Description

Book Synopsis

What is it like to live in an illiberal regime? Ethical life in totalitarian regimes is easy to critique because it deviates from everything we think morally acceptable. But illiberal regimes are similar enough to liberal democracies to make addressing the experience of living there strikingly difficult.

Political ethics in illiberal regimes argues that the common language of normative political theory is simply not up to the task of capturing this experience. On the one hand, we do not really need political theory to know why illiberal regimes are dangerous and undesirable. On the other, we do need political theory – at least of a certain realist kind – to understand why millions of reasonable people come to terms with living in such regimes.

The book presents a novel theoretical language – Williamsian, liberal and realist – to articulate this experience. Part I lays out the theoretical framework, while Part II examines how politicians, experts and citizens in illiberal regimes are confronted with role-specific, political-ethical challenges and how the various normative contexts of their roles shape their agency.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: In theory
1 The case for a liberal political realism
2 A neo-Aristotelian regime theory to the rescue
3 The political-ethical experience of living in illiberal regimes
Part II: In practice
4 The politics of illiberal ambition
5 Independence in an illiberal regime
6 Illiberal citizenship
Conclusion
References
Index

Political Ethics in Illiberal Regimes: A Realist

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    A Hardback by Zoltán Gábor Szucs

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      View other formats and editions of Political Ethics in Illiberal Regimes: A Realist by Zoltán Gábor Szucs

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 25/04/2023
      ISBN13: 9781526142344, 978-1526142344
      ISBN10: 1526142341

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      What is it like to live in an illiberal regime? Ethical life in totalitarian regimes is easy to critique because it deviates from everything we think morally acceptable. But illiberal regimes are similar enough to liberal democracies to make addressing the experience of living there strikingly difficult.

      Political ethics in illiberal regimes argues that the common language of normative political theory is simply not up to the task of capturing this experience. On the one hand, we do not really need political theory to know why illiberal regimes are dangerous and undesirable. On the other, we do need political theory – at least of a certain realist kind – to understand why millions of reasonable people come to terms with living in such regimes.

      The book presents a novel theoretical language – Williamsian, liberal and realist – to articulate this experience. Part I lays out the theoretical framework, while Part II examines how politicians, experts and citizens in illiberal regimes are confronted with role-specific, political-ethical challenges and how the various normative contexts of their roles shape their agency.



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments
      Introduction
      Part I: In theory
      1 The case for a liberal political realism
      2 A neo-Aristotelian regime theory to the rescue
      3 The political-ethical experience of living in illiberal regimes
      Part II: In practice
      4 The politics of illiberal ambition
      5 Independence in an illiberal regime
      6 Illiberal citizenship
      Conclusion
      References
      Index

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