Community Concept, Conception and Ideology
Community Concept, Conception and Ideology
Community Concept, Conception and Ideology
Ideology
RAYMOND PLANT
I am very grateful for the comments of the following friends and colleagues on this
paper: Kee Kok Imber, Hillel Steiner, Geraint Parry, Steven Lukes, Bill Connolly, and Harry
Lesser.
latter describe how this vagueness can be used in working out social
policy:
An integral part of the search for shared goals and the use of democratic proce-
dures is legitimation by the community.... Thus the goals emanate from a
now legitimate source-the community itself, further buttressed by the use
of democratic procedures so important in our culture. Characteristic of this
strategy is the indefiniteness with which the term &dquo;community&dquo; is used. The
term is meant to cover all persons and interests, but it is not defined. Nor are
mechanisms available which permit us to reach such an ideal community, so
that it remains vague and indefmite.3
3. Robert Morris and Martin Rein, "Goals, Structures and Strategies for Community
Change," in Social Work Practice, ed. National Conference on Social Welfare (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1962), p. 183.
4. George A. Hillery, "Definitions of Community: Areas of Agreement," Rural So-
ciology, vol. 20 (1955).
5. Margaret Stacey, "The Myth of Community Studies," British Journal of Sociology,
vol. 20 (1969).
6. Ray E. Pahl, Patterns of Urban Life (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1970), p. 107.
7. Jacqueline Scherer (London: Tavistock Publications, 1972).
81
8. See John Searle, "Meaning and Speech Acts," Philosophical Review, vol. 51 (1962);
and Geoffrey Warnock, "Hare on Meaning and Speech Acts," Philosophical Review, voL 80
(1971).
9. Scott Greer and David W. Minar, eds., The Concept of Community (Chicago: Aldine
Press, 1969), p. 9.
10. Colin Bell and Howard Newby, Community Studies (London: George Allen and
Unwin, 1972), p. 21.
11. Sheldon Wolin, Politics and Vision (London: George Allen and Unwin, 1961), p.
363.
12. See Robert Nisbet, "Moral Values and Community," in Tradition and Revolt (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1970); idem, The Sociological Tradition (London: Heine-
mann, 1967); idem, The Quest for Community (New York: Oxford University Press, 1970).
82
14. See Halsey, "Government against Poverty"; and Robert Paul Wolff, The Poverty
of Liberalism (Boston: Beacon Press, 1968), pp. 183-84.
15. Quentin Skinner, "The Empirical Theorists of Democracy and Their Critics," Political
Theory, vol. 1 (1973).
16. W. Bryce Gallie, "Essentially Contested Concepts" in Proceedings of The Aristote-
lian Society, vol. 56 (1956).
84
pretations and maintain their particular one. In debates about community dif-
ferent users of the concept seem to be aware of the disputed nature of the con-
cept.
6. The concept must be derived from an original exemplar. If this condition
is not satisfied then those arguing about the concept might be thought to be
arguing about different things under the same name. There must be some para-
digm case, perhaps drawn from the remote past, that all parties using the concept
in their different ways are willing to regard as falling under the concept. In the
case of community there do seem to be clear attempts to secure paradigm cases.
The Greek city widely propounded by German philosophers and lit-
state was
erary figures such as Hegel, Schiller, and Hôlderlin to be a prime example of com-
munity ; the feudal village has been seen in much the same way, particularly
by William Morris, some of the Guild socialists, and, in a quite different way by
Peter Laslett. Others have turned to works of fiction as portraying incontestable
paradigms of community. W. J. M. Mackenzie, for example, cites Mrs. Gaskell’s
Cranford, Trollope’s Barchester, Winifred Holtby’s South Riding, Faulkner’s
Yoknapatawpha 17
7. There must be the probability that the continued competition between users
enables the original exemplar’s achievement to be sustained. This again is a neces-
sary condition for the debate about community not to be a debate about dif-
ferent things under the same name.
times contestants argue not just over the weighting and specifying
ingredients in an agreed and original exemplar, but over which ex-
perience or construct counts as the best exemplar&dquo;:19 for example,
the Greek polis, a medieval manorial estate, a nineteenth-century
Cheshire village, or a working-class neighborbood in a large British
town between the wars. It does seem to be that there can be dis-
17. See Raymond Plant, Hegel (London: George Allen and Unwin, 1973); Edward
Thompson, William Morris: From Romantic to Revolutionary (London: Gollancz, 1956);
Peter Laslett, The World We Have Lost (London: Methuen, 1965); W. J. M. MacKenzie,
Politics and Social Science (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1967), p. 218.
