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Criticism of democracy

Criticism of democracy, or debate on democracy and the different aspects of how to implement democracy best have been widely discussed. There are both internal critics (those who call upon the constitutional regime to be true to its own highest principles) and external ones who reject the values promoted by constitutional democracy.[1]

Criticism of democracy has been a key part of democracy, its functions, and its development throughout history. Plato famously opposed democracy, arguing for a 'government of the best qualified'; James Madison extensively studied the historic attempts at and arguments on democracy in his preparation for the Constitutional Convention; and Winston Churchill remarked that "No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time."[2]

Critics of democracy have often tried to highlight democracy's inconsistencies, paradoxes, and limits by contrasting it with other forms of government, such as a less democratic epistocracy or a more democratic lottocracy. They have characterized most modern democracies as democratic polyarchies[3] and democratic aristocracies;[4] they have identified fascist moments in modern democracies; they have termed the societies produced by modern democracies as neo-feudal;[5] and they have contrasted democracy with fascism, anarcho-capitalism, theocracy, and absolute monarchy.

Historical debates edit

Classical antiquity edit

 
Plato is considered one of the most important opponents of democratic rule in Ancient Greece.

As Robert Dahl writes, "Although the practices of modern democracy bear only a weak resemblance to the political institutions of classical Greece...Greek democratic ideas have been more influential...[and] what we know of their ideas comes less from the writings and speeches of democratic advocates, of which only fragments survive, than from their critics".[6]

Aristotle was a mild critic who "disliked the power that he thought the expansion of democracy necessarily gave to the poor."[6] Plato's political philosophy was skeptical of democracy and advocated for "government by the best qualified".[6] Modern liberal democracy incorporated some of these critiques.[7] For example, James Madison "trained rigorously in...ancient learning" as a young man, and the ideas of ancient authors explain a "facet of Madison's recorded attitude on the nature of man".[8] The influence of the ancient critiques of democracy is seen in how Madison spent the months before the Constitutional Convention "studying many centuries of political philosophy and histories of past attempts at republican forms of government".[9]

According to Dahl, Aristotle and Plato would agree with most advocates of modern democracy that an aim of the society is "to produce good citizens" and "Virtue, justice, and happiness are companions...[in] developing citizens who seek the common good".[6]

Thucydides, the famous ancient Greek historian of the Peloponnesian War, witnessed the fall of Athenian democracy and applied scientific history in his critique of the democratic government.[10] At the heart of his critique were how democracy failed "in the search for truth" and how leaders and citizens attempted "to impose their own speech-dependent meanings on reality".[10] Thucydides blamed "public orators" and demagogues for a failure of epistemic knowledge, allowing most Athenians to "believe silly things about their past and the institutions of their opponents".[10]

Confucius greatly influenced East Asian societies over time, and political leaders, such as Lee Kuan Yew, in Singapore and China today often say Confucianism provides a more "coherent ideological basis for a well-ordered Asian society than Western notions of individual liberty".[11] Nonetheless, East Asian countries employ forms of Democracy and Communism, political systems developed in the West.[citation needed] The notion of "well-ordered Asian" society is more compatible with Communism, employed by China and Vietnam,[citation needed] both rapidly growing and globalized economies in the 21st century, but also in North Korea which follows isolationism which hampers the improvement of lives of average citizens.[citation needed]

Post-classical period edit

From 500 to 1500 AD, philosophers and political leaders around the world often advocated for traditional systems of governing society, which were critical of democracy.[citation needed]

Italian philosopher and theologian Thomas Aquinas advocated for "a mixed government combining elements of democracy, aristocracy and kingship...[which] is reminiscent of Aristotle's preference for mixed government over either democracy or oligarchy."[12] Scholars also consider "the substantial medieval literature in support of the Inquisitions" as opposed to modern ideas of democracy.[13]

Democracy existed in a few "city-states of medieval Italy...[which] were ultimately submerged in imperial or oligarchic rule."[6] The idea of "representation was not invented by democrats but developed instead as a medieval institution of monarchical and aristocratic government," and had its beginnings in "assemblies summoned by the monarch, or sometimes the nobles themselves, to deal with important matters of state."[6] The "state of military technology and organization" in medieval Europe was "highly unfavorable in its effects" on democracy.[6]

