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Showing papers by "Anthony Giddens published in 1998"


Book
09 Nov 1998

1,116 citations


Book
01 Jan 1998
TL;DR: In this article, Giddens and O'Brien discuss the sociology of risk society and the transformation of Intimacy to Life Politics in the context of left and right politics.
Abstract: Preface. The Sociology of Anthony Giddens: An Introduction by Martin O'Brien. Interview 1: Life and Intellectual Career. Interview 2: The Sociological Classics and Beyond. Interview 3: Structuration Theory. Interview 4: Modernity. Interview 5: From the Transformation of Intimacy to Life Politics. Interview 6: Politics Beyond Left and Right. Interview 7: World Politics. Centre Left at Centre Stage. The Politics of Risk Society. Beyond Chaos and Dogma. Risks, Scares, Nightmares.

633 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that risk society, the current form of modernity, originates in a system of securities governed by tradition, and advances towards a world of uncertainties.
Abstract: The author argues here that risk society, the current form of modernity, originates in a system of securities governed by tradition, and advances towards a world of uncertainties. On the one hand, by freeing itself from traditional restraints, society turns its members into risk-takers, as more and more aspects of social life result from decisions and no longer from an assumed fate. On the other hand, the sudden appearance of science and technology in all aspects of social life, particularly family and individual life, delivers to these domains the noxious effects of many of their products. Science and technology expand the array of options, but also the array of dangers implied in each option. The author points out the relations between the several types of risk that characterize our times, such as ecological risks that affect the worlds of finance, social morality, and politics. Any attempt to control or shape the future -i.e., any risk-creating activity-, brings negative and undesired consequences on social order itself.

15 citations