18. Alasdair MacIntyre, "On the Essential Contestability of Some Social Concepts,"
in Ethics, vol. 84 (1973); William E. Connolly, The Terms of Political Discourse, (Lexington
and Toronto: D. C. Heath, 1974).
19. W. E. Connolly in a private communication to the author.
85
exemplar is not like some golden thread running through all the
different debates about community and making them, as it were,
debates about community. This feature of community would make
it perhaps more radically contestable than any other central social
and political concept.
However, there are those who would argue that this approach--
to community, or for that matter to any other concept central to
social and political life, commits us to an extreme form of Protagorean
relativism and to the abandonment of any claim on the part of the
social sciences to be free from ideological taint. If the concept of
community is radically contestable in the way indicated and if it
can only be given a fixed definition against a particular ideological
or normative background, then any theory developed within the
social sciences that makes use of such a concept is going to embody
ideological/normative assumptions. This is certainly a difficulty
that worries many social scientists, and in order to avoid it many
have claimed that it must be possible to produce a straightforward
descriptive definition of those concepts that are central to the social
sciences. In support of just this kind of conclusion Felix E. Oppen-
heim has recently argued that &dquo;for the purpose of a scientific study
of politics, we must at least attempt to provide basic political con-
cepts with explications acceptable to anyone regardless of his nor-
mative and ideological commitments so that the truth or falsity
of statements in which these concepts thus defmed occur will depend
exclusively on intersubjectively ascertainable evidence.,,20 This
requirement is put starkly, so far as community is concerned, by
Hillery in Communal Organisations: &dquo;The moral to be drawn is a
scientific one: our definitions must be wedded to facts-those things
which we perceive through the senses. The error which is often made
in the definition of concepts of community is what may be referred
to as the sin of pronouncement. Students have pronounced upon the
traits which they felt should be contained in community and then
have proceeded to look at the facts.&dquo;21 .
26. Rawls,
A Theory of Justice, pp. 9-10.
89
27. G. W. F. Hegel, The Philosophy of Right, trans. T. M. Knox (Oxford: The Clarendon
Press, 1952), p. 14.
28. K. Marx, The German Ideology, trans. R. Pascal (London: Lawrence and Wishart,
1942); Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, Selected Works, vol. 1 (Moscow: Foreign Language
Publishing House, 1967).
29. "On the Jewish Question," in Karl Marx Early Writings, ed. T. B. Bottomore (Har-
mondsworth: Penguin, 1963), p. 26.
91
with its lord; it has his rank ... his privileges, his jurisdictions,
his political position ... for those belonging to the estate it is
more like their fatherland. It is a constricted sort of nationality. &dquo;30
These social ties that were intimately interwoven with each person’s
sense of identity and significance were pared down by capitalism:
&dquo;Free industry and trade abolished privileged exclusivities. In its
place they set men free from privileges, which isolate him from the
social whole, but at the same time joins him to a narrower exclusivity.
Man is no longer bound by the semblance of communities. Thus
they produce the universal struggle of man against man, individual
against individual.&dquo;31 Within capitalist society the state is often
portrayed as the community, that which stands above the self-seeking
of the market and the general exploitative relationships between
men in the market. This was clearly the vision of Hegel and Lasalle,
and Marx decisively rejects it. The state for Marx is one more illusory
community within capitalist society. Far from being the universal
that reconciles the fractures in civil society and the mutual antag-
onisms of the market, it embodies a particular sectional interest,
namely that of the capitalist class.
However, it would be a great mistake to imply that Marx’s own
conception of community was greatly influenced by the feudal,
preindustrial model. Although he clearly saw the Gemeinschaft pre-
capitalist social order as mediating important social bonds, he also
saw it as hierarchical in ways that were thought to express the natural
in his account of British rule in India: &dquo;We must not forget that
these idyllic village communities inoffensive as they may appear,
had always been the solid foundation of oriental despotism, that they
restrained the mind within the smallest compass, making it the un-
resisting tool of superstition, enslaving it beneath traditional rules.
