JOURNAL ARTICLE

Inclusion and Democracy. By Iris Marion Young. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000. 304p. $29.95.

Barbara Cruikshank

Year: 2002 Journal:   American Political Science Review Vol: 96 (1)Pages: 200-201   Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Abstract

Engaging her contemporaries in debates over democratic ideals and processes, Iris M. Young offers a collection of seven essays that mitigate arguments on either side of those debates (participation vs. representation, localism vs. state, segregation vs. integration, identity vs. difference) by applying the critical ideal of inclusion. She argues that the normative legitimacy of democratic decisions rests upon the extent to which those affected by decisions are included in or have the opportunity to enter the decision making process. One might think that inclusion solves only one problem, the problem of exclusion, for democracy. However, Young extends the ideal of inclusion across manifold debates in democratic theory and speaks broadly to the less than ideal conditions under which we now practice democracy.

Keywords:
Democracy Inclusion (mineral) Ideal (ethics) Legitimacy Sociology Identity (music) Inclusion–exclusion principle Normative Representation (politics) Deliberative democracy Localism Citizenship Political science Epistemology Law Social science Aesthetics Philosophy Politics

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Topics

Political Philosophy and Ethics
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Political Science and International Relations
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