In this article, I engage with what relevant literature addresses as the ‘paradox of democracy’ and trace it back to the dialectic between authorization and representation established by social contract theories. To make my argument, I take Rousseau’s Social Contract as a paradigmatic example of the paradox and analyse it in light of Hegel’s critical response. My aim is to show that, although Rousseau rejects the idea of representing the popular will, representation resurfaces in his Republic from top to bottom and engenders a structural opposition between citizens and rulers: drawing on the Hegelian scrutiny of contractarianism, I focus on three key moments in Rousseau’s theory, namely the Lawgiver, the majority rule and the executive powe...
This thesis places Jean-Jacques Rousseau in the "realist" or raison d'état tradition of political th...
The purpose of this discussion paper is to promote a reconsideration of the political theory of Jean...
The expansion and continuing prestige of democracy no longer seems inevitable. Doubts frequently ari...
In this article, I engage with what relevant literature addresses as the ‘paradox of democracy’ and ...
This dissertation investigates Rousseau’s normative defence of democracy, beginning with his thought...
Although it may seem as a paradox, but in 1767, in a letter addressed to the Marquis de Mirabeau, JJ...
This article examines the intersection in Hegel’s political thought between Aristotelianism – with i...
The Social Contract was first published in 1752. From then on, Rousseau's conception of democracy ha...
”The sovereign cannot be represented, divided or broken up in anyway” wrote Rousseau in The Social C...
In the author’s opinion we can agree that the theories of contractualism provide an excellent found...
"PENIGAUD de MOURGUES Théophile" Source : ABES [http://www.idref.fr/033702462/id] - theses.fr, 16/03...
© The Author 2016. Rousseau has always had an uncertain relationship with the theory of constituent ...
This thesis expounds the view that the notion of radical democracy advanced by Laclau and Mouffe, as...
The thinking of Rousseau and Habermas, as social theorists, confirms the understanding of democracy ...
This article considers whether Rousseau’s Social Contract allows us to think of a popular revolt aga...
This thesis places Jean-Jacques Rousseau in the "realist" or raison d'état tradition of political th...
The purpose of this discussion paper is to promote a reconsideration of the political theory of Jean...
The expansion and continuing prestige of democracy no longer seems inevitable. Doubts frequently ari...
In this article, I engage with what relevant literature addresses as the ‘paradox of democracy’ and ...
This dissertation investigates Rousseau’s normative defence of democracy, beginning with his thought...
Although it may seem as a paradox, but in 1767, in a letter addressed to the Marquis de Mirabeau, JJ...
This article examines the intersection in Hegel’s political thought between Aristotelianism – with i...
The Social Contract was first published in 1752. From then on, Rousseau's conception of democracy ha...
”The sovereign cannot be represented, divided or broken up in anyway” wrote Rousseau in The Social C...
In the author’s opinion we can agree that the theories of contractualism provide an excellent found...
"PENIGAUD de MOURGUES Théophile" Source : ABES [http://www.idref.fr/033702462/id] - theses.fr, 16/03...
© The Author 2016. Rousseau has always had an uncertain relationship with the theory of constituent ...
This thesis expounds the view that the notion of radical democracy advanced by Laclau and Mouffe, as...
The thinking of Rousseau and Habermas, as social theorists, confirms the understanding of democracy ...
This article considers whether Rousseau’s Social Contract allows us to think of a popular revolt aga...
This thesis places Jean-Jacques Rousseau in the "realist" or raison d'état tradition of political th...
The purpose of this discussion paper is to promote a reconsideration of the political theory of Jean...
The expansion and continuing prestige of democracy no longer seems inevitable. Doubts frequently ari...