Theorizing about Democracy

in Democratic Theory
Author:
Michael Saward University of Warwick m.j.saward@warwick.ac.uk

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Abstract

How can we theorize about democracy? We can identify the major topics that form the focus of democratic theorists (and others traversing the field), such as democracy's meaning and value. This article focuses on the methodological lenses through which the topics have been and can be viewed. Different lenses bring into focus different phenomena, questions, and problems of democracy. It is argued that the lenses that bring conventional democratic theory approaches into view can provide an unnecessarily narrow and restrictive perspective. Donning different methodological lenses can introduce alternative perspectives, such as renewed attention to value pluralism and the “everyday.” The article sketches four “circles” that capture different potential types of and sources for theoretical work, some of them radically unconventional. It concludes by discussing the specific example of how methods and assumptions of design theory can prompt promising new approaches to theorizing about democracy.

Contributor Notes

Michael Saward is a professor of politics within the department of politics and international studies at the University of Warwick. E–mail: m.j.saward@warwick.ac.uk

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