The decade of the 1980s marked a triumph for market capitalism. As
politicians of all stripes sought to reinvent government in the
image of private enterprise, they looked to the voluntary sector
for allies to assuage the human costs of reductions in public
policies of social welfare. This book details the "savage side" of
market capitalism in Appalachia and explains the social, political,
and economic roles that mediating structures play in mitigating it.
Profiling the work of twenty-three such mediating
structures--community-based organizations that battled to provide
social safety nets, fight environmental assaults, and upgrade the
education and job skills of Appalachian residents--Richard Couto
distills the practical lessons to be found in their successes and
shortcomings.
Couto argues that a broader set of democratic dimensions be used in
taking the measure of civil society and public policy in the
twenty-first century. He shows that mediating structures promote
the democratic prospect of reduced inequality and increased
communal bonds when they provide and advocate for new forms and
increased amounts of social capital--the public goods and moral
resources that we invest in one another as members of a
community.