Medieval Jewish political philosophy was influenced by Plato, Muslim thought, and Halakhic concepts and was "monarchist, and inherently anti-democratic."[14]

As Amartya Sen wrote about traditional Asian societies, "It is not hard, of course, to find authoritarian writings within the Asian traditions. But neither is it hard to find them in Western classics: One has only to reflect on the writings of Plato or Aquinas to see that devotion to discipline is not a special Asian taste."[13]

Since the post-classical period, Islam has been an important pillar of society for much of the world, and some critics have defended this tradition from "the secular assumptions of the Enlightenment" and an "uncritical universalism," which "erodes historical continuity and the sense of community that sustains traditional societies."[15] In many societies today, people of faith challenge the idea of "secularism as the only 'rational' way to deal with the challenges of life."[15]

Early modern period edit

Thomas Hobbes, one of the first philosophers of the Enlightenment, published Leviathan in 1651 in defense of "absolute sovereignty" and supporting the royalists in the English Civil War.[16] Hobbes was a critic of democracy because "the sovereign in a democracy (i.e. the people) can only exercise its power when it is actually assembled together...Only in a monarchy is the capacity to govern always exercised."[17] Hobbes also thought democracy would lead to instability, conflict, glory seeking, mistrust, and undermining the social contract.[17] Later Enlightenment thinkers, such as Madison who shared Hobbesian concerns about "the strongest passions and most dangerous weaknesses" of human nature, would use some of these critiques to improve modern democracy.[18][8]

Romantic era edit

Romantic critics of democracy include Thomas Carlyle, John Ruskin, Matthew Arnold, James Fitzjames Stephen, Henry Maine, and William Lecky. In his study, Benjamin Evans Lippincott wrote that "they opposed democracy fundamentally for the same reason as Plato—that democracy led to disorder." Their unique historical contribution was to critique democracy under capitalism in modern industrial society. They believed that democracy produced anarchy in society, not simply anarchy within the individual as Plato believed.[19]

Lippincott proposed that their three leading doctrines were "the common man's inferiority, the title of the few to rule, and authority". The main sources of these ideas were Puritanism, middle-class ideas of power, and the classical education that they received in their youth. The three doctrines were "most perfectly represented in Plato's Republic," while classical history seemed to provide examples of "the common man's inferiority" as in the cases of Athens and Rome, "which showed the populace turning to disorder". The three doctrines were developed during the Reformation and the Enlightenment by writers like John Calvin, Edmund Burke and David Hume.[20]

Arguments for further democratization edit

These arguments support more political egalitarianism by improving representative democracy or relying more on mechanisms like citizens' assemblies to delegate power more directly and unfiltered through the election process.

Not democratic enough edit

Robert A. Dahl defines democracies as systems of government that respond nearly fully to every one of their citizens. He then poses that no such, fully responsive system exists today.[3] However, this does not mean that partially democratic regimes do not exist—they do. Thus, Dahl rejects a democracy dichotomy in favor of a democratization spectrum. To Dahl, the question is not whether a country is a democracy or not. The question is to what extent a country is experiencing democratization at a national level. Dahl measures this democratization in terms of the country's endorsement and reception of public contestation. Polyarchy, or "rule of the many people," is the only existing form of democratized government; that is, it is within polyarchies that democratization can flourish. Countries do not immediately transform from hegemonies and competitive oligarchies into democracies. Instead, a country that adopts democracy as its form of government can only claim to have switched to polyarchy, which is conducive to, but does not guarantee democratization. Dahl's polyarchy spectrum ends at the point in which a country becomes a full polyarchy at the national level and begins to democratize at the subnational level, among its social and private affairs. Dahl is not deeply concerned about the limits of his polyarchy spectrum because he believes that most countries today still have a long way before they reach full polyarchy status.[21] For Dahl, whatever lies beyond full polyarchy is only possible, and thus only a concern, for advanced countries like those of Western Europe.[citation needed]

According to Boaventura de Sousa Santos, "democracy is being so emptied of content that it can be instrumentally defended by those who use it in order to destroy it," saying that individuals calling for increased democratization and protection from fascism are labeled as leftists.[22] De Sousa Santos says that while the Western world displays its support for democracy, its approval of governments being overthrown is a double standard.[22]

Elections give oligarchs too much power edit

Manin edit

Bernard Manin believes that both representative and direct democracy promote "rule of the people," but that elections lead to the "rule of the aristocratic". Manin explains that in direct democracies, virtually every citizen has the chance to be selected (sometimes at random) to populate the government but in modern republics, only elites have the chance of being elected.

