The Democracy Sourcebook offers a collection of classic writings
and contemporary scholarship on democracy, creating a book that can
be used by undergraduate and graduate students in a wide variety of
courses, including American politics, international relations,
comparative politics, and political philosophy. The editors have
chosen substantial excerpts from the essential theorists of the
past, including Jean-Jacques Rousseau, John Stuart Mill, Alexis de
Tocqueville, and the authors of The Federalist Papers; they place
them side by side with the work of such influential modern scholars
as Joseph Schumpeter, Adam Przeworski, Seymour Martin Lipset,
Samuel P. Huntington, Ronald Dworkin, and Amartya Sen.The book is
divided into nine self-contained chapters: "Defining Democracy,"
which discusses procedural, deliberative, and substantive
democracy; "Sources of Democracy," on why democracy exists in some
countries and not in others; "Democracy, Culture, and Society,"
about cultural and sociological preconditions for democracy;
"Democracy and Constitutionalism," which focuses on the importance
of independent courts and a bill of rights; "Presidentialism versus
Parliamentarianism"; "Representation," discussing which is the
fairest system of democratic accountability; "Interest Groups";
"Democracy's Effects," an examination of the effect of democracy on
economic growth and social inequality; and finally, "Democracy and
the Global Order" discusses the effects of democracy on
international relations, including the propensity for war and the
erosion of national sovereignty by transnational forces.
General
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