Is This Any Way to Run a Democratic Government?

Capa
Stephen J. Wayne
Georgetown University Press, 15/04/2004 - 208 páginas

Has our system of checks and balances between the three branches of our federal government undergone changes for good or ill over the years since the Constitution was set as the cornerstone of our nation? How stand our political traditions, our personal freedoms, our purported equality, our sense of governance "of, by, and for the people"? Are we the democratic nation we set out to be, or do we have a distance to go to achieve this ideal? Alternatively, is approaching a democratic ideal desirable today in the light of the smaller, more integrated, and dangerous world in which we live?

Is This Any Way to Run a Democratic Government? examines the theory and practice of American democracy and the dichotomy that currently exists between them. The contributors assess both the reasons—and the consequences—of this division between the theory of democracy and how it is played out in actuality. Focusing on the here and now, this book is about the institutions, process, and politics of government: how well they work; whether they meet the criteria for a viable democratic system; and the extent to which they contribute to good public policy.

As we begin the 21st century, with rancorous political partisanship and threats to domestic security and tranquility at an all-time high, Is This Any Way to Run a Democratic Government? asks us to think seriously about the state of our much-heralded democracy, and whether or not our political system can respond to the pressing needs of a new era without jeopardizing the basic values and beliefs that underlie its very foundation.

 

Índice

Democratic Theory
1
Issues of Democratic Governance
3
The Civic Foundations of American Democracy
21
A Democratic Congress?
33
Campaign Contributions and Democracy
35
Money and the Possibility of Democratic Governance
51
Women in Congress Descriptive Representation and Democratic Governance
69
A Democratic Executive?
83
Democratic Government and the Unilateral Presidency
115
Can the Federal Budget Be Democratic? OMBs Invisible Hand
125
A Democratic Judiciary?
143
Does a Real Democracy Need Judicial Review? The Supreme Court as an Antidemocratic Institution
145
Entering the Political Thicket The Unintended Consequences of the Supreme Courts Reapportionment Decisions
157
Conclusion
173
Is This Any Way to Run a Democratic Government?
175
Contributors
181

A Government That Looks Like America?
85
The Promise and Peril of Presidential Polling Between Gallups Dream and the Morris Nightmare
101

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Passagens conhecidas

Página ix - There was a time when many said that the cultures of Japan and Germany were incapable of sustaining democratic values. Well, they were wrong. Some say the same of Iraq today. They are mistaken.

Acerca do autor (2004)

Stephen J. Wayne is a professor of government at Georgetown University and the author of The Road to the White House, and coauthor of Presidential Leadership.

Informação bibliográfica