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About this book
Democracy is usually conceived as based on self-rule or rule by the people, and it is this which is taken to ground the legitimacy of the democratic form of government. But who constitutes the people? Democratic political theory has a potentially fatal weakness at its core unless it can answer this question satisfactorily. In The Time of Popular Sovereignty, Paulina Ochoa Espejo examines the problems the concept of the people raises for liberal democratic theory, constitutional theory, and critical theory. She argues that to solve these problems, the people cannot be conceived as simply a collection of individuals. Rather, the people should be seen as a series of events, an ongoing process unfolding in time. She then offers a new theory of democratic peoplehood, laying the foundations for a new theory of democratic legitimacy.
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Information
Table of contents
- Front Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Table of Contents
- Untitled
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Time of the People
- Chapter One: The Mob and the People in Mexico
- Chapter Two: A Problem in Liberal Democratic Theory
- Chapter Three: Mechanical and Theological Conceptions of the People
- Chapter Four: Dynamic Constitutionalism and Historical Time
- Chapter Five: The People Between Change and Stability
- Chapter Six: Creative Freedom and the People as Process
- Chapter Seven: A Democratic People as Process
- Conclusion: Radical Realism
- Bibliography
- Index
- Back Cover