Democratic Change: Normative Guidance to Political Actors on the Use of Violence Pubblico
Raghuveera, Nikhil (2014)
Abstract
Recent cases such as those in Egypt, Libya and Syria demonstrate moments when citizens turn to political violence to overthrow an oppressive regime and institute democratic change. The problem, however, is that very little literature exists on how violence should be used for achieving democratic aims. A plethora of literature exists on nonviolent principles, but guidance on well-used violence has largely been left out even though political actors continue to resort to violent means for political change. This thesis offers normative guidance to political actors on how they can use violence to foster conditions for the emergence of democracy.
The thesis first considers the arguments of John Schwarzmantel, Sheldon Wolin, and Niccolò Machiavelli. Schwarzmantel takes an institutional approach to argue that political violence undermines an existing liberal democracy, and that democratization is promoted through inclusion of citizens into institutions. Wolin, on the other hand, explains that true democracy as total political equality emerges only in the eruptive nature of revolution with the transgression of laws and institutions. Both theorists provide valuable insight into democracy and political violence, but fail to explain how violence can be used to create a sustainable democracy. Furthermore, political and social cleavages present difficulties going forward in the wake of violence. Machiavelli proposes executing political opponents as a solution, but this method undermines democracy. Therefore, an approach for reconciliation is needed after the use of violence in order to maintain the new state.
This thesis provides a middle way that serves as a direct
response to the problems presented by Wolin, Schwarzmantel, and
Machiavelli. The proposed solution is an organized and inclusive
violence that creates conditions for democracy, and a
reconciliation process driven by consociationalism and truth and
reconciliation commissions. This solution gives democratic-aiming
political actors on the ground principles for violence that can
successfully realize political change.
Table of Contents
Introduction - Guidance on the Use of Political
Violence...1
Chapter 1 - Schwarzmantel, Wolin, and Machiavelli: An Assessment
and the Need for Another Way...14
Chapter 2 - Organized and Inclusive Democratic Violence...42
Chapter 3 - Sustaining Democracy...69
Conclusion - Theory in Practice...108
About this Honors Thesis
School | |
---|---|
Department | |
Degree | |
Submission | |
Language |
|
Research Field | |
Parola chiave | |
Committee Chair / Thesis Advisor | |
Committee Members |
Primary PDF
Thumbnail | Title | Date Uploaded | Actions |
---|---|---|---|
Democratic Change: Normative Guidance to Political Actors on the Use of Violence () | 2018-08-28 11:39:56 -0400 |
|
Supplemental Files
Thumbnail | Title | Date Uploaded | Actions |
---|