Is democracy worth saving? Responding to the erosion of democracy, philosophical debates have pivoted from analyzing the best forms of democracy to questioning what is so valuable about democracy to begin with, how we can save it, and whether it is indeed worth saving.
Contemporary Democratic Theory charts this pivot and surveys the most important new developments in the philosophical, theoretical, and normative examination of the concept of democracy. Comparisons that dominated 20th century democratic theory – between direct democracy, participatory democracy, deliberative democracy, and agonistic democracy – are in the 21st century giving way to comparisons between democracy and its challengers: epistocracy, technocracy, meritocracy, oligarchy, and autocracy. Philosophical interest in the canonical figures of democratic theory like Aristotle, Rousseau and Mill is being eclipsed by damage control in the face populism, sinking trust in democratic institutions, failing political parties, and the spread of misinformation.
Overarching epochal forces of crisis and threat are pushing democratic theory in new directions and towards new ideas. This refreshing and authoritative text identifies, explains, and evaluates the new directions taken by contemporary democratic theory in challenging times.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Justifying Democracy
Chapter 3: Equality
Chapter 4: Freedom
Chapter 5: Instrumentalism 1: Realism
Chapter 6: Instrumentalism 2: Performance Skeptics
Chapter 7: Instrumentalism 3: Epistemic Democracy
Chapter 8: Populism and the People
Chapter 9: Representation
Chapter 10: Public Sphere
Chapter 11: Innovation and Disobedience
Chapter 12: Conclusion
Über den Autor
Simone Chambers is a Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Irvine.