학술논문

The Two Faces of Democracy : Decentering Agonism and Deliberation
Document Type
Book
Author
Source
Subject
agonism
deliberation
democratic theory
populism
democratic mythic
communicative democracy
Politics
Political Theory
Language
English
Abstract
The democratic imagination is facing significant challenges. These challenges involve not only deep philosophical questions about the core values of democracy but also pressing practical issues related to how we should understand and confront the rise of right-wing authoritarian populism. What should our stance be as defenders of democratic life? The two most prominent efforts to orient us here are the deliberative and agonistic models of democracy. The former emphasizes reasoned discussion, but some worry that this exclusive focus overlooks structures of injustice that distort civil deliberation. The latter prioritizes contestation and conflict, but its proponents struggle to explain why this prime orientation to defeating political opponents will not also corrode our commitment to normative democratic restraints, like fairness. This book develops an understanding of the moral core of democracy. In doing so, it illuminates how these two faces of democratic life, the deliberative and agonistic, each has a significant, but constrained, role to play in a more capacious comprehension of what our democratic commitments require of us. The “communicative model” of democracy proposed here provides better grounds for facing the challenges of contemporary antidemocratic movements than either the deliberative or agonistic models alone.

Online Access