Affiliation:
1. University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract
The goal of this article is to show that mainstream liberal accounts of civil disobedience fail to fully capture the latter’s specific characteristics as a genuinely political and democratic practice of contestation that is not reducible to an ethical or legal understanding either in terms of individual conscience or of fidelity to the rule of law. In developing this account in more detail, I first define civil disobedience with an aim of spelling out why the standard liberal model, while providing a useful starting point, ultimately leads to an overly constrained, domesticated and sanitized understanding of this complex political practice. Second, I place the political practice of civil disobedience between two opposing poles: symbolic politics and real confrontation. I argue that the irreducible tension between these poles precisely accounts for its politicizing and democratizing potential. Finally, I briefly examine the role of civil disobedience in representative democracies, addressing a series of recent challenges made in response to this radically democratic understanding of disobedience.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Philosophy
Cited by
110 articles.
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1. Is uncivil disobedience ‘phenomenologically accurate’ and ‘politically useful’? Reflections on uncivil disobedience based on the 2019 Hong Kong Protests;Australian Journal of Political Science;2024-08-21
2. Contents;X-Texte zu Kultur und Gesellschaft;2024-06-04
3. Frontmatter;X-Texte zu Kultur und Gesellschaft;2024-06-04
4. Bibliography;X-Texte zu Kultur und Gesellschaft;2024-06-04
5. Illustrations;X-Texte zu Kultur und Gesellschaft;2024-06-04