qualities in any political work."
--Edward Shils, Guardian
AAUP Web Site, August, 2000
Summary
In this illuminating celebration of the political world, Bernard Crick asserts that politics, with its compromises
and power struggles, remains the only tested alternative to government by coercion, making both freedom and order
possible in heterogeneous societies. For Crick, politics is messy and complex, and his book defends it against
those who would identify it with (and reduce it to) ideology, democracy, nationalism, or technology. This Fourth
edition has been updated to include an assessment of the revolutions in 1989 in Eastern Europe. It also examines
current situations in Northern Ireland, Israel and Palestine, and South Africa.