Is Democratic Theory for Export?

Ethics and International Affairs 1:53-71 (1987)
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Abstract

A prominent feature of American political consciousness is a desire to propagate democracy throughout the world. In our enthusiasm to share what we enjoy, Jacques Barzun sees that little attention is paid to exactly what we are trying to distribute. Through a brief historical survey of democracy, he shows that our popular conception of the term does not correspond with any particular definition. U.S. democracy has no central text and is distinctly different, in theory and in practice, from the democracy of other states, both historical and contemporary. Democracy is an abstract ideal that is a function of time. Its present incarnation in the United States emphasizes freedom and equality through the means and language of specific personal rights. Barzun sees an internal tension in this formulation, one that ultimately threatens both freedom and equality if exported to the rest of the world.

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reprint Barzun, Jacques (1987) "Is Democratic Theory for Export?". Ethics International Affairs 1(1):53-71

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References found in this work

Rousseau and Burke.George H. Sabine & Annie Marion Osborn - 1941 - Philosophical Review 50 (5):538.
Rousseau and Burke.Annie Marion Osborn - 1940 - New York,: Russell & Russell.

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