... We must not forget that these little communities were con-
taminated by caste and slavery, that they subjugated man to external
circumstance instead of elevating man to be the sovereign of circum-
stance, that they changed a self-developing social state into a never
changing destiny.&dquo;32
Precapitalist communities were, as Colletti
argues, cohesive but confining;3~
the growth of capitalism brought
with it mobility and human autonomy but a corresponding loss of
communal ties. A truly human community is for the future, when
both the claims of community and autonomy will be reconciled in
a socialist society. To achieve such a society a revolution is necessary
in order to break the structure of domination over individuals and
in order to change the basis of economic activity to a much less com-
petitive and dehumanizing form.
It is at this point that Marxist political commitments relate to
current preoccupations on the left about the nature of community.
If a truly human community can only be achieved after the revolu-
tionary transformation of a society then a necessary condition of
this is the development of class consciousness on the part of the
proletariat; yet it is just this requirement that often comes into con-
flict with the admiration many socialists feel for traditional working-
class communities, communities that are being broken up by urban
renewal. Many socialists have been in the forefront of protests about
the breakup of these neighborhood communities; but other Marxists,
perhaps being more consistent, have found this attitude very diffi-
cult to understand. John Westergaard has pointed out very clearly
the difficulties facing the Marxist in this position: on one hand, he
admires the strong sense of community within working-class areas.
On the other hand, he feels that the development of class conscious-
ness may actually be inhibited by the attachment working people
feel toward persons from their own area and by the consequent
exclusivity involved:
Not only has it become fashionable to deplore the dilution of traditional working
class culture per se, a reaction which reflects an odd, conservative nostalgia for
a way of life moulded by insecurity, seclusion and crude deprivation both material
and mental, but this cultural dilution has not infrequently come to be equated
In a similar vein Frank Parkin points out that &dquo;a class outlook
is rooted in a perception of the social order that stretches far beyond
the frontiers of community. It entails a macro-social view of the
reward structure and an understanding of the systematic nature of
inequality.&dquo;35
Indeed within the history of political thought there
is a good deal of negative evidence in support of this conclusion.
The British Hegelians, particularly T. H. Green, B. Bosanquet, and
Sir Henry Jones, all rejected a class analysis of politics and counter-
posed to this a communitarian view claiming that within modem
society there is a common good, the existence of which can be demon-
strated by philosophical argument and which all men, whatever
their social class, may aspire to play a part in attaining.36
Earlier
in the nineteenth century Thomas Chalmers in his The Civic and
Christian Economy of Large Towns argued that if the minds of
working people could be turned inward to the problems of their
own locality this would in fact inhibit the development of class
consciousness.
This tension between the claims of class and the claims of the
local community, which has its roots in the nineteenth century,
is a major problem in some current areas of social policy. In Great
Britain, where many radicals have taken posts as community workers
and have played roles in officially sponsored community-develop-
ment projects, precisely the same kinds of problems have arisen.
Does the concentration of attention of the problems of the local
community and the competition for scarce economic resources
between communities in fact disguise what the Marxist must see
34. John Westergaard, ’’The Withering Away of Class," in Towards Socialism, eds. Perry
Anderson and Robin Blackburn (Glasgow: Fontana, 1965), pp. 107-8.
35. Frank Parkin, Class, Inequality and Political Order (St. Albans: Paladin, 1972),
p. 90.
36. For a good discussion of this aspect of Green’s work see Alasdair MacIntyre, Seculari
-
sation and Moral Change (London: Oxford University Press, 1967).
94
37. Eugene Kamenka, "Marxism and the Crisis in Social Ethics," in Socialist Humanism,
ed. Erich Fromm (London: Allen Lane, 1967).
95
can thrive: they are not chains that bind but are rather an inherited
social framework that constrains men’s propensity for brutishness
and his disposition for anarchy. It is, in Burkean terms, a harmonious
union that &dquo;holds all physical and moral natures each in its appointed
place.&dquo;
Usually organically related hierarchical order has been held
this
to be a of necessity, expressing either the will of God, the
matter
empirically discernible order in nature, congenital and ineradicable
differences between men, or some mixture of the three. A good
example of this kind of thinking is found in Edmund Dudley’s The
Tree of Commonwealth: &dquo;God hath set an order by grace between
himself and Angel and between Angel and Angel; and by reason
between Angel and man and between man and man and man and
beast ... which order from the highest point to the lowest God
willeth us to keep without any enterprise to the contrary.&dquo;39 Proba-
bly the most developed form of the argument that human society
must be seen in an hierarchical way and as corresponding to a natural
cosmic order ordained by God is in Hooker’s Of the Laws of Ecclesias-
tical Polity. In this work there are of course many fine evocations
of this theme, but among the most direct is the following: &dquo;God’s
purpose is to amiably order all things and suitably with the kinds
and qualities of their nature.... The whole world consisting
in parts so many, so different is by this only thing upheld; he which
hath formed them in order
This conception of human community was more than just an
intellectual construction found in works of political reflection, it
was a view that entered very deeply into people’s lived experiences
in the precapitalist era in Western Europe. Not only did such con-
ceptions tie in very closely with the perceived social structure, but
the social structure itself received symbolic reinforcement through
religious, particularly Anglican, teachings, as both Laslett and
Schochet have shown. This kind of teaching, which was very diffi-
cult to avoid, expressed in less subtle language precisely the vision
of society encapsulated in works like Ecclesiastical Polity. Indeed,
the religious reinforcement for such a conception of community
may well have lasted much longer than might have been expected.
