Deliberative Democracy and Beyond: Liberals, Critics, Contestations (Oxford Political Theory) by Dryzek John S

Deliberative Democracy and Beyond: Liberals, Critics, Contestations (Oxford Political Theory) by Dryzek John S

Author:Dryzek, John S. [Dryzek, John S.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2000-04-19T16:00:00+00:00


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10 In Dryzek (1996, pp. 5–9) I argue that an advance on any one of these dimensions should never be bought at the expense of a retreat on one of the two others.

11 For a detailed analysis of the hazards of co-option, especially for resource-poor groups, see Saward (1992).

12 One parliamentary seat in the German land of Schleswig-Holstein is reserved for the tiny Danish minority.

13 Early 20th-cent. pluralists such as Harold Laski (1919) and Mary Parker Follett (1918) have more in common with contemporary difference democrats than do Truman et al. (see Schlosberg, 1998).

14 Here, Walzer echoes the long-standing fear of mass society theorists such as Kornhauser (1959).

15 A somewhat different model going by the same name is developed by Hirst (1994). But whereas Cohen and Rogers propose an actively inclusive state, the state in Hirst’s associative democracy is passively inclusive. In Hirst’s model, democracy is built from the ground up by citizen associations which would then take on many of the functions now performed by the state. The state’s role is restricted to enabling such a process to occur, rather than actively promoting it.



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