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Book Cover for: Democracy's Place: Air Power and Coercion in War, Ian Shapiro

Democracy's Place: Air Power and Coercion in War

Ian Shapiro

One of our nation's most prolific and widely discussed political theorists, Ian Shapiro speaks with a distinctive voice. His work is Deweyan in its inspiration, cosmopolitan in its concerns, and practical in its referents. In this book, he provides his first extended statement on contemporary democratic politics.Democracy's Place includes seven essays in which Shapiro carefully integrates the theoretical and the applied. Four deal principally with democratic theory and its link to problems of social justice; the other three detail applications in the United States, the postcommunist world, and the author's native South Africa. All advance a view of democratic politics which rests on principled, yet nuanced, suspicion of hierarchical social arrangements and of political blueprints. Shapiro's writing is unified as well by a pervasive concern with the relations between the requirements of democracy and those of social justice. These themes, substantiated by complex yet accessible arguments, offer a constructive democratic perspective on contemporary debates about liberalism, communitarianism, and distributive justice.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Cornell University Press
  • Publish Date: Sep 19th, 1996
  • Pages: 288
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.89in - 5.89in - 0.68in - 0.87lb
  • EAN: 9780801483707
  • Categories: Political Ideologies - DemocracyHistory & Theory - General

About the Author

Shapiro, Ian: - Ian Shapiro is Sterling Professor of Political Science at Yale University and Henry R. Luce Director at the Yale Center for International and Area Studies. He is the author or editor of many books, including most recently The Flight from Reality in the Human Sciences and Death by a Thousand Cuts: The Fight over Taxing Inherited Wealth.

Praise for this book

Ian Shapiro presents an engaging and provocative explication of the challenges facing democracy in the coming century.

--Jeffrey Sikkenga "Journal of Politics"

Shapiro does an excellent job of demolishing recrudescent but obsolete notions of 'the free market, ' of the self-evidently false notion that 'the market generates an appropriate system of rewards.'

--Philip Green "Political Theory"