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Democratization is a process of collective emancipation through
self-government. Continuous political contestation is essential for
emancipation but, in order to know which strategies and conditions
will emancipate us, we also need to know which ones subjugate us.
Political mechanisms with the capacity to modulate our individual
and collective bodies and make them docile tend to be close
relatives of those which make us equal and free. Drawing on the
latest theories concerning globalization and democracy, this book
argues that postnational and postsovereign multilevel governance
regimes, including the European Union, should be understood as
mechanisms of global capitalism aimed at privatizing democracy.
Through a detailed applied analysis of the Basque case, the author
illustrates how democratization is closely linked to ideas about
territory, collective empowerment and institutional political
capacity. Democratization always takes place partially: it never
"ends". Contrary to the dominant thinking, this book argues that
the incomplete nature of democratization is a positive aspect, with
perpetual conflict leading to perpetual change. This is precisely
what allows, and obliges, each generation to shape its own forms of
emancipation.
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