This review seeks to contextualize the perception that the thinker Jacques Rancière has about the contemporary political structure and the concept of democracy. The text is careful to present the author’s criticism of current democracies and the way governments demonstrate and defend their structures. The French thinker is emphatic in stating that the responsibility for the removal of entities from the public environment is the result of an action by the governments themselves, which, in order to have greater freedom, encourage the masses to live only on the pursuit of the individual and private, an action the one that would generate what Rancière calls hatred of democracy
The defence and promotion of democracy through (and in) education is a major concern today. Scholars...
open access articleThe democratic leadership literature emphasises those leadership practices that i...
 In the work of Jacques Rancière one encounters a welcome and uncompromising return to the questio...
The article presents an introduction to the Special Issue on the French philosopher Jacques Rancière...
This thesis advances a critique of the political theory of Jacques Rancière, focusing on the problem...
In his Hatred of Democracy Jacques Rancière defines democracy as a way to have power over two ‘exces...
Taking as his point of departure the London Tottenham riots, a product of a mob lacking political co...
Several authors have recently stressed the constitutive and ubiquitous nature of representation, whi...
This work seeks to examine the problematic notion of political competence in modern democratic syste...
Among readers of Jacques Rancière there is a discussion about the possibility of aesthetics substitu...
The idea of “literary democracy” can be traced back to the early twentieth century, which this artic...
Since the publication of his last book-length political polemic, 'Hatred of Democracy' (2005), the w...
This article aims to reflect on democracy in the light of the work entitled "The hatred of democracy...
In his influential book Disagreement: Politics and Philosophy Jacques Ranciere builds a substantial ...
Post-democracy and Administrative Law “Post-democracy” leads back to the political concepts of Colin...
The defence and promotion of democracy through (and in) education is a major concern today. Scholars...
open access articleThe democratic leadership literature emphasises those leadership practices that i...
 In the work of Jacques Rancière one encounters a welcome and uncompromising return to the questio...
The article presents an introduction to the Special Issue on the French philosopher Jacques Rancière...
This thesis advances a critique of the political theory of Jacques Rancière, focusing on the problem...
In his Hatred of Democracy Jacques Rancière defines democracy as a way to have power over two ‘exces...
Taking as his point of departure the London Tottenham riots, a product of a mob lacking political co...
Several authors have recently stressed the constitutive and ubiquitous nature of representation, whi...
This work seeks to examine the problematic notion of political competence in modern democratic syste...
Among readers of Jacques Rancière there is a discussion about the possibility of aesthetics substitu...
The idea of “literary democracy” can be traced back to the early twentieth century, which this artic...
Since the publication of his last book-length political polemic, 'Hatred of Democracy' (2005), the w...
This article aims to reflect on democracy in the light of the work entitled "The hatred of democracy...
In his influential book Disagreement: Politics and Philosophy Jacques Ranciere builds a substantial ...
Post-democracy and Administrative Law “Post-democracy” leads back to the political concepts of Colin...
The defence and promotion of democracy through (and in) education is a major concern today. Scholars...
open access articleThe democratic leadership literature emphasises those leadership practices that i...
 In the work of Jacques Rancière one encounters a welcome and uncompromising return to the questio...