In Lark Rise to Candleford Flora Thompson writes about an Anglican
sermon in the village church of Candleford in the closing years of the
nineteenth century: &dquo;Another subject was the social order as it
then existed. God in his infinite wisdom had appointed a place for
every man, woman and child on this earth and it was their bounden
duty to remain contentedly in their niches. A gentleman might seem
to some of his listeners to have a pleasant easy life compared with
theirs as field labourers; but he had duties and responsibilities which
would be far beyond their capabilities. He had to pay taxes, sit on
the bench of magistrates, oversee his estate and keep up his position --
41. Thompson, Lark Rise to Candleford (London: Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1945), p. 201.
42. Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France (London: Dent, 1910),
p. 46.
43. Parkin, Class Inequality and Political Order, p. 85.
98
archical society. This point has been brought out particularly well
by Bernard Williams: &dquo;What keeps stable hierarchies together is the
idea of necessity, that it is somehow foreordained and inevitable
that there should be those orders.&dquo;45 Trying to mirror in community
the order that inheres in nature, rather than trying actively to impose
order upon it, is a central hallmark of conservative social thought,
and its role has to be understood in the light of Williams’s remarks,
which in turn are given empirical backing by the work of McKenzie,
Silver, and Parkin. The Marxist criticism that the feudal village com-
munity constrained and inhibited human development is vitiated for
the conservative by the overoptimistic assumptions made by the
Marxist about human nature and the natural necessities and contin-
gencies of human life; in neither case can their conceptions of com-
munity be understood without taking into account these background
assumptions.
For the Marxist and the conservative, community is something
of anembarrassment. The Marxist sees community in capitalist
society as being used primarily to describe specific localities marked
by neighborliness and kinship, its particularity and exclusivity standing
in stark contrast to the universality of class consciousness, without
which there can be no transformation of society and no community
of humankind. The conservative sees that the social structure and
the attendant modes of consciousness and ethical conviction intrin-
sic to his vision of community have fallen away and that the various
natural necessities that appeared to make his vision both viable and
compelling are losing their force.46 Both, however, are agreed in
44. Robert McKenzie and Allan Silver, Angels in Marble (London: Macmillan, 1968),
p. 249.
45. Bernard Williams, "The Idea of Equality," in Philosophy, Politics and Society,
series 11, eds. P. Laslett and W. G. Runciman (Oxford: Blackwell, 1962), p. 119.
46. Ibid. "Once one accepts ... that the degree of man’s consciousness about such
99
tion of middle class liberal political thought has not quite known
what to do with it. The essence of that tradition was individualist,
and the shadow of individualism lies over it still. Fraternity, in this
tradition, can only be the by product of individual impulses, of
things as his role in society is itself in some part the product of social arrangements, and
that it can be increased, the idea of stable hierarchy must disappear."
47. Wolff, The Poverty of Liberalism, p. 184.
100
48. Eric Hobsbawm, "The Idea of Fraternity," New Society, vol.34 (November 1975).
101
of this is that each person has to select which of his interests, capac-
ities, and powers he wishes to pursue and develop; and in doing
so he will come into contact with others with whom he will cooperate
in realizing a common venture. Social solidarity arises not out of
organic unity reflecting natural inequalities but rather is based upon
cooperation within discrete spheres of interest. Rawls has a par-
ticularly fine description of this sort of ideal: &dquo;We are led to the
notion of a community of mankind, the members of which enjoy
each other’s assets and individuality elicited by free institutions
and they recognize the good of each as an element in the complete
activity, the whole scheme of which is consented to and gives pleasure
to all. ,49
The liberal-social democrat will therefore see solidarity and
significance emerging out of particular interest groups within modem
industrial society, and a view of human nature such as that articulated
by Rawls would enable such a viewpoint to be stated in its full philo-
sophical generality. This conception of community within urban
industrial society and within liberal assumptions about moral, cul-
tural, political, and economic pluralism has been the subject of a
good deal of sociological investigation and also of prescriptive social
theory. While this conception may perhaps have some of its roots
in Hegel’s work, it has come to be especially identified with Durkheim.
