Active and Passive Citizens: A Defense of Majoritarian Democracy
المواطنون النشطون والسلبيون: الدفاع عن ديمقراطية الأغلبية
The idea that democratic governance rests on active self-rule by citizens plays surprisingly little part in current theories of democracy, which instead stress the importance of representation by elected, appointed, or randomly selected bodies such as legislatures, courts, and juries. This would have astonished eighteenth-century theorists of democracy, who viewed universal suffrage and majoritarian voting as the sole criteria for democratic politics. _Active and Passive Citizens_ defends the view of these earlier thinkers, asserting that individual agency is the very essence of democracy. In this provocative and lucidly argued book, Richard Tuck draws on the distinction made by the Abbé Sieyès, a leading political theorist of the French Revolution, between “active” citizens (the electorate) and “passive” ones (those who are represented by the institutions of the state). Tuck traces our current representative view of democracy to Sieyès and contrasts him with Rousseau, a theorist of active self-rule by the people. Tuck argues that modern theories of democracy have effectively turned us into passive citizens and calls for a renewal of a majoritarian democracy that realizes the full potential of active citizenship.

Bibliographic Data
| Author | |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Island PressWebsite |
| Publisher Address | info@press.princeton.edu |
| Country | USA |
| Also In | |
| Language | English (EN) |
| Pages | 208 pages |
| Edition | first |
| Dimensions | 5×8 |
| ISBN | 9780691242811 |
| Translation | Not Translated |












