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Pillarization ('Verzuiling'): On Organized 'Self-Contained Worlds' in the Modern World

Staf Hellemans
- 01 Jun 2020 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 2, pp 124-147
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TLDR
A review of pillarization theory in the Netherlands, Belgium and elsewhere can be found in this paper, where the authors argue for a broad, international perspective on pillarization against the particularistic tendencies of many pillarization researchers.
Abstract
Movements and groups abound in modern society. Sometimes, a movement or group succeeds in mobilizing a large section of the population and thoroughly knitting it together, by building a pervasive subculture and by setting up a vast interrelated network of organizations, resulting in a seemingly impenetrable and powerful bloc. This happened to different degrees in most Western countries, including the United States and Canada. It is also occurring now in the non-Western world. Belgium and the Netherlands were particularly affected by extensive bloc building. In both countries, Catholic, Socialist, and Liberal pillars – plus a Protestant pillar in the Netherlands – divided society and determined political and social life from the late nineteenth century up to the late twentieth century. As a consequence, the phenomenon has been studied there more thoroughly and under a specific label, ‘verzuiling’ (pillarization). The first section of this article offers a review of pillarization theory in the Netherlands, Belgium and elsewhere. In the second part, to advance the study of organized blocs all over the world, I argue for a broad, international perspective on pillarization against the particularistic tendencies of many pillarization researchers, especially in the Netherlands. In a shorter third part, I address the isolation of pillarization theory from general sociological theory. Self-reinforcing processes of segregation and organization in large population groupings were and still are a common feature in the modern world. They have resulted in more than one case in divided societies.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Polarization but Not Pillarization Catholicism and Cultural Change in Post-Transformation Poland

Wojciech Sadlon
- 22 Jun 2021 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that Polish Catholicism entered the transformation process to some extent as an agential force which shaped progressive social change and delivered energy for the transformation of Polish society.
Journal ArticleDOI

Civil Society, Cleavage Structures, and Democracy in Germany

Edgar Grande
- 23 Sep 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this paper , the consequences of recent changes in cleavage structures in German society for civil society, democracy, and social cohesion are analyzed, arguing that the emergence of a new "demarcationintegration" cleavage has politicised civil society in Germany in several ways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sociology in great little Belgium

TL;DR: The development of sociology has been shaped, both institutionally and intellectually, by different national contexts as discussed by the authors, and the development of the social sciences and sociology in particular, in little Belgium.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Democracy in plural societies : a comparative exploration

TL;DR: Lijphart argues that it is not at all impossible to achieve and maintain stable democratic governments in countries with deep religious, ideological, linguistic, cultural, or ethnic cleavages as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Protestant--Catholic--Jew: An Essay in American Religious Sociology

Will Herberg
TL;DR: In "Protestant-Catholic-Jew" as mentioned in this paper, Herberg has written the most fascinating essay on the religious sociology of America that has appeared in decades, and each chapter presents surprising and yet very compelling, theses about the religious life of this country.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dutch ‘Multiculturalism’ Beyond the Pillarisation Myth

TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess the popular claim that a paradigmatic change has occurred in the Netherlands due to events such as 9/11, and assess the state of multiculturalist politics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards a generalized concept of verzuiling: a preliminary note

Abstract: M Y early work on cleavage structures and mass politics in Western Europe focussed on the formation of the full-suflrage parry systems as they emerged during the first quarter of the twentieth century: I tried to develop a parsimonious model for the explanation of variations in the structure of the electoral alternatiues presented to the citizency during the final stages of formal democratization.’ I emphasized again and again that this was a deliberate simplification of a set of complex historical processes: I was fully aware that there were other manifestations of mass politics equally worthy of systematic analysis. In fact in one of my early articles on Norwegian developments 1 called for detailed analysis of the parallels and the interactions between two sets of organization-building efforts: the structuring of alternatives in what 1 called the ‘numerical democracy’ channel and the building of effective units of action in the corporate bargaining channel.2 Robert Alford and Roger Friedland have recently taken me to task for my failure to bring these two components of mass politics into a unified model:3 in fact they use my ‘two-tier’ analysis of the Norwegian regime as a springboard for a critique of my model for the explanation of variations in the formation of party systems. I accept their basic argument. I can only plead in defence that models have to be built up and tested step by step: it proved easiest to start off with comparisons of party systems but that was clearly only a beginning. A full-fledged model would have to generate hypotheses not only about the emergence of alternatives in the electoral channel but also about the structuring of mass organizations in the corporate channels and about types of interlinkages between the units in the two arenas. This is a demanding set of tasks and we cannot hope to get far in this direction just within one local team: this is clearly a theme for intensive cross-national d i scu~s ion .~ So far, our group has given priority to detailed analyses of Norwegian data on organizational developments in the two channels: Frank Aarebrot and Bjarne Kristiansen have worked extensively on the early counter-cultural organizations and their role in the first waves of mass mobilization, Kjell Eliassen and Lars