He recognizes the values of personal autonomy and self-direction
achieved through the decline of traditional communities; he is also
very sensitive to the dangers of mass society and to the baneful
consequences on individuals of the loss of supportive primary groups;
he sees in occupational groups a possible source of support for de-
racinated individuals; he adopts a theory of human nature comparable
to that of Rawls; and he makes specific recommendations about
how occupational groups could be organized in order to strengthen
their supportive role vis-a-vis individuals. In Socialism, The Division
of Labour in Society, and Professional Ethics and Civic Morals,
Durkheim explores these themes in various ways.5~ In The Division
ratized in much the same way and in the interest of two values that
the liberal-social democratic tradition has often seen as antithetical,
namely, autonomy and community.
However, the critic, whether conservative or Marxist, may well
reply that however far the idea of occupational and interest group
community might be carried, the conception of community in ques-
tion is still an exiguous one. Within this framework we shall always
be compelled to talk about qualified, partial, or functional com-
munities, not about community in some overall sense. The consis-
tent liberal-social democrat, committed as he is to a pluralist view
of culture, politics, and the economy, cannot provide a conception
of overall community. Criticism may be coupled with the assumption
that only an overall community is legitimate as a conception of
community and that the liberal-social democrat, in appropriating
the term to describe other types of groups within industrial society,
is performing a kind of semantic sleight of hand. Thus Robert Paul
Wolff argues that pluralism &dquo;by portraying society as an aggregate
of human communities rather than as itself a human community
rules out any viable conception of the common good.,,54 A liberal-
social democratic perspective provides at best a conception of par-
ticular communities based upon common but sectional interests
and cannot provide an account of community overall (granting that
most contemporary liberals and social democrats would not want
to take Lasalle’s or Hegel’s way out and argue that the institutions
of the modem state provide for a sense of overall community).
However, it is not immediately clear that the liberal-social demo-
crat does not offer a solution to this difficulty. In A Theory of justice
Rawls has argued, using the impeccable liberal device of contract
theory, that a basic principle of justice is the difference principle:
&dquo;social and economic inequalities are to be arranged so that they
are both (a) to the greatest benefit to the least advantaged and (b)
attached to offices and positions open to all.&dquo; According to Rawls
a society whose basic structure conformed to his principles would
wanting to act on the difference principle has precisely this consequence. Those
better circumstanced are willing to have their greater advantages only under
a scheme in which this works out for the benefit of the least fortunate.5-5-
55. Rawls,
A Theory of Justice, p. 105.
106
when the term is used in substantive debates about social and public
policy it is never being used in a neutral fashion. There is always
going to be some normative and ideological engagement.
It might of course be argued with some plausibility that we
could produce an adequate and nonideological account of human
community if we had an adequate account of human nature or philo-
sophical anthropology, 57and indeed such a view has had its place
in the history of political thought. It is a beguiling view that human
institutions could be derived from a correct understanding of human
nature. Two of the most influential community theorists of the past
decade or so, Robert Paul Wolff in The Poverty of Liberalism and
expression; the greater the concrete detail and the greater the histori-
cal sense of its variety, the more adequate the philosophy will
seem. ,,58 However, it is just this very richness and variety in the ex-
pression of human nature, some aspects of which have been touched
upon in this paper, that leads one to question whether the true nature
of human community is ever going to be founded upon &dquo;facts&dquo;
about human nature. Our conceptions of human nature and com-
munity cannot be separated, with one made more basic than the
other; they are tied together in an indissoluble fashion.
58. Hampshire, Thought and Action (London: Chatto and Windus, 1959), p. 234. Cf.
MacIntyre in A Short History of Ethics (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1967), p. 268:
"Nor can I look to human nature as a neutral standard asking which form of social and moral
life will give it the most adequate expression. For each form of life carries with it its own
picture of human nature. The choice of a form of life and the choice of a view of human
nature go together."