Democratic Equality What Went Wrong?

Democratic Equality: What Went Wrong? by Ed Broadbent, published by University of Toronto Press in January 2001, explores the challenges facing the oldest democracies in addressing inequality. This edition spans 263 pages and is presented in English. The book examines how, over the past fifty years, democratic governments have worked to mitigate the inequalities stemming from capitalist economies, while also introducing a new concept of democratic citizenship that encompasses social and economic rights alongside traditional political and civil liberties.
Readers will find a collection of essays from leading scholars in political science, sociology, philosophy, and economics, discussing the ideological challenges to equality that have emerged since the 1980s. The contributors analyze the shift towards inequality in the context of mass capital globalization, highlighting how many European democracies have adapted without adopting policies that promote inequality. The essays collectively emphasize the significance of political decision-making in either entrenching or combating rising inequality, a trend that is presented as neither necessary nor desirable.
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Are the world’s oldest democracies failing? For most of the past fifty years democratic governments made determined and successful efforts at overcoming the significant inequalities that are the by-product of a capitalist economy. During this period a new concept of democratic citizenship that added social and economic rights to the liberal legacy of political and civil liberties established roots in most North Atlantic democracies. Since the 1980s this notion of democratic citizenship has been challenged ideologically to such a degree that through either major modification or complete elimination of programs, equality as a fundamental democratic goal is disappearing in many nations – particularly in the Anglo-American democracies.
In this extraordinary collection, top scholars in political science, sociology, philosophy and economics, discuss this radical shift towards inequality in an age of mass capital globalization. Wide ranging in topic yet coherent in approach, Inequality and the Modern Democratic State comprises thirteen essays, including Ed Broadbent’s “Ten Propositions about Equality and Democracy”, Robert Hackett’s “Watch Dogs, Mad Dogs, or Lap Dogs?: News Media and Civic Equality” and Barbara Ehrenreich’s “Inequality in the Clinton Era”.
Many European democracies, argue the contributors, have adapted to new circumstance in the global economy without resorting to policies that actively promote inequality. While differing in some important details on solutions, they all contend that the political decision-making process is of critical importance in entrenching, or battling, an escalating inequality that is neither necessary nor desirable.
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