“…Sociological perspectives on civil society range from the third sector perspective, which focuses exclusively on an institutionally defined field (e.g., van Til (1988); Evers and Laville (2004); Brandsen et al (2005); Valentinov (2009); van Til (2009); Vaceková and Plaček (2020); Young D. R. ( 2000)), to the strategic action field (e.g., Klein and Lee, 2019), which sees civil society as consisting of organizations acting with knowledge of one another under a set of common understandings about the purposes of the field, the relationships in the field, and the field's rules (Fligstein and McAdam, 2011;Fligstein and McAdam, 2015), to the arena approach, as shown in Heinrich (2005), that places it between the state, the market, and family in which citizens pursue their interests and, therefore, bears strong similarities to both Gramscian and neo-Gramscian views (e.g., Buttigieg, 1995;César Souza Ramos, 2006;Landau, 2008;Tocco, 2014;Whitehead, 2015;Fonseca, 2018), and to the sphere (Alexander, 2006;Alexander and Tognato, 2018;Alexander et al, 2019a;Alexander et al, 2019b;Alexander et al, 2020;Tognato et al, 2020) approach that includes diverse institutions outside the state apparatus and the market, norms, legal codes, and public opinion through which a civil code finds its expression, and, finally, as broad as to mean society's overall quality. There appears to be a noticeably established consensus among scholars within all these theoretical interpretations and sociological perspectives.…”