To Professor and Mrs. Erb[?]--with best wishes from your friend/Carrie Jacobs-Bond, 1919'--composer's note at top of page 1; price indicated as 60¢ on page 1; back cover is advertisement for more songs by composer; plate number Democracy - 4; vocal range is D4-F5
The current populist challenges in western liberal democracies should not be seen as evidence of their decline, but as a constituent part. The history of democracy shows us that such challenges enable democracy's growth and evolution. As these modern conflicts and crises see populists seek to capitalise on the discontent of the people, it is evident that much of the conflict comes from tensions between the rule of law and majority rule. Elites seeking to preserve the liberal democratic system need to make their arguments in defence of the rule of law and democratic values, rather than assuming them to be self-evident. We should only become concerned over the fate of liberal democracy when the conflict moves from dialogue into physical violence, or as in Hungary, where the executive has dismantled counter-majoritarian checks. It is only then that the departure from democracy truly begins.
"Populär Democracy" - eine pluralistische "populäre" Demokratie aller Bevölkerungsschichten - das fordern die Anhänger des Pater Edicio de la Torres mit der im Juni 1986 gegründeten Organisation* "Volunteers for Populär Democracy" - VPD Der aus der Zeitschrift "Peacemaker" vom April-Juni 1986 übernommene und übersetzte Artikel ist eine programmatische Ableitung aus den konkreten politischen Machtverhältnissen in den ersten Monaten nach den Februarereignissen. Die VPD entwerfen darin das Konzept einer Demokratie für alle politischen Strömungen in der philippinischen Bevölkerung. Damals hatte es noch keine Putschversuche des Militärs, keine Schüsse auf für ihre Rechte demonstrierende Bauern und streikende Arbeiter, keine gescheiterten Waffenstillstandsverhandlungen und keine Verfassung gegeben.
The current populist challenges in western liberal democracies should not be seen as evidence of their decline, but as a constituent part. The history of democracy shows us that such challenges enable democracy's growth and evolution. As these modern conflicts and crises see populists seek to capitalise on the discontent of the people, it is evident that much of the conflict comes from tensions between the rule of law and majority rule. Elites seeking to preserve the liberal democratic system need to make their arguments in defence of the rule of law and democratic values, rather than assuming them to be self-evident. We should only become concerned over the fate of liberal democracy when the conflict moves from dialogue into physical violence, or as in Hungary, where the executive has dismantled counter-majoritarian checks. It is only then that the departure from democracy truly begins.
Democracy is a term that is used to denote a variety of distinct objects and ideas. Democracy describes either a set of political institutions or an ideal of collective self-rule. Democracy can also be short for a normative principle of either legitimacy or justice. Finally, democracy might be used to denote an egalitarian attitude. These four uses of the term should be kept distinct and raises separate conceptual and normative issues. The value of democracy, whether democratic political institutions or democratic self-rule, is either instrumental, non-instrumental, or both. The non-instrumental value of democracy derives either from the alleged fairness of majority rule or from the value of the social relationships enabled by participation in democratic procedures. The instrumental value of democracy lends support from a growing body of empirical research. Yet, the claim that democracy has a positive causal effect on public goods is inconclusive with respect to the moral justification of democratic institutions. Normative reasons for democracy's instrumental value must instead appeal to the fact that it contributes to equality, liberty, truth, or the realization of popular will. Democracy as a principle of either political legitimacy or justice is a normative view that evades concerns with the definition and value of democracy. Normative democracy is a claim about the conditions either for legitimacy or justice of either public authority or coercion. Debates in normative democracy are largely divorced from the conceptual and empirical concerns that inform studies of democracy elsewhere. The boundaries of the people entitled to participate in collective decisions is a question that applies to all four uses of democracy. The boundary question raises three distinct issues. The first is the extent of inclusion required among the members of the unit. The second is if membership in the unit is necessary for inclusion or if people that are not recognized as members are on certain conditions also entitled to participate. The third and final issue concerns the boundaries of the unit itself. ; Artikel publicerad i Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics [online].
