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Legitimacy in Liberal Democracies

الشرعية في الديمقراطيات الليبرالية

Not Translated

Explores how legitimacy should be treated in countries where authoritarian alternatives to democracy lack credibility

In this book, Studebaker develops a theory of legitimacy to explain the crisis of liberal democracy in established democracies, like the United Kingdom and the United States. In these countries there is deep dissatisfaction with political procedures, yet no credible alternatives have emerged. Without alternatives, the crisis cannot produce revolution. Instead, Studebaker suggests that the disagreements that ordinarily lead to political violence instead proliferate throughout the state and society. As the distinction between legitimacy and ideology blurs, efforts to generate legitimacy instead generate greater inequality, pluralism, and gridlock. As different factions try to save democracy in radically different ways, diverse advocates of democracy get in each other’s way and even begin to appear authoritarian to one another. In Legitimacy in Liberal Democracies, Studebaker depicts a legitimacy crisis rife with state capacity problems, in which citizens tell each other many conflicting legitimation stories as they search for ways to live with a dissatisfying political system they cannot replace. The result is a legitimation hydra – a state that is burdened by an excess of narratives, that struggles to take any action at all.

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Legitimacy in Liberal Democracies

Bibliographic Data

Author
Publisher‎ Edinburgh University PressWebsite
Countryبريطانيا
Primary CategoryIdeas and Policies
Published2024
LanguageEnglish (EN)
Pages208 pages
Editionfirst
Dimensions15×23
ISBN9781399534697
Translation
Not Translated

About Benjamin M. Studebaker

Benjamin M. Studebaker received his PhD in Politics and International Studies from the University of Cambridge.

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