Front cover image for The deconstitutionalization of America : the forgotten frailties of democratic rule

The deconstitutionalization of America : the forgotten frailties of democratic rule

"In The Deconstitutionalization of America: The Forgotten Frailties of Democratic Rule, Roger M. Barrus and his coauthors embark on a discussion of American democracy from the nineteenth century to the present day. The present paradox that democracy finds itself in can be summed up as "the best of times and the worst of times." Democracy, at its best, has triumphed throughout the world. It is the authors' contention that this same success represents the potential for its undoing: with all governments claiming to be democratic, modern democrats - and this includes just about everyone - find it difficult if not impossible to understand the nature and problems of democracy. Since most everyone lives within a democratic horizon, they have nothing to compare democracy to and no one to point out its faults. In this way, they are hampered in dealing with their social and political problems, some of which may be the result of contradictions inherent in the democratic principle itself. After all, the solution to democracy's ills might not be more democracy. This book is essential reading for those interested in American studies, American history, and political science."--Jacket
Print Book, English, ©2004
Lexington Books, Lanham, Md., ©2004
ix, 162 pages ; 24 cm
9780739108345, 9780739108352, 0739108344, 0739108352
54503582
James Madison's constitution of freedom
Abraham Lincoln's new birth of freedom
Woodrow Wilson's progressive constitution
Franklin Roosevelt, the Great Depression and the rise of interest-group government
Congress : increased power and institutional weakness
Presidential leadership and the two publics
The modern judiciary and palliative government : still the "least dangerous branch"?
Deconstitutionalization and American foreign policy
National performance review and Madisonian constitutionalism : the persistence of Wilsonian administrative thought