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Appropriate(d) democracy [Ressource électronique] : analyzing elite discourse across North Africa / Brandon Gorman

بواسطة:نوع المادة : نصنصوصف:1 vol. (68 p.)الموضوع:تصنيف DDC:
  • 321.80961 23E
تصنيفات أخرى:
  • 321.8A
موارد على الانترنت:ملاحظة الأطروحة:Master of Arts : Sociology : Faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill : 2012 ملخص:Political speeches in the contemporary world illustrate a tendency among heads of state of appealing to democracy and democratic concepts regardless of regime type. While the prevalence of this discourse in countries like the United States is unsurprising, the use of discourses of democracy among autocrats presents a puzzle: what are autocrats doing in their discursive invocation of democracy? Current literature on global norms of democratic governance suggests that decoupling - or feigning support for democracy without enacting it in local institutions - is endemic in discourses which touch upon global norms. This literature suggests that these norms can be either adopted wholesale, decoupled, or rejected wholesale, the latter being the rarest configuration. This study seeks to transcend this categorization. I argue that discourses of democracy are in fact appropriated discourses, in which global norms interact with local interests, issues, and power structures and new definitions of these norms are articulated
نوع المادة:
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Master of Arts : Sociology : Faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill : 2012

Bibliogr. p. 62-68

Political speeches in the contemporary world illustrate a tendency among heads of state of appealing to democracy and democratic concepts regardless of regime type. While the prevalence of this discourse in countries like the United States is unsurprising, the use of discourses of democracy among autocrats presents a puzzle: what are autocrats doing in their discursive invocation of democracy? Current literature on global norms of democratic governance suggests that decoupling - or feigning support for democracy without enacting it in local institutions - is endemic in discourses which touch upon global norms. This literature suggests that these norms can be either adopted wholesale, decoupled, or rejected wholesale, the latter being the rarest configuration. This study seeks to transcend this categorization. I argue that discourses of democracy are in fact appropriated discourses, in which global norms interact with local interests, issues, and power structures and new definitions of these norms are articulated

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