Democracy and Competition

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Social Sciences

Alfred Moore

Samuel Bagg

The British Academy

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pages : 192
format : Hardback
illustrated

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Rethinking the Forms, Purposes, and Values of Competition in Democracy

Sets out to reframe the role of competition in democratic theory. Competition is the defining feature of modern democratic politics. On the dominant account of ‘competitive democracy’, competition is framed as electoral competition. This framing is shared by both defenders and critics of the dominant model, who then argue whether democracy needs more or less (of this kind of) competition. However, the contributions to this volume highlight the diversity of concepts, sites, and modes of competition within democratic politics. They ask: when, where, and what kinds of competition we need in democracies today, what purposes these varied forms of competition serve, and what kinds of competition threaten democracy.

This volume aims to set a new research agenda for democratic theorists of all stripes, while also making arguments about competition and institutional design that are relevant to empirical political science, legal scholarship, and studies of communication.

Alfred Moore

Alfred Moore is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Politics at the University of York.

Samuel Bagg

Samuel Bagg is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of South Carolina.

Agence Schweiger