1st Edition

Fomenting Friendship The Politics and Policy of Interpersonal Warmth

By Andrea Chandler Copyright 2025
118 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

118 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

In studies of comparative politics and public policy specifically, interpersonal friendship has been generally regarded as a matter that belongs to the private domain, rather than a site for government intervention. And yet, friendship is inherently political. While friendships can and do evolve spontaneously between individuals, political factors can help to bring people together or drive them... Read more

Introduction.  Chapter 1. Friendship and Comparative Politics  Chapter 2. The Benefits of Friendship for Political Society  Chapter 3. Hierarchies of Friendship and Exclusion  Chapter 4. Systemic Causes of the Erosion of Friendship  Chapter 5. How to Foment Friendship

Biography

Andrea Chandler is Professor of Political Science at Carleton University, Canada where she teaches courses in comparative politics, democracy, and politics of Russia and Eastern Europe. A native of Halifax, Nova Scotia (Canada), she has published numerous peer-reviewed articles and books, including Canada and Eastern Europe, 1945–1991: Meeting in the Middle (2024) and Democracy, Gender and Social Policy in Russia: A Wayward Society (2013).