Democracy and Complexity: A Realist Approach

封面
Penn State Press, 1992 - 202 頁

This book is a highly original and provocative contribution to democratic theory. Zolo argues that the increasing complexity of modern societies represents a fundamental challenge to the basic assumptions of the Western democratic tradition and calls for a reformulation of some of the key questions of political theory.

Zolo maintains that, as modern societies become more complex and more involved in the "information revolution," they are subjected to new and unprecedented forms of stress--as manifested, for instance, in the growing autonomy and power of political parties, and in new kinds of political communication which create the fiction of consensus. These stresses have become so serious that they threaten to undermine some of the values traditionally associated with democracy, such as the rationality and autonomy of the individual, and the visibility and accountability of power.

In conclusion, Zolo develops a set of proposals which seek to renew democratic values and to contribute to a fundamental reform of Western political systems.

 

內容

Some General Assumptions
1
Complexity and Political Theory
19
A Kantian version of Menenius Agrippas apologue
28
Politics as selective regulation of social risks
35
Notes
45
Complexity and Democratic Theory
54
The Evolutionary Risks of Democracy
99
The Principality of Communication
145
Conclusion
177
Select Bibliography
185
Index
198
74
199
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