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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The landscape of international politics has undergone a profound metamorphosis with the expansive nature of global interface. With this tremendous change of how people learn, conduct business, communicate and engage with virtually every other aspect of daily life has come the need to redefine what exactly politics has come to mean as one of the most critical components in the world today. Susan Strange's piece entitled "The Limits of Politics" examines the myriad ways in which politics have been defined both traditionally and as the twenty-first century has reshaped the meaning. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCpollimit.rtf
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every other aspect of daily life has come the need to redefine what exactly politics has come to mean as one of the most critical components in the world today.
Susan Stranges piece entitled "The Limits of Politics" examines the myriad ways in which politics have been defined both traditionally and as the twenty-first century has reshaped the meaning.
"...If political relates only to the typical concerns of most governments, the agenda is limited. But if political includes all action requiring the cooperation of others, the agenda
is much more comprehensive" (Strange, 1996, p. 40). The narrowly defined connotation of politics is no longer applicable in todays globalized society, inasmuch as the agenda of politics has been
lengthened to include a multitude of entities heretofore never considered as being political in nature. Strange (1996), "a pioneer of the reintegration of politics with economics" (Halliday, 2008), duly
identifies the conventional understanding of politics as relating directly and only to the state whereby government function and policy comprised the whole of its meaning. By contrast, the author
then illustrates how this myopic interpretation has not only transformed into an entirely different value but also one that has stretched the notion of politics to such a degree that
there is virtually no limit to who and what is influenced (Botjer, 2006). The key point Strange (1996) points to in making this assertion is that while economy, international
relations and such are still and always will be considered politics within the confines of government, the more expansive connotation is described as any single objective that requires the will
of others in order to be achieved. Getting people together to contribute to a charity or organize a car pool or a baby-sitting rota is political [and] involves gaining
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