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The great disruption: human nature and the reconstitution of social order

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1999

Year

Unknown Author(s)
Choice Reviews Online

TLDR

Over the past thirty years, developed nations have shifted from industrial to information societies, with knowledge replacing mass production as the basis of wealth, power, and social interaction, while also seeing rising crime, changing family structures, declining trust, and a move toward individualism. Fukuyama argues that despite the collapse of the old order, a new social order is already forming—a Great Reconstruction that weaves a new fabric of social and moral values suited to the postindustrial world.

Abstract

From the Publisher: The Great Disruption begins by observing that over the past thirty years, the United States and other developed countries have undergone a profound transformation from industrial to information societies; knowledge has replaced mass production as the basis of wealth, power, and social interaction. At the same time, Western societies have endured increasing levels of crime, massive changes in fertility and family structure, decreasing levels of trust, and the triumph of individualism over community. Just as the Industrial Revolution brought about momentous changes in society's moral values, a similar Great Disruption in our own time has caused profound changes in our social structure. Drawing on the latest sociological data and new theoretical models from fields as diverse as economics and biology, Fukuyama reveals that even though the old order has broken apart, a new social order is already taking shape. Indeed, he suggests, the Great Disruption of the 1960s and 1970s may be giving way to a Great Reconstruction, as Western society weaves a new fabric of social and moral values appropriate to the changed realities of the postindustrial world.