The article points out that the concept of democracy as used by people at large has been ignored in the research on democratisation and interwar democracy. It also shows some of the ways in which the rhetoric of democracy has been sidestepped, discussing some structuralist and other preconditionalist accounts in which the focus has been on the questions of modernisation and legitimacy as well as on political culture and ideological traditions. The article shows, furthermore, that studies of democratic transition have displayed some interest in the rhetorical aspect of politics, although this potential has not been fully played out. The article points out the difficulty of doing comparative research on the language of democracy, but neverthe...
Will Kymlicka has argued “democratic politics is politics in the vernacular.” Does it imply that dem...
It is often argued that the Scandinavian post-war period was marked by a democratic optimism that co...
This introductory article to Democratic Theory’s special issue on the marginalized democracies of th...
It is often pointed out in the literature of democratisation and the breakdown of democracy that old...
In some of the most established and supposedly immutable liberal democracies, diverse social groups...
textThis study was motivated by a variety of democratic experience in the world that interchangeably...
How was democracy achieved in nineteenth-century Europe? This article reviews fours recent books tha...
The interwar period witnessed fierce criticism of the ways in which parliamentary democracies were o...
The article explores the ‘democratic turn’ in political theory and the nascent ideological status of...
textThe traditional master-narrative in histories of rhetoric assumes that formal democratic institu...
This article analyses changes in party-manifesto references to democracy in post-war Britain, the Fr...
Who gets to interpret why “ordinary” citizens abstain from voting? Usually perceived as a model demo...
The purpose of this article is to introduce an innovative approach to the theoretical debate of the ...
We report differences in political rhetoric within former East- and West-German journalists’ editori...
The main argument of this paper is directed against the thesis that we are in a post-democratic era....
Will Kymlicka has argued “democratic politics is politics in the vernacular.” Does it imply that dem...
It is often argued that the Scandinavian post-war period was marked by a democratic optimism that co...
This introductory article to Democratic Theory’s special issue on the marginalized democracies of th...
It is often pointed out in the literature of democratisation and the breakdown of democracy that old...
In some of the most established and supposedly immutable liberal democracies, diverse social groups...
textThis study was motivated by a variety of democratic experience in the world that interchangeably...
How was democracy achieved in nineteenth-century Europe? This article reviews fours recent books tha...
The interwar period witnessed fierce criticism of the ways in which parliamentary democracies were o...
The article explores the ‘democratic turn’ in political theory and the nascent ideological status of...
textThe traditional master-narrative in histories of rhetoric assumes that formal democratic institu...
This article analyses changes in party-manifesto references to democracy in post-war Britain, the Fr...
Who gets to interpret why “ordinary” citizens abstain from voting? Usually perceived as a model demo...
The purpose of this article is to introduce an innovative approach to the theoretical debate of the ...
We report differences in political rhetoric within former East- and West-German journalists’ editori...
The main argument of this paper is directed against the thesis that we are in a post-democratic era....
Will Kymlicka has argued “democratic politics is politics in the vernacular.” Does it imply that dem...
It is often argued that the Scandinavian post-war period was marked by a democratic optimism that co...
This introductory article to Democratic Theory’s special issue on the marginalized democracies of th...