A Productive Challenge: Unelected Representatives Can Enrich Democracy

During the last quarter of the eighteenth century, in various parts of the Atlantic region, the meaning of citizenship was profoundly transformed by the advent of representative democracy. Central to its definition and functioning was the principle that citizens in a democratic state are entitled periodically to elect candidates to representative assemblies and executive offices which hold the reins of governmental power.

Read PDF version here

Copyright 2012 John Keane | Subscribe to RSS