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Many observers of American politics believe that representative government, particularly in the Congress, is failing. This book examines the case for failure: what are the outward signs, and how do they reflect breaches of underlying norms of fair and effective representation? The book argues that good representation demands healthy competition between parties, but that in today's America, that competition has run off the rails.
List of contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction - Henry E. Brady
- FOR THE PEOPLE? DEMOCRATIC REPRESENTATION IN AMERICA
- Preface and OverviewLecture I: Intimations of Failure - Charles R. Beitz
- Lecture II: Regulating Rivalry - Charles R. Beitz
- COMMENTARIES
- The Preference-Policy Link and Representation - Martin Gilens
- Systems, Dyads, and a Contingency Theory of Competition: A Citizen's View - Jane Mansbridge
- Unrepresentative Democracy in America - Pamela S. Karlen
- RESPONSE
- Reply to Commentators: Preferences and Policy, Legitimacy, and Countermajoritarianism - Charles R. Beitz
- References
- Index
About the author
Charles R. Beitz teaches political philosophy at Princeton University, where he has been director of the University Center for Human Values and the Program in Political Philosophy. He served previously as dean for academic affairs and professor of government at Bowdoin College and professor of political science at Swarthmore College. He was editor of Philosophy & Public Affairs for a decade. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has held fellowships from the Guggenheim, MacArthur, and Rockefeller Foundations, the American Council of Learned Societies, and the American Council on Education.
Henry E. Brady is Class of 1941 Monroe Deutsch Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Public Policy at the University of California Berkeley. He has served as president of the American Political Science Association and dean of the Goldman School of Public Policy at UC Berkeley. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He has written on public opinion and political participation, political methodology, Canadian and American elections, the collapse of the Soviet Union, and topics in public policy including higher education, social welfare, and voting systems.
Summary
Many scholars of American government believe representative democracy is failing more systematically than even the recent spectacle of political extremism suggests. Unprecedented levels of elite polarization, severe partisan gerrymandering, weakened party institutions, easing of restrictions on campaign finance, and other forces-all in the context of rising levels of economic inequality-produce dysfunction that subverts healthy political competition. A gridlocked U.S. Congress offers few solutions to broadly recognized public problems. Legislation favors the interests of elites when they conflict with those of the majority.
In his 2022 Berkeley Tanner Lectures, Charles Beitz examines the narrative of dysfunction by reading the literature of political science as democratic theory. The narrative raises two questions. First, are symptoms documented by political scientists really failures? What norms of democratic representation do they infringe? This is a problem of diagnosis. Second, what would successful democratic representation look like? This is a problem of prescription. Beitz's book explores both.
The literatures of political scientists, constitutional lawyers, and democratic theorists on norms of democratic representation tend to cross too seldom. They do not agree about the meaning of fair and effective representation. One might look to democratic theory for insight, but for the most part it has been too remote from political practice to illuminate the problems of America's recent institutional history. Beitz's lectures bring the theory of democratic representation into closer contact with its troubled American practice. Emphasizing the constructive role that competition can play in democratic politics, they aim to articulate systemic norms for fair and effective democratic representation through critical engagement with the findings of scholars who have studied it in the wild.
The volume includes commentaries by a political scientist, Martin Gilens; a constitutional lawyer, Pamela S. Karlan; and a political theorist, Jane Mansbridge. Their commentaries elaborate themes in the lectures and pose critical questions. Charles Beitz responds in a concluding comment.