Manin draws from James Harrington, Montesquieu, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau to suggest that the dominant form of government, representative as opposed to direct, is effectively aristocratic.[4] He says that modern representative governments exercise political power through aristocratic elections which, in turn, contradicts "rule of the people". As far as Montesquieu is concerned, elections favor the "best" citizens who Manin notes tend to be wealthy and upper-class. As far as Rousseau is concerned, elections favor the incumbent government officials or the citizens with the strongest personalities, which results in hereditary aristocracy. Manin further evinces the aristocratic nature of representative governments by contrasting them with the ancient style of selection by lot. Manin notes that Montesquieu believed that lotteries prevent jealousy and distribute offices equally (among citizens from different ranks), while Rousseau believed that lotteries choose indifferently, preventing self-interest and partiality from polluting the citizen's choice (and thus prevent hereditary aristocracy).

However, Manin also provides criticism of the Athenians' experiment with direct democracy, or selection by lot.[4] Manin reflects on Montesquieu's interrogation of the extent to which Athenian direct democracy was truly direct. Montesquieu finds that citizens who had reason to believe they would be accused as "unworthy of selection" commonly withheld their names from the lottery, thereby making selection by lot vulnerable to self-selection bias and, thus, aristocratic. Manin does not dwell on direct democracy's potentially aristocratic elements, perhaps because he shares Montesquieu's belief that nothing is alarming about the exclusion of citizens who may be incompetent; this exclusion may be inevitable in any method of selection.

Additionally, Manin is interested in explaining the discrepancy between 18th-century American and French revolutionaries' declaration of the "equality of all citizens" and their enactment of (aristocratic) elections in their respective democratic experiments.[4] Manin suggests that the discrepancy is explained by the revolutionaries' contemporary preoccupation with one form of equality over another. The revolutionaries prioritized gaining the equal right to consent to their choice of government (even a potentially aristocratic democracy), at the expense of seeking the equal right to be the face of that democracy. And it is elections, not lots, that provide citizens with more opportunities to consent. In elections, citizens consent both to the procedure of elections and the product of the elections (even if they produce the election of elites). In lotteries, citizens consent only to the procedure of lots, but not to the product of the lots (even if they produce the election of the average person). That is, if the revolutionaries prioritized consent to be governed over equal opportunity to serve as the government, then their choice of elections over lotteries makes sense.

Michels edit

A major scholarly attack based on democracy was made by German-Italian political scientist Robert Michels who developed the mainstream political science theory of the iron law of oligarchy in 1911.[23] Michels argued that oligarchy is inevitable as an "iron law" within any organization as part of the "tactical and technical necessities" of organization and on the topic of democracy, Michels stated: "It is organization which gives birth to the dominion of the elected over the electors, of the mandataries over the mandators, of the delegates over the delegators. Who says organization, says oligarchy" and went on to state "Historical evolution mocks all the prophylactic measures that have been adopted for the prevention of oligarchy".[23] Michels stated that the official goal of democracy of eliminating elite rule was impossible, that democracy is a façade legitimizing the rule of a particular elite, and that elite rule, that he refers to as oligarchy, is inevitable.[23] Michels had formerly been a Marxist but became drawn to the syndicalism of Sorel, Eduoard Berth, Arturo Labriola, and Enrico Leone and had become strongly opposed parliamentarian, legalistic, and bureaucratic socialism of social democracy and in contrast supported an activist, voluntarist, anti-parliamentarian socialism.[24] Michels would later become a supporter of fascism upon Mussolini's rise to power in 1922, viewing fascism's goal to destroy liberal democracy sympathetically.[24]

Lagardelle edit

French revolutionary syndicalist Hubert Lagardelle claimed that French revolutionary syndicalism came to being as the result of "the reaction of the proletariat against idiotic democracy," which he claimed was "the popular form of bourgeois dominance". Lagardelle opposed democracy for its universalism, and believed in the necessity of class separation of the proletariat from the bourgeoisie, as democracy did not recognize the social differences between them.

