Government for the people: the substantive elements of democracy |
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Authors: | Paul Spicker |
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Institution: | Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK |
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Abstract: | The most widely used understandings of the concept of democracy – normative, procedural and institutional – focus on its methods and approaches. This article argues that democracy needs also to be understood in terms of its substantive implications. Democratic rights include not only the civil and political rights associated with liberal democracy, but also the economic and social rights promoted in industrially developed countries. Liberal principles promote democracy and economic development. Social rights have developed, not just through state action, but through the independent establishment of solidarities facilitated by the exercise of democratic rights. Every established democracy has a system of social welfare provision. This is not coincidental. Democracy, economic development and social protection are intimately linked. |
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Keywords: | democracy welfare social rights liberal democracy |
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