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Grassroots and Academia Fighting Marginalisation Grassroots organisations and researchers collaborate to promote health and social inclusion and to facilitate multilevel change and human development University of Bergen, Norway January 10-12.
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Grassroots and Academia Fighting Marginalisation Grassroots organisations and researchers collaborate to promote health and social inclusion and to facilitate multilevel change and human development University of Bergen, Norway January 10-12
MULTICULTURAL VENUES IN HEALTH AND EDUCATION Applying local cultural perspectives on global social challenges Thematic research group: Faculty of Psychology
LOVE, RIGHTS AND SOLIDARITY The struggle for Recognition A theoretical and applied framework Gro Th. Lie Research Centre for Health Promotion/Dept of Education and Health Promotion, Faculty of Psychology, UoB
A person can not develop a personal identity without social recognition. The need for recognition is fundamental: • to individual development, • to development of a society of civil and legal rights • for the development of legal consciousness and understanding of legal rights • the need for recognition is essential for the development societies of solidarity.
Threepatterns of intersubjective recognition: LOVE, RIGHTS and SOLIDARITY. These patterns of recognition are essential for the development of : • self-confidence(trust in one self, trust in one’s own agency) • respect/self-respect(a person who is worthy of the same kinds of rights as other persons within the legal society) • self-esteem(a person who regard herself as worthy in a social context and is given a social status in a society of shared community values).
1) The sphere of intimacy (privacy) the way we know it from close families and bonds of deep friendships 2) The sphere of a legal and rights regulated society 3) The sphere of solidarity that includes community of work, of cultural and political values, - community of shared social (and institutional) values.
This release into independence has to be supported by an affective confidence in the continuity of shared concern. … Because this experience must be mutual in love relationships, recognition is here characterised by a double process, in which the other is released and, at the same time, emotionally tied to the loving subject. Thus speaking of recognition as a constitutive element of love, what is meant is an affirmation that is guided – indeed, supported – by care(Honneth, 1993, p.170).
Love is basic and a condition for any other and later forms of inter subjective relations or mutual relationships with others
Honneth uses the concept ‘love’ widely as a phenomenon that involves giving and getting emotional attention and recognition.
The violation of the body involves “psychological death” • The denial of rights involves “social death” • The denigration of ways of life involves injuries, scarification, being marked, being deprived of esteem • (Honneth, 1992; 1993).
Threepatterns of intersubjective recognition: LOVE, RIGHTS and SOLIDARITY. These patterns of recognition are essential for the development of : • self-confidence(trust in one self, trust in one’s own agency) • respect/self-respect(a person who is worthy of the same kinds of rights as other persons within the legal society) • self-esteem(a person who regard herself as worthy in a social context and is given a social status in a society of shared community values).
LOVE, RIGHTS AND SOLIDARITY The struggle for Recognition A theoretical and applied framework Gro Th. Lie Research Centre for Health Promotion/Dept of Education and Health Promotion, Faculty of Psychology, UoB