Van Reybrouck edit

David Van Reybrouck, the author of Against Elections: The Case for Democracy, argues that allocating power through sortition, such as in citizens' assemblies, fixes many of the shortcomings of representative democracy. "Democracy is not government by the best in our society, because such a thing is called an aristocracy, elected or not...Democracy, by contrast, flourishes precisely by allowing a diversity of voices to be heard. It's all about having an equal say, an equal right to determine what political action is taken."[25]

Pareto and Mosca edit

The 20th-century Italian thinkers Vilfredo Pareto and Gaetano Mosca (independently) argued that democracy was illusory, and served only to mask the reality of elite rule. Indeed, they argued that elite oligarchy is the unbendable law of human nature, due largely to the apathy and division of the masses (as opposed to the drive, initiative and unity of the elites), and that democratic institutions would do no more than shift the exercise of power from oppression to manipulation.[26]

Martin Gilens edit

A 2014 study led by Princeton professor Martin Gilens of 1,779 U.S. government decisions concluded that "elites and organized groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on U.S. government policy, while average citizens and mass-based interest groups have little or no independent influence."[27]

Arguments for full democratization edit

Corruption edit

The inability of governments around the world to successfully deal with corruption is causing a global crisis of democracy.[28] Whilst countries that have high levels of democracy tend to have low levels of different forms of corruption, it is also clear that countries with moderate levels of democracy have high corruption, as well as countries with no democracy having very little corruption.[29] Varying types of democratic policies reduce corruption, but only high levels of, and multiple kinds of democratic institutions, such as open and free elections combined with judicial and legislative constraints, will effectively reduce corruption. One important internal element of democracy is the electoral process which can be considered easily corruptible. For example, it is not inevitable in a democracy that elections will be free and fair. The giving and receiving of bribes, the threat or use of violence, treatment, and impersonation are common ways that the electoral process can be corrupted,[30] meaning that democracy is not impenetrable from external problems and can be criticized for allowing it to take place.

M. S. Golwalkar, in his book Bunch of Thoughts, describes democracy as "...to a very large extent only a myth in practice...The high-sounding concept of 'individual freedom' only meant the freedom of those talented few to exploit the rest".[citation needed]

Voter turnout edit

Voter turnout being lower than desired in some democracies has been attributed to several causes, with examples including reduced trust in democratic processes, lack of compulsory voting, political efficacy, include wasted votes,[31] gridlock and high barriers to entry for new political movements.[32]

Coase theorem edit

Daron Acemoglu argues that the Coase theorem is only valid in politics while there are "rules of the game," so to speak, that are being enforced by the government. But when there is nobody there to enforce the rules for the government itself, there is no way to guarantee that low transaction costs will lead to an efficient outcome in democracies.[33]

Anthony Downs argued that the political market works much the same way as the economic market and that there could potentially be an equilibrium in the system because of the democratic process.[34] However, he argued that imperfect knowledge in politicians and voters prevented the full realization of that equilibrium.[34]

Manipulation of the opposition edit

Various reasons can be found for eliminating or suppressing political opponents. Methods such as false flags, counterterrorism-laws,[35] planting or creating compromising material and perpetuation of public fear may be used to suppress dissent. After a failed coup d'état over 110,000 people have been purged and nearly 40,000 have been imprisoned in Turkey, which is or was considered to be a democratic nation, during the 2016 Turkish purges.[36][37]

Fake parties, phantom political rivals, and "scarecrow" opponents may be used to undermine the opposition.[38]

