This article formulates the concept of democracy as a configuration to overcome the rigid universalist, liberal-proceduralist dominated conceptions of democracy that define invariant core elements and combine them with culturally individualistic features. Instead, the approach presented here focuses on the basic principles behind democracy. Lincoln’s often-criticized broad definition of democracy as “government by, of, and for the people” provides the opportunity for an open, transglobal approach that focuses on the premise of political self-efficacy for all citizens and portrays democracy not as a mechanism but as a way of life. Political self-efficacy can be institutionalized in different ways, so this contribution refers to specific models of democracy (e.g., liberal, republican, or communitarian)
CITATION STYLE
Osterberg-Kaufmann, N., Stark, T., & Mohamad-Klotzbach, C. (2023). Conceptualizing Difference The Normative Core of Democracy. Democratic Theory, 10(1), 72–90. https://doi.org/10.3167/dt.2023.100106
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