The main argument of this paper is directed against the thesis that we are in a post-democratic era. I consider that we are rather in a post-political era, that is to say, one in which the demands expressed in moments of democratic explosion do not often find a political channel that translates them into effective transformations. To this is added the fact that some of the current forms of activism have given rise to what could be called an "intermittent citizenship" that has seduced some with the possibility of establishing that negative sovereignty at the core of the construction of the general will, which has depolitizing effects. This is the context in which the great rift between technocratic reasons and populist reasons has been constituted. I end up defending a concept of "indirect democracy" or "complex democracy" that attempts to politically integrate both moments.
Natural rights of man.--Principles of democracy.--The Constitution.--Political economy.--Social welfare.--Religion.--Foreign affairs.--Appendix: 1. Axioms and dicta. II. Opinion of contemporaries. III. Select bibliography (p. 283-285) ; Mode of access: Internet.
This item is part of the Political & Rights Issues & Social Movements (PRISM) digital collection, a collaborative initiative between Florida Atlantic University and University of Central Florida in the Publication of Archival, Library & Museum Materials (PALMM).
Se explica el concepto de este sistema político y se enumeran sus elementos más importantes: libertad de expresión, derecho al voto, elecciones libres, partidos políticos, existencia de una constitución, división del Estado en tres poderes independientes y libertad económica. También, se repasa su evolución histórica y se recalcan, especialmente, las aportaciones legadas por Grecia y por las revoluciones de finales del siglo XVIII en Francia y en las colonias americanas, hasta llegar a la actualidad. Igualmente, se explica la implantación de este sistema a la actual comunidad mundial. ; SC ; Biblioteca de Educación del Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte; Calle San Agustín, 5 - 3 planta; 28014 Madrid; Tel. +34917748000; biblioteca@mecd.es ; GBR
Se explica el concepto de este sistema político y se enumeran sus elementos más importantes: libertad de expresión, derecho al voto, elecciones libres, partidos políticos, existencia de una constitución, división del Estado en tres poderes independientes y libertad económica. También, se repasa su evolución histórica y se recalcan, especialmente, las aportaciones legadas por Grecia y por las revoluciones de finales del siglo XVIII en Francia y en las colonias americanas, hasta llegar a la actualidad. Igualmente, se explica la implantación de este sistema a la actual comunidad mundial. ; SC ; Biblioteca de Educación del Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte; Calle San Agustín, 5 - 3 planta; 28014 Madrid; Tel. +34917748000; biblioteca@mecd.es ; GBR
Version 3.2. Originally published on blog and wiki and then as a chapter in the book, Extreme Democracy. This version edited by Jon Lebkowsky. ; This essay argues that a new form of democracy — an "Emergent Democracy" — will develop as a result of the use of Internet communication tools and platforms such as blogs. The essay explores a variety of tools available and explores the history of democracy, modern experiments with democracy and how these tools might support democracy. The essay also explores concerns as these new tools emerge. These issues include concerns such as privacy and the societally negative use of these tools by corporations, totalitarian regimes and terrorists.
I. Machine politics.--II. Organized democracy.--III. The cost of machine politics.--IV. The necessity of reorganization.--V. General considerations. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes. ; Belief systems after converse / Donald R. Kinder -- Democracy with attitudes / Larry M. Bartels -- The political psychology of party identification / Herbert F. Weisberg and Steve H. Greene -- Process matters: cognitive models of candidate evaluation / Marco Steenbergen and Milton Lodge -- Policy issues and electoral democracy / Stuart Elaine Macdonald, Geroge Rabinowitz and Holly Brasher -- Elections and the dynamics of ideological representation / Michael B. MacKuen . [et al.] -- The heavenly public: what would a fully informed citizenry be like? / Robert C. Luskin -- The nature of belief in a mass public / Michael W. Traugot --- Electoral democracy during policts as usual, and unusual / John Aldrich -- Coming to grips with V.O. Key's concept of latent opinion / John Zaller. ; Mode of access: Internet.
The delinking of issues of redistribution from the current wave of democratization is truly remarkable. In the nineteenth century, democracy meant replacing the representation of property by the representation of the people and meant related developments