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Democracy’s Meanings challenges conventional wisdom regarding how the public thinks about and evaluates democracy. Mining both political theory and more than 75 years of public opinion data, the book argues that Americans think about democracy in ways that go beyond voting or elected representation. Instead, citizens have rich and substantive views about the material conditions that democracy should produce, which draw from their beliefs about equality, fairness, and justice.The authors construct a typology of views about democracy. Procedural views of democracy take a minimalistic quality. While voting and fair treatment are important to this vision of democracy, ideas about equality are mostly limited to civil liberties. In contrast, social views of democracy incorporate both civil and economic equality; according to people with these views, democracy ought to meet the basic social and material needs of citizens. Complementing these two groups are moderate and indifferent views about democracy. While moderate views sit somewhere in between procedural and social perspectives regarding the role of democracy in producing social and economic equality, indifferent views of democracy involve disaffection toward it. For a small group of apathetic citizens, democracy is an ambiguous and ill-defined concept.
Nicholas T. Davis is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Alabama.Keith Gåddie is Professor in the College of Architecture at the University of Oklahoma.Kirby Goidel is Professor in the Department of Political Science at Texas A&M University.
List of figuresList of tablesAcknowledgementsPrefaceChapter 1 – IntroductionChapter 2 – What is democracy? Definitions and scholarly disagreementsChapter 3 – Polling the public about democracyChapter 4 – Creating and validating a typology of democratic meaningsChapter 5 – The correlates of the democracy typologyChapter 6 – Compromise and representation within the democracy typologyChapter 7 – Support for democracyChapter 8 – Democratic norms and the democracy typologyChapter 9 – ConclusionAppendix – Technical details and supplementary analysisReferences
“How should we think about the crisis of American democracy and what can we do about it? Democracy’s Meanings sheds crucial light on these questions with rigorous data analysis, and points a way forward: Americans are still committed to democracy, but they want it to do more for them. Only a democracy that truly delivers the social and economic goods is one that will thrive.”—Lee Drutman, New America