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ISBN9781108634397 (ebook)
Call NumberElectronic Book
AuthorAltman, David, 1968- (2)
TitleCitizenship and contemporary direct democracy / David Altman.
ImprintCambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2019.
Physical1 online resource (xxiii, 258 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).
NoteTitle from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 04 Jan 2019).
ContentDemocratic innovations for representative governments -- Breaking through: the rebirth of direct democracy in the age of the nation- -- Catching on: waves of adoption of citizen-initiated mechanisms of direct democracy since World War I -- Status quo bias: political change through direct democracy -- Left or right: investigating potential ideological biases in contemporary direct democracy -- Why adopt direct democracy: much more than a simple vote -- How can direct democracy be improved: citizens' commissions and citizens' counterproposals -- Conclusions: a new democratic equilibrium.
SummaryStanding out from all other books on direct democracy, Citizenship and Contemporary Direct Democracy connects the study of direct democracy to the broader field of comparative democratization and to an important strand in normative democratic theory. Analyzing the relationship between direct democracy and representative government, this book is organized around three main sections: the origins of contemporary direct democracy, its functioning, and the ways to improve the use of direct democracy and its abuse. David Altman argues that citizen-initiated mechanisms of direct democracy constitute an important and viable way to re-invigorate current representative regimes by strengthening democracies' normative foundations - freedom and equity among citizens - which are particularly fragile in the context of unequal societies. Citizenship and Contemporary Direct Democracy demonstrates how citizen-initiated mechanisms of direct democracy empowers citizens, channels social demands, defuses violence, re-enchants citizens with politics, and breaks through some of the institutionalized barriers to accountability that arise in representative systems.
SubjectDirect democracy. (6)
 Political participation. (59)
 Electronic books. (319)
HoldingLIC
URL ObjectEbook
GroupE-Book
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