'Overall, Wingenbach's work is a passionate and thoughtful defense of agonistic democracy and its need to be institutionalized. Against those who claim that agonistic thought provides little foundation for positive political formulations, Wingenbach carefully and with great skill develops an agonistic liberalism that is faithful to agonistic philosophy and political liberalism. The first half of the work provides an accessible and rich analysis of the various strands of agonistic thought. Then, Wingenbach develops an innovative and compelling version of agonistic liberalism that will appeal to those seeking to develop a post-foundational political thought on the principles of agonistic philosophy or its close relatives, postmodernism and postcolonialism. In so doing, Wingenbach offers a clear and convincing response to those critics of agonism who claim that its Achilles heel is that it provides little or no guidance for creating political institutions.' William Paul Simmons, Arizona State University, USA 'Wingenbach reads agonistic democracy soberly and pragmatically; he reads Rawls radically. This leads him to the counterintuitive yet pathbreaking conclusion that only political liberalism can provide safe harbor for the principles and ethos of agonistic democracy. This book may please neither Rawlsians nor radical democrats, yet it will show both that the future of democracy lies in the formation of democratic institutions that foster agonism.' Samuel A. Chambers, Johns Hopkins University, USA 'Wingenbach artfully develops the institutional framework of agonistic pluralism. Given the agonistic commitment to exposing and contesting the inevitable violence, exclusions and remainders of forms of political order, this is no easy task. Closely engaged with a broad range of contemporary democratic theory, this book brings agonistic and post-structuralist theory "into the fold" of liberal theory and political science research on institutions, offering a time