Description

Book Synopsis

Democratization is a process of collective emancipation through self-government. Continuous political contestation is essential for emancipation but, in order to know which strategies and conditions will emancipate us, we also need to know which ones subjugate us. Political mechanisms with the capacity to modulate our individual and collective bodies and make them docile tend to be close relatives of those which make us equal and free.

Drawing on the latest theories concerning globalization and democracy, this book argues that postnational and postsovereign multilevel governance regimes, including the European Union, should be understood as mechanisms of global capitalism aimed at privatizing democracy. Through a detailed applied analysis of the Basque case, the author illustrates how democratization is closely linked to ideas about territory, collective empowerment and institutional political capacity.

Democratization always takes place partially: it never «ends». Contrary to the dominant thinking, this book argues that the incomplete nature of democratization is a positive aspect, with perpetual conflict leading to perpetual change. This is precisely what allows, and obliges, each generation to shape its own forms of emancipation.



Table of Contents

CONTENTS: Introduction: Privatizing democracy – Global capitalism, democracy and the European Union – Democratization – Territory, political economy and the nation-state – Basque territories: Federation, nation and self-determination – Basque democratization.

Privatizing Democracy: Global Ideals, European

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    A Paperback / softback by Jule Goikoetxea

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      View other formats and editions of Privatizing Democracy: Global Ideals, European by Jule Goikoetxea

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 30/08/2017
      ISBN13: 9783034322614, 978-3034322614
      ISBN10: 3034322615

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Democratization is a process of collective emancipation through self-government. Continuous political contestation is essential for emancipation but, in order to know which strategies and conditions will emancipate us, we also need to know which ones subjugate us. Political mechanisms with the capacity to modulate our individual and collective bodies and make them docile tend to be close relatives of those which make us equal and free.

      Drawing on the latest theories concerning globalization and democracy, this book argues that postnational and postsovereign multilevel governance regimes, including the European Union, should be understood as mechanisms of global capitalism aimed at privatizing democracy. Through a detailed applied analysis of the Basque case, the author illustrates how democratization is closely linked to ideas about territory, collective empowerment and institutional political capacity.

      Democratization always takes place partially: it never «ends». Contrary to the dominant thinking, this book argues that the incomplete nature of democratization is a positive aspect, with perpetual conflict leading to perpetual change. This is precisely what allows, and obliges, each generation to shape its own forms of emancipation.



      Table of Contents

      CONTENTS: Introduction: Privatizing democracy – Global capitalism, democracy and the European Union – Democratization – Territory, political economy and the nation-state – Basque territories: Federation, nation and self-determination – Basque democratization.

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