Wanting Democracy
Description
Representative democracy grew out of struggles by excluded groups demanding a voice in politics. In this book, renowned political theorist Rosemary H. T. O'Kane asks why democracy is so deeply desired, yet why it often falls short in practice. She explores how democratic systems can be strengthened against the pressures that threaten them, showing democracy as a living system shaped by institutions, society, and collective action.
Instead of starting with ancient Athens or abstract philosophical debates, O'Kane takes a fresh approach. She looks at real historical and contemporary cases (from the Chartists and Russia in 1905 to civil rights movements in Northern Ireland and the United States, and the UK's anti EU campaign) while engaging with classic theories about bureaucracy, political parties, elites, and power. These lessons, additionally informed by the cases of India, South Korea, Taiwan and Sweden, are then used to build a "practical ideal" vision of representative democracy grounded in everyday realities. This practical ideal goes beyond elections and rights to include fair law, neutral bureaucracy, and an active society marked by equality and civic participation.
By blending case studies with theory Wanting Democracy: Cases, Theories and Realization gives students a clear, accessible framework for understanding both the strengths and the limits of modern democracy today.
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Person
Rosemary H. T. O'Kane is Emeritus Professor of Comparative Political Theory at Keele University, UK. Her books include The Likelihood of Coups (1987), Terror, Force and States: The Path from Modernity (1996), Paths to Democracy: Revolution and Totalitarianism (2004), Terrorism (2007, 2012), Rosa Luxemburg in Action: For Revolution and Democracy (2015). Her book The Revolutionary Reign of Terror: The Role of Violence in Political Change (1991) won the CHOICE Outstanding Academic Book for 1993.
Content
Preface. 1. Modern Democracy Part 1: Wanting Democracy: Petitions, Movements and Referendum 2. Petitioning for Representation 3. Contrasting Petition Outcomes 4. Civil Rights Movements 5. After the Civil Rights Movements 6. Referendum 7. Democracy as Theory and Practice Part 2: Democracy Wanting: Theories 8. Bureaucracy and Representative Democracy 9. Political Parties and Leaders 10. Power Elite 11. Dominant Class Part 3: Representative Democracy: Ideal into Practice 12. Democracy in the Real World 13. Democratic Society Part 4: Practical-Ideal 14. Practical-Ideal