Providential Democracy

Regular price €82.99
A01=Dominique Schnapper
Author_Dominique Schnapper
Big City Policies
Category=JPHV
citizenship rights Europe
Collective Transcendence
Common Language
Cultural Rights
democraticus
Direct Democracy
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
equity versus equality
homo
Homo Democraticus
Immigrant Population Groups
Minimum Insertion Income
multicultural integration
Multicultural Policy
Myth Symbol Complexes
National Employment Agency
Political Transcendence
positive discrimination policy
providence
Providence State
Providence State Societies
Providential Democracy
Republican Transcendence
Salaried Employee Society
Salaried Employees
Sensitive Urban Zones
Social Protection System
social stratification analysis
state
Thirty Glorious Years
Unconditional Minimum Income
United Political Europe
Universal Vocation
welfare state identity politics
welfare state theory
Zones Urbaines Sensibles

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765803061
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Jan 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Democracy posits the universality of the equality principle: a community of citizens is governed by the principle of the formal equality of all individuals, whatever their real social, cultural, or other inequalities. Democratization, on the other hand, is motivated by the ambition of ensuring the real equality of citizens, and not simply their formal equality. The dynamics of democracy are thus insured by the development of a welfare state that increasingly intervenes in order to satisfy the social and economic needs of individuals. Especially focused on France, yet informed by the experiences of other European countries, this book examines the dilemmas of the search for equality in society and politics.

Democratization guarantees the rights of salaried workers and employees, the rights to material survival and housing, as well as health care, education, and culture. Today, however, as Schnapper observes, its action has become paradoxical. As the fruit of a praiseworthy concern to ensure the universality of rights, what Schnapper identifies as a "Providence State" now aims, by means of positive discrimination and other specific promotion policies, to defend the particular rights of certain categories of individuals. The action of the Providence State thus nourishes an aspiration: that the identities of historical collectivities gathered within the same national society be publicly recognized, and that these have rights. Equity thus supplants equality; and multiculturalism, universality. Such is the ordeal currently experienced by Western democracies, which are faced with the increasingly "providential" nature of their societies. Indeed, the author asks, how can a united political Europe be constructed on the ideals and institutions of citizenship, when European nations are becoming providential democracies?

Providential Democracy offers a searching and timely critique of democratization that will be of interest to sociologists, political scientists, and historians.

Dominique Schnapper is professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales and a member of the French Constitutional Council. Among her seventeen books are Community of Citizens: On the Modern Idea of Nationality (available from Transaction), The France of Integration, and A Europe of Immigrants. John Taylor is the auuthor of four collections of stories and short prose and Paths to Contemporary French Literature (available from Transaction).