Debated aspects of democracy edit

Majoritarianism edit

Unlike in a consensus democracy or majoritarian democracies that embrace political egalitarianism, democratic theorists worried about conditions where a majority could become tyrannical. Plato and James Madison, for example, were concerned about tyranny of the majority.[39][40] Professors Richard Ellis of Willamette University and Michael Nelson of Rhodes College argue that much constitutional thought, from Madison to Lincoln and beyond, has focused on "the problem of majority tyranny". They conclude, "The principles of republican government embedded in the Constitution represent an effort by the framers to ensure that the inalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness would not be trampled by majorities".[41] Thomas Jefferson warned that "an elective despotism is not the government we fought for".[42] A constitution[43] would limit the powers of what a simple majority can accomplish.[44] Liberal democracy safeguards against the tyranny of majority through rights of the individual, liberty, consent of the governed, political equality, right to private property and equality before the law.[45][46]

Fierlbeck (1998) believes that a majority rule that may not be in the best interest of all its citizens is not necessarily due to a failure in the democratic process, but rather, "because democracy is responsive to the desires of a large middle class increasingly willing to disregard the muted voices of economically marginalized groups within its own borders".[47]

Stability edit

Majoritarian democracy has been criticized [who?] for not offering enough political stability.[citation needed] As governments are frequently elected on and off there tends to be frequent changes in the policies of democratic countries both domestically and internationally.[citation needed] Reason Wafawarova argued in 2008 that rigid approaches to democracy may undermine that ability for a developing country to achieve long-term stability and democracy.[48][needs update]

Media has been accused[who?] of causing political instability and undermining democracy.[49][verification needed]

Winner-take-all elections edit

By the median voter theorem, only a few people hold the balance of power in an two-party system, and many may be unhappy with their decisions. In this way, they argue, Two-party democracies are inefficient.[50] Such a system could result in a wealth disparity or racial discrimination.

Arrow's impossibility theorem suggests that winner-take-all elections (unlike multi-winner voting such as proportional representation) can be logically incoherent. This is based on a certain set of criteria for democratic decision-making being inherently conflicting, i.e., these three "fairness" criteria:

1) If every voter prefers alternative X over alternative Y, then the group prefers X over Y.

2) If every voter's preference between X and Y remains unchanged, then the group's preference between X and Y will also remain unchanged (even if voters' preferences between other pairs like X and Z, Y and Z, or Z and W change).

3) There is no "dictator": no single voter possesses the power to always determine the group's preference.

Kenneth Arrow summarised the implications of the theorem in a non-mathematical form, stating that "no voting method is fair," "every ranked voting method is flawed," and "the only voting method that isn't flawed is a dictatorship".[51][needs context][verification needed] However, Arrow's formal premises can be considered overly strict, and with their reasonable weakening, the logical incoherence of democracy looks much less critical.[52]

This situation was metaphorically characterized by Charles Plott:

The subject began with what seemed to be a minor problem with majority rule. "It is just a mathematical curiosity," said some...But intrigued and curious about this little hole, researchers, not deterred by the possibly irrelevant, began digging in the ground nearby...What they now appear to have been uncovering is a gigantic cavern into which fall almost all of our ideas about social actions. Almost anything we say and/or anyone has ever said about what society wants or should get is threatened with internal inconsistency. It is as though people have been talking for years about a thing that cannot, "in principle," exist, and a major effort now is needed to see what objectively remains from the conversations.

— Charles Plott (1976) Axiomatic social choice theory, p. 511[53]

Rule of law edit

The Chinese Communist Party political concept of whole-process people's democracy criticizes liberal democracy for excessively relying on procedural formalities or rule of law without, in the party's view, genuinely reflecting the interests of the people.[54]: 60–64  According to Wang Zhongyuan of Fudan University, this critique arises as part of a post-1990s trend in which various countries have sought to redefine "democracy" in ways that differ from Western multi-party democratic systems.[54]: 61  Under the framing of whole-process people's democracy, the most important criteria for democracy is whether it can "solve the people's real problems," while a system in which "the people are awakened only for voting" is deemed not truly democratic.[54]: 60–64  The concept is thus both a way of criticizing liberal democracy and deflecting criticism of the Chinese system.[54]: 64 

Long-term thinking edit

Different voting systems lead to different levels of short-termism in politics.[55]

