Abstract

The social evolution of Germany in the course of the last two centuries was in many ways quite different from that of Holland. And a sociological study of vertical pluralism there poses difficult problems both from the viewpoint of facts and from that of the methods to be used. If it is true that one can scarcely speak of a history of vertical pluralism in Germany, it is true, on the contrary, that since 1945, one can recognise, in the efforts made to have the subsidiarity and relative autonomy of social groups vis-à-vis the State recognised, the beginning at least of a process of ideological partitioning.

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