Free Term Papers on Three Paradoxes Of Democracy

OPPapers.com Essay Index >> American History >> Three Paradoxes Of Democracy

We have many free term papers and essays on Three Paradoxes Of Democracy. We also have a wide variety of research papers and book reports available to you for free. You can browse our collection of term papers or use our search engine.

Essays from FratFiles.com
  1. Three Paradoxes Of Democracy

    three paradoxes of Democracy. Three Paradoxes of Democracy 1. Consent vs.
    effectiveness 2. Conflict vs. Consensus 3. Representation vs. ...

  2. Women Nominized And Winners Of The Nobel Prize

    ... of whom only Alfred and three brothers reached ... but he actually distrusted democracy,
    opposed suffrage ... however, remains a figure of paradoxes and contradictions ...

  3. Immanuel Kant

    ... Kant's Ideas are really all about metaphysical paradoxes (Antimony of ... There are three
    types of concepts. ... He believed that if democracy was established and that ...

  4. Marketing

    ... majority may, at times lead to paradoxes, in that ... the Congress-Organization joined
    with three other parties ... majority by merging with the Congress for Democracy. ...

  5. Critique On Peter Drucker Book

    ... economy and ecology, the paradoxes of development ... to free markets and ‘bourgeois
    democracy' (Drucker 1989 ... Drucker saw three possible outcomes coming out of this ...

View More Papers...

Three Paradoxes Of Democracy

Submitted by mjwall on March 8, 2006

Category: American History
Words: 617 | Pages: 3
Views: 115
Popularity Rank: 90,746
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Three Paradoxes of Democracy
1. Consent vs. effectiveness
2. Conflict vs. Consensus
3. Representation vs. Governability

What's effective may not be what is popular
-economic policies are a good example – hyperinflation and other painful unpopular reforms
-even in established democracies you are thinking about getting elected not long term policies
Examples:
• Free trade – job loss
• Terrorism – loss of personal liberties
• Deficit spending – people like low taxes but also like government programs
• Environmental issues
Conflict vs. Consensus: debate needs to happen but shouldn't go too far (need a healthy medium) – people still need to trust and follow their government's decisions
Representation vs. Governability: local interests vs. effective national policy

Is democracy the best system?
Marxism would assert that in a capitalist system – the owners of the means of production control the government…challenges to democracy were fascism and Marxism

Fascism: democracy is too weak and ineffective – need a strong leader to lead the nation to new heights – main proponents defeated in WWII

New enemies? Islamic extremists what people call "Asian Values" – but Asia is a vast area with VERY diverse cultures

SEN – democracy is a universal value (accepted worldwide)…not whether or not you have the right condition, it can work anywhere! Dispels the economics first notion – yes some auth regimes have been fast growing but it can go either way
DEMOCRACY HELPS THE POOR – no famines in democracies…people are allowed to put pressure on their governments

Elklit and Svensson
-freedom is more important than impartiality/fairness
Two aspects of fairness:
Regularity: impartial application of the law (this has to be there)
Reasonableness: securing roughly...

You must Login to view the entire paper.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!