Chinese policymakers argue that policy under democratic systems is largely restricted to ad hoc interventions which leaves social development vulnerable to market forces.[56]: 144  According to this view, policy-making in democratic systems is limited to ad hoc policy interventions.[56]: 144–145  Chinese planners argue that such interventions are incapable of coping with fundamental challenges such as environmental degradation, dysfunction in capital markets, and demographic change.[56]: 145 

Influence of the media edit

Malleability of public opinion is cited by Schumpeter as a reason to prefer technocracy to democracy, while others concerned about the sway of the public argue for limiting the ability of money to play a role in democracy.[57][58] Critics[who?] claim that mass media actually shapes public opinion, and can therefore be used to "control" democracy.

Dan Slater and Lucan Ahmad Way criticized the FBI for announcing that the agency would examine potentially incriminating evidence against Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server just 11 days before the election.[59] The argue that misinformation − such as fake news − has become central to elections around the world.[59] In December 2016 United States' intelligence agencies made allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 United States Elections by working "to undermine public faith in the U.S. democratic process, denigrate Secretary [Hillary] Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency" − including passing material against the Democrats to WikiLeaks to discredit the election and favor Donald Trump.[59][improper synthesis?]

Social bots and other forms of online propaganda as well as search engine result algorithms may be used to alter the perception and opinion of voters.[60][61] In 2016 Andrés Sepúlveda disclosed that he manipulated public opinion to rig elections in Latin America. According to him, with a budget of $600,000, he led a team of hackers that stole campaign strategies, manipulated social media to create false waves of enthusiasm and derision, and installed spyware in opposition offices to help Enrique Peña Nieto, a right-of-center candidate, win the election.[62][63] Televised debates[64] and, according to George Bishop, inaccurate opinion polls[65] may also be able to shift election outcomes.[improper synthesis?]

Anti-democratic thought edit

These critiques largely see people as incapable of self-rule, preferring the empowerment of religious or secular elites.

Religion edit

Theocracies view deities as supreme ruling authorities, not the people.[66] Theodemocracy combines authority by both deity and the people.[67]

Salafism (Islam) edit

The practice of orthodox Islam in the form of Salafism can clash with a democratic system. The core precept of Islam, that of "tawheed" (the "oneness of God"), can be interpreted by fundamentalists to mean, among other things, that democracy as a political system is incompatible with the purported notion that laws not handed down by God should not be recognized.[68]

Voter literacy tests edit

Plato believed it's reckless to allow common men to vote. The vote of an expert has equal value to the vote of 'an incompetent'.[69] Jason Brennan believes that the low information voters is a major problem in America and is the main objection to democracies in general because the system does not incentivize being informed.[70] Brennan cites a study where less than 30% of Americans can name two or more of the rights listed in the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights.[70] He believes an informed voter should have extensive knowledge of the candidate's current and previous political beliefs/tendencies. He proposes an epistocracy, which would only give a vote to those with an elite political understanding.[70]

Charles Maurras, a supporter of the Vichy regime and member of the far-right FRS of the Action Française movement believed in biological inequality and natural hierarchies, and claimed that the individual is naturally subordinated to social collectivities such as the family, the society, and the state, which he claims are doomed to fail if based upon the "myth of equality" or "abstract liberty". Maurras criticized democracy as being a "government by numbers" in which quantity matters more over quality and prefers the worst over the best. Maurras denounced the principles of liberalism as described in The Social Contract by Jean-Jacques Rousseau and in Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen as based upon the false assumption of liberty and the false assumption of equality. He claimed that the parliamentary system subordinates the national interest, or common good, to private interests of a parliament's representatives where only short-sighted interests of individuals prevail.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

