Democracy and Its Critics
TL;DR: The course is focused on historical texts, most of them philosophical as discussed by the authors, and context for understanding the texts and the course of democratic development will be provided in lecture and discussions, and by some background readings (Dunn).
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Abstract: The course is focused on historical texts, most of them philosophical. Context for understanding the texts and the course of democratic development will be provided in lecture and discussions, and by some background readings (Dunn). We begin with the remarkable Athenian democracy, and its frequent enemy the Spartan oligarchy. In Athens legislation was passed directly by an assembly of all citizens, and executive officials were selected by lot rather than by competitive election. Athenian oligarchs such as Plato more admired Sparta, and their disdain for the democracy became the judgment of the ages, until well after the modern democratic revolutions. Marsilius of Padua in the early Middle Ages argued for popular sovereignty. The Italian citystates of the Middle Ages did without kings, and looked back to Rome and Greece for republican models. During the English Civil War republicans debated whether the few or the many should be full citizens of the regime. The English, French, and American revolutions struggled with justifying and establishing a representative democracy suitable for a large state, and relied on election rather than lot to select officials. The English established a constitutional monarchy, admired in Europe, and adapted by the Americans in their republican constitution. The American Revolution helped inspire the French, and the French inspired republican and democratic revolution throughout Europe during the 19 century.
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What is Media Assistance and (Why) Does It Matter? The Case of Polish Foreign Aid to the Media in Belarus and Ukraine
TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of media assistance, as a specific form of foreign aid, that Poland offers to strengthen media development in Belarus and Ukraine, is presented, showing that Polish media assistance is unlikely to boost media freedom in Belarus as is usually expected as an outcome of democratic aid and is under-financed in the case of Ukraine.
Revolutionary Attitudes in Democratic Regimes
TL;DR: Contrary to a classic prediction of democratic theory, empirical studies do not find that democratic systems produce internal peace as discussed by the authors, and this absence of relationship does not mean that democratic theor...
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Strategies for ensuring sustainable democracy in South Africa
Victor G Hilliard,Mxolisi Notshulwana +1 more
- 01 Apr 2001
TL;DR: The authors examines the South African experience of democracy and focuses in particular on the democratisation of South Africa's government and administration, and examines some of the mechanisms or strategies to keep democracy vibrant and to ensure that public functionaries serve the general good and do not pursue selfish, parochial interests.
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Workshop 12 - National Tradition of Democratic Thought
Bernardo Ivo Cruz
- 01 Jan 2004
TL;DR: The need for a political system, based in democracy, that ensures compatibility between the European Union Member States, was reaffirmed by G. Verheugen, member of the European Commission responsible for the enlargement process, when he argued that ‘[democracy] [i]s a central issue for the Union. It is so central that we will not even enter into membership negotiations unless a country meets this criterion as mentioned in this paper.
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