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E-grāmata: What Is Democracy? [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formāts: 240 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Apr-1997
  • Izdevniecība: Westview Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780429503115
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Cena: 155,64 €*
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What Is Democracy?
  • Formāts: 240 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Apr-1997
  • Izdevniecība: Westview Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780429503115
In this sequel to A Critique of Modernity, Alain Touraine questions the social and cultural content of democracy today. At a time when state power is being increasingly eroded by the economic might of transnational capital, what possible value can we ascribe to a democratic idea that is defined merely as a set of guarantees against the totalitarian state?If democracy is to survive in the postcommunist world, Touraine argues, it must accomplish two urgent goals: It must somehow protect the power of the nation-state at the same time as it limits that power (for only the state has sufficient means to counterbalance the global corporate wielders of money and information); and it must reconcile social diversity with social unity and individual liberty with integration.This is not merely a philosophical problem but a dilemma whose resolution will dramatically affect the immediate future of people everywhere. If we want a resolution in democracys favor, then it is time, in Touraines view, for us to redefine democracy in terms of active intervention rather than mere passive institution. To preserve the power and effectiveness of our states and societies, we must make visible stridesand soonaway from a politics of particularity and toward the integration and balancing of women and minorities, of immigrants, of rich and poor. If our states become too weakened, too debased by the politics of competing identities and interest groups, we will one day find ourselves without the means to protect the very values we believe we are fighting to uphold. }In this sequel to A Critique of Modernity, Alain Touraine questions the social and cultural content of democracy today. At a time when state power is being increasingly eroded by the economic might of transnational capital, what possible value can we asc ribe to a democratic idea that is defined merely as a set of guarantees against the totalitarian state?If democracy is to survive in the postcommunist world, Touraine argues, it must accomplish two urgent goals: It must somehow protect the power of the nation-state at the same time as it limits that power (for only the state has sufficient means to counterbalance the global corporate wielders of money and information); and it must reconcile social diversity with social unity and individual liberty with integration. This is not merely a philosophical problem but a dilemma whose resolution will dramatically affect the immediate future of people everywhere. If we want a resolution in democracys favor, then it is time, in Touraines view, for us to redefine democracy in terms of active intervention rather than mere passive institution. To preserve the power and effectiveness of our states and societies, we must make visible stridesand soonaway from a politics of particularity and toward the integration and balancing of women and minorities, of immigrants, of rich and poor. If our states become too weakened, too debased by the politics of competing identities and interest groups, we will one day find ourselves without the means to protect the very values we believe we are fighting to uphold. }
Preface and Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(6)
Part 1 The Three Dimensions of Democracy 7(70)
1 A New Idea
7(14)
The Liberty of the Subject
12(2)
Liberty, Memory, and Reason
14(2)
Development and Democracy
16(3)
The Limits of the Political
19(2)
2 Human Rights, Representation, and Citizenship
21(15)
The Principle of Recourse
22(1)
Ancients and Moderns
23(3)
Three Dimensions of Democracy
26(2)
Three Types of Democracy
28(2)
The Separation of Powers
30(3)
A Note on John Rawls
33(3)
3 Limitations on Power
36(15)
Human Rights Versus the Sovereignty of the People
37(2)
Republicans Versus Democrats
39(2)
The Twofold Autonomy of the Political System
41(4)
The Limits of Liberalism
45(6)
4 Representative Political Actors
51(13)
Social Actors and Political Agents
51(2)
Political Representation in Crisis
53(2)
Political Corruption
55(1)
Social Movements and Democracy
56(3)
Overrationalized Democracies
59(1)
Democracy and the People
60(4)
5 Citizenship
64(13)
Citizenship and Community
64(1)
The Communitarian State Versus Democracy
65(3)
The Decline of the Nation-State in Europe
68(2)
Three in One
70(2)
Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
72(5)
Part 2 A History of the Modern Democratic Spirit 77(38)
6 Republicans and Liberals
77(13)
The Republican Spirit
78(4)
The Tyranny of the Majority
82(4)
Liberals and Utilitarians
86(4)
7 Opening Up a Public Space
90(25)
Parties and Unions
94(3)
Totalitarianism
97(7)
The Welfare State
104(4)
Democracy Weakened
108(3)
The Renewal of the Democratic Idea
111(4)
Part 3 Democratic Culture 115(38)
8 The Politics of the Subject
115(21)
Conflicting Values and Democracy
119(1)
A Second Note on John Rawls
120(4)
The Subject and Democracy
124(4)
A Reversal of Perspective
128(2)
Democracy and Justice
130(2)
Mass Society
132(4)
9 Recomposing the World
136(17)
Unity and Difference
137(3)
Democratic Integration
140(2)
Ecology and Democracy
142(1)
Democratic Education
143(4)
The One Disappears
147(2)
The Public Space
149(4)
Part 4 Democracy and Development 153(32)
10 Modernization or Development?
153(12)
Between State Voluntarism and Economic Rationalism
155(4)
Endogenous Development
159(2)
Crisis and Authoritarianism
161(4)
11 Transforming Old into New
165(9)
Memory and Project
167(2)
Religion and Democracy
169(3)
Revolutionaries and Democrats
172(2)
12 Democratization in the East and the South?
174(11)
Postcommunism
174(4)
Latin America: Democracy Under Tutelage
178(4)
The Limitations of Economic Liberalism
182(3)
Conclusion 185(14)
Bibliography 199(8)
About the Book and Author 207(2)
Index 209