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Democracy: Anthropological Approaches
Paperback

Democracy: Anthropological Approaches

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In recent decades, powerful institutions have packaged Western democracy for export around the globe. Although Western democracy is grounded in specific historical experiences and cultural assumptions, advocates have generally taken its normative status for granted. So too have most academics. Yet if democracy is broadly understood as government by the people, it must necessarily differ along with the people in question. Just what the will of the people is and how it might be realized become questions of pressing importance. Rather than advance alternative definitions of democracy, celebrate alternative democracies, or posit alternatives to democracy, the contributors to this volume focus on the way that specific definitions of democracy are advanced as normative and others eclipsed, and how certain claims to represent the will of the people gain currency and others are silenced. While previous scholars of democracy have proposed one definitive model after another, the authors in this work suggest that democracy is by nature an open ended set of questions about the workings of power–questions best engaged through the dialogical processes of fieldwork and ethnographic writing.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
SAR Press
Country
United States
Date
10 December 2008
Pages
280
ISBN
9781934691076

In recent decades, powerful institutions have packaged Western democracy for export around the globe. Although Western democracy is grounded in specific historical experiences and cultural assumptions, advocates have generally taken its normative status for granted. So too have most academics. Yet if democracy is broadly understood as government by the people, it must necessarily differ along with the people in question. Just what the will of the people is and how it might be realized become questions of pressing importance. Rather than advance alternative definitions of democracy, celebrate alternative democracies, or posit alternatives to democracy, the contributors to this volume focus on the way that specific definitions of democracy are advanced as normative and others eclipsed, and how certain claims to represent the will of the people gain currency and others are silenced. While previous scholars of democracy have proposed one definitive model after another, the authors in this work suggest that democracy is by nature an open ended set of questions about the workings of power–questions best engaged through the dialogical processes of fieldwork and ethnographic writing.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
SAR Press
Country
United States
Date
10 December 2008
Pages
280
ISBN
9781934691076