<p>Financial crisis, economic globalization and the strengthening of neoliberal policies present stark challenges to traditional conceptions of representative democracy. Yet, at the same time, new opportunities are emerging that propose alternative visions for the future of democracy.</p><p>In this
How Social Movements Can Save Democracy: Democratic Innovations from Below
β Scribed by Donatella della Porta
- Publisher
- Polity
- Year
- 2020
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 205
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The birth of democracies owes much to the interventions and mobilizations of ordinary people. Yet many feel as though they have inherited democratic institutions which do not deliver for the people β that a rigid democratic process has been imposed from above, with increasing numbers of people feeling left out or left behind.
In this well-researched volume, leading political sociologist Donatella della Porta rehabilitates the role social movements have long played in fostering and deepening democracy, particularly focusing on progressive movements of the Left which have sought to broaden the plurality of voices and knowledge in democratic debate. Bridging social movement studies and democratic theory, della Porta investigates contemporary innovations in times of crisis, particularly those in the direction of participatory and deliberative practices β βcrowd-sourced constitutionsβ, referendums from below and movement parties β and reflects on the potential and limits of such alternative politics.
In a moment in which concerns increase for the potential disruption of a Great Regression led by xenophobic movements and parties, the cases and analyses of resistance in this volume offer important material for students and scholars of political sociology, political science and social movement studies.
β¦ Table of Contents
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgements
1. Democratic Innovations and Social Movements
2. Crowd-Sourced Constitutionalism: Social Movements in the Constitutional Process
3. Referendums from Below: Direct Democracy and Social Movements
4. Movement Parties in the Great Recession
5. Progressive Movements and Democratic Innovations: Some Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
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