This article presents a normative‐theoretical account of democratic legitimacy that meets the challenge of moral and cultural pluralism in a way that takes the avoidance of oppression and violence to be a fundamental imperative. The discourse‐theoretical perspective of jürgen Habermas reveals that reasoned agreement among citizens is the only alternative to political oppression. Pace Habermas, however, the legitimacy of even basic constitutional principles does not require us to agree with one another for the same reasons. While we can affirm such principles for a wide range of different reasons, the process of achieving reasoned agreements on contentious issues draws us together as citizens in loyalty to a particular, historical set of pol...
The enterprise of democratic constitutionalism rests upon the premise of collective agency. If we as...
This Article draws on Black American intellectual history to offer an approach to fundamental questi...
This chapter develops a number of analytical tools and ideal-typical models to investigate the rela...
This article presents a normative‐theoretical account of democratic legitimacy that meets the challe...
This article addresses the question of how, if at all, citizens can sustain an effective sense of po...
This article offers a critical assessment of Jürgen Habermas's discourse theory of democracy. It sug...
As part of a collection of essays, this paper discusses constitutional claims proposed by national i...
The aim of this Article is to introduce and clarify a new way of thinking about decisions in close c...
Interest in constitutionalism and in the relationship among constitutions, national identity, and et...
Contains fulltext : 155429.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This article ...
This article explains how John Rawls and Jürgen Habermas offer away out of the conflicts that occur ...
The last fifty years has seen a worldwide trend toward constitutional democracy. But can constitutio...
Habermas proposes a new solution to the problematic relation between republican values and democracy...
“Legitimation by Constitution” is the authors’ name for a key idea in Rawlsian political liberalism,...
The enterprise of democratic constitutionalism rests upon the premise of collective agency. If we as...
This Article draws on Black American intellectual history to offer an approach to fundamental questi...
This chapter develops a number of analytical tools and ideal-typical models to investigate the rela...
This article presents a normative‐theoretical account of democratic legitimacy that meets the challe...
This article addresses the question of how, if at all, citizens can sustain an effective sense of po...
This article offers a critical assessment of Jürgen Habermas's discourse theory of democracy. It sug...
As part of a collection of essays, this paper discusses constitutional claims proposed by national i...
The aim of this Article is to introduce and clarify a new way of thinking about decisions in close c...
Interest in constitutionalism and in the relationship among constitutions, national identity, and et...
Contains fulltext : 155429.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This article ...
This article explains how John Rawls and Jürgen Habermas offer away out of the conflicts that occur ...
The last fifty years has seen a worldwide trend toward constitutional democracy. But can constitutio...
Habermas proposes a new solution to the problematic relation between republican values and democracy...
“Legitimation by Constitution” is the authors’ name for a key idea in Rawlsian political liberalism,...
The enterprise of democratic constitutionalism rests upon the premise of collective agency. If we as...
This Article draws on Black American intellectual history to offer an approach to fundamental questi...
This chapter develops a number of analytical tools and ideal-typical models to investigate the rela...