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Cited works edit

Further reading edit

criticism, democracy, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, editing, february, 2024, learn, when, remove, this, message, broader, coverage, this, topic, democracy, debate, democracy, different, aspects, implem. This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message For broader coverage of this topic see Democracy Criticism of democracy or debate on democracy and the different aspects of how to implement democracy best have been widely discussed There are both internal critics those who call upon the constitutional regime to be true to its own highest principles and external ones who reject the values promoted by constitutional democracy 1 Criticism of democracy has been a key part of democracy its functions and its development throughout history Plato famously opposed democracy arguing for a government of the best qualified James Madison extensively studied the historic attempts at and arguments on democracy in his preparation for the Constitutional Convention and Winston Churchill remarked that No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all wise Indeed it has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time 2 Critics of democracy have often tried to highlight democracy s inconsistencies paradoxes and limits by contrasting it with other forms of government such as a less democratic epistocracy or a more democratic lottocracy They have characterized most modern democracies as democratic polyarchies 3 and democratic aristocracies 4 they have identified fascist moments in modern democracies they have termed the societies produced by modern democracies as neo feudal 5 and they have contrasted democracy with fascism anarcho capitalism theocracy and absolute monarchy Contents 1 Historical debates 1 1 Classical antiquity 1 2 Post classical period 1 3 Early modern period 1 4 Romantic era 2 Arguments for further democratization 2 1 Not democratic enough 2 2 Elections give oligarchs too much power 2 2 1 Manin 2 2 2 Michels 2 2 3 Lagardelle 2 2 4 Van Reybrouck 2 2 5 Pareto and Mosca 2 2 6 Martin Gilens 2 3 Arguments for full democratization 2 3 1 Corruption 2 3 2 Voter turnout 2 3 3 Coase theorem 2 3 4 Manipulation of the opposition 3 Debated aspects of democracy 3 1 Majoritarianism 3 2 Stability 3 3 Winner take all elections 3 4 Rule of law 3 5 Long term thinking 3 6 Influence of the media 4 Anti democratic thought 4 1 Religion 4 1 1 Salafism Islam 4 2 Voter literacy tests 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Cited works 7 Further readingHistorical debates editClassical antiquity edit nbsp Plato is considered one of the most important opponents of democratic rule in Ancient Greece As Robert Dahl writes Although the practices of modern democracy bear only a weak resemblance to the political institutions of classical Greece Greek democratic ideas have been more influential and what we know of their ideas comes less from the writings and speeches of democratic advocates of which only fragments survive than from their critics 6 Aristotle was a mild critic who disliked the power that he thought the expansion of democracy necessarily gave to the poor 6 Plato s political philosophy was skeptical of democracy and advocated for government by the best qualified 6 Modern liberal democracy incorporated some of these critiques 7 For example James Madison trained rigorously in ancient learning as a young man and the ideas of ancient authors explain a facet of Madison s recorded attitude on the nature of man 8 The influence of the ancient critiques of democracy is seen in how Madison spent the months before the Constitutional Convention studying many centuries of political philosophy and histories of past attempts at republican forms of government 9 According to Dahl Aristotle and Plato would agree with most advocates of modern democracy that an aim of the society is to produce good citizens and Virtue justice and happiness are companions in developing citizens who seek the common good 6 Thucydides the famous ancient Greek historian of the Peloponnesian War witnessed the fall of Athenian democracy and applied scientific history in his critique of the democratic government 10 At the heart of his critique were how democracy failed in the search for truth and how leaders and citizens attempted to impose their own speech dependent meanings on reality 10 Thucydides blamed public orators and demagogues for a failure of epistemic knowledge allowing most Athenians to believe silly things about their past and the institutions of their opponents 10 Confucius greatly influenced East Asian societies over time and political leaders such as Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore and China today often say Confucianism provides a more coherent ideological basis for a well ordered Asian society than Western notions of individual liberty 11 Nonetheless East Asian countries employ forms of Democracy and Communism political systems developed in the West citation needed The notion of well ordered Asian society is more compatible with Communism employed by China and Vietnam citation needed both rapidly growing and globalized economies in the 21st century but also in North Korea which follows isolationism which hampers the improvement of lives of average citizens citation needed Post classical period edit From 500 to 1500 AD philosophers and political leaders around the world often advocated for traditional systems of governing society which were critical of democracy citation needed Italian philosopher and theologian Thomas Aquinas advocated for a