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Conclusion : democratising the history of democracy

chapter
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by Benjamin IsakhanBenjamin Isakhan, S Stockwell
The aim of The Secret History of Democracy has been to open debate on a larger view of democratic practice than that encapsulated by its wellknown standard history. The book came about from a concern that, while democracy was experiencing an ascendancy that began in the aftermath of the Second World War and intensified with the end of the Cold War, the global uptake of this particular form of governance came at the very moment when its limitations were becoming clearer: in its European and American heartlands there was less interest in participating in democracy; Clinton began in hope but ended in scandal; 9/11 was a victory for intolerance precisely because Western democracy restricted its own freedoms; the Bush, Blair and Howard governments became less relevant to their constituents and waged unpopular wars; the global financial crisis revealed democracy’s dependence on a flawed economic model; and difficulties in dealing with the global impact of climate change showed the limitations of national democracies, hostage to sectional interests. The exemplars of democracy were not having an easy time.

History

Title of book

The secret history of democracy

Chapter number

14

Pagination

219 - 224

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

Place of publication

London, Eng.

ISBN-13

9780230244214

Language

eng

Publication classification

B Book chapter; B1.1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2011, Palgrave Macmillan

Extent

14

Editor/Contributor(s)

B Isakhan

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