The world is full of boundaries. Whatever their nature, boundaries provide the conditions for communal or individual identity and agency, and they make collective action possible. That very capacity to define and contain, however, allows boundaries to close off possibilities of being that might otherwise flourish. Paradoxically, boundaries both foster and inhibit freedom. This article explores how one particular boundary-ethnicity- has served both as an important source of identity and a cause of deep fracture in societies that this article calls severely fractured. The purpose of the article is to explore what institutional structures and processes might be appropriate to respond to the challenges that severely fractured societies fa...
Since the first generation of deliberative democratic theory, and the ‘deliberative turn’ in the 199...
Abstract. Ethnic violence has increased exponentially in the decades fol-lowing World War II. As suc...
"This essay deals with two questions: Is an internal pluralism of cultures compatible with the basic...
The world is full of boundaries. Whatever their nature, boundaries provide the conditions for commun...
When newly democratizing countries engage in processes of decision-making, a great deal rests upon t...
The coexistence of cultural and religious minorities in liberal democratic systems presents various ...
Abstract: The defenders of deliberative democracy insist in the idea that for searching political tr...
Theories of deliberative democracy, which emphasize open-mindedness and cooperative dialogue, confro...
The defenders of deliberative democracy insist in the idea that for searching political truths is ne...
We review institutional approaches to mitigating ethnic conflict and fostering stable democracy in p...
Through case-analysis and cross-sectional assessment of eleven countries this collection explores th...
Democratic theory passed through two major developments during the last 20 years: the first one was ...
Multicultural societies are marked by the coexistence of ethnic, sexual, religious, racial, and cult...
Societies can be held together in many ways. Historically, many groups were linked by a common histo...
Democracy is crucially about inclusion: a theory of democracy must account for who is to be included...
Since the first generation of deliberative democratic theory, and the ‘deliberative turn’ in the 199...
Abstract. Ethnic violence has increased exponentially in the decades fol-lowing World War II. As suc...
"This essay deals with two questions: Is an internal pluralism of cultures compatible with the basic...
The world is full of boundaries. Whatever their nature, boundaries provide the conditions for commun...
When newly democratizing countries engage in processes of decision-making, a great deal rests upon t...
The coexistence of cultural and religious minorities in liberal democratic systems presents various ...
Abstract: The defenders of deliberative democracy insist in the idea that for searching political tr...
Theories of deliberative democracy, which emphasize open-mindedness and cooperative dialogue, confro...
The defenders of deliberative democracy insist in the idea that for searching political truths is ne...
We review institutional approaches to mitigating ethnic conflict and fostering stable democracy in p...
Through case-analysis and cross-sectional assessment of eleven countries this collection explores th...
Democratic theory passed through two major developments during the last 20 years: the first one was ...
Multicultural societies are marked by the coexistence of ethnic, sexual, religious, racial, and cult...
Societies can be held together in many ways. Historically, many groups were linked by a common histo...
Democracy is crucially about inclusion: a theory of democracy must account for who is to be included...
Since the first generation of deliberative democratic theory, and the ‘deliberative turn’ in the 199...
Abstract. Ethnic violence has increased exponentially in the decades fol-lowing World War II. As suc...
"This essay deals with two questions: Is an internal pluralism of cultures compatible with the basic...