mixed government combining elements of democracy aristocracy and kingship which is reminiscent of Aristotle s preference for mixed government over either democracy or oligarchy 12 Scholars also consider the substantial medieval literature in support of the Inquisitions as opposed to modern ideas of democracy 13 Democracy existed in a few city states of medieval Italy which were ultimately submerged in imperial or oligarchic rule 6 The idea of representation was not invented by democrats but developed instead as a medieval institution of monarchical and aristocratic government and had its beginnings in assemblies summoned by the monarch or sometimes the nobles themselves to deal with important matters of state 6 The state of military technology and organization in medieval Europe was highly unfavorable in its effects on democracy 6 Medieval Jewish political philosophy was influenced by Plato Muslim thought and Halakhic concepts and was monarchist and inherently anti democratic 14 As Amartya Sen wrote about traditional Asian societies It is not hard of course to find authoritarian writings within the Asian traditions But neither is it hard to find them in Western classics One has only to reflect on the writings of Plato or Aquinas to see that devotion to discipline is not a special Asian taste 13 Since the post classical period Islam has been an important pillar of society for much of the world and some critics have defended this tradition from the secular assumptions of the Enlightenment and an uncritical universalism which erodes historical continuity and the sense of community that sustains traditional societies 15 In many societies today people of faith challenge the idea of secularism as the only rational way to deal with the challenges of life 15 Early modern period edit Thomas Hobbes one of the first philosophers of the Enlightenment published Leviathan in 1651 in defense of absolute sovereignty and supporting the royalists in the English Civil War 16 Hobbes was a critic of democracy because the sovereign in a democracy i e the people can only exercise its power when it is actually assembled together Only in a monarchy is the capacity to govern always exercised 17 Hobbes also thought democracy would lead to instability conflict glory seeking mistrust and undermining the social contract 17 Later Enlightenment thinkers such as Madison who shared Hobbesian concerns about the strongest passions and most dangerous weaknesses of human nature would use some of these critiques to improve modern democracy 18 8 Romantic era edit Romantic critics of democracy include Thomas Carlyle John Ruskin Matthew Arnold James Fitzjames Stephen Henry Maine and William Lecky In his study Benjamin Evans Lippincott wrote that they opposed democracy fundamentally for the same reason as Plato that democracy led to disorder Their unique historical contribution was to critique democracy under capitalism in modern industrial society They believed that democracy produced anarchy in society not simply anarchy within the individual as Plato believed 19 Lippincott proposed that their three leading doctrines were the common man s inferiority the title of the few to rule and authority The main sources of these ideas were Puritanism middle class ideas of power and the classical education that they received in their youth The three doctrines were most perfectly represented in Plato s Republic while classical history seemed to provide examples of the common man s inferiority as in the cases of Athens and Rome which showed the populace turning to disorder The three doctrines were developed during the Reformation and the Enlightenment by writers like John Calvin Edmund Burke and David Hume 20 Arguments for further democratization editMain articles Sortition Deliberative democracy and DemocratizationThese arguments support more political egalitarianism by improving representative democracy or relying more on mechanisms like citizens assemblies to delegate power more directly and unfiltered through the election process Not democratic enough edit See also Post democracy and Democratic backsliding Robert A Dahl defines democracies as systems of government that respond nearly fully to every one of their citizens He then poses that no such fully responsive system exists today 3 However this does not mean that partially democratic regimes do not exist they do Thus Dahl rejects a democracy dichotomy in favor of a democratization spectrum To Dahl the question is not whether a country is a democracy or not The question is to what extent a country is experiencing democratization at a national level Dahl measures this democratization in terms of the country s endorsement and reception of public contestation Polyarchy or rule of the many people is the only existing form of democratized government that is it is within polyarchies that democratization can flourish Countries do not immediately transform from hegemonies and competitive oligarchies into democracies Instead a country that adopts democracy as its form of government can only claim to have switched to polyarchy which is conducive to but does not guarantee democratization Dahl s polyarchy spectrum ends at the point in which a country becomes a full polyarchy at the national level and begins to democratize at the subnational level among its social and private affairs Dahl is not deeply concerned about the limits of his polyarchy spectrum because he believes that most countries today still have a long way before they reach full polyarchy status 21 For Dahl whatever lies beyond full polyarchy is only possible and thus only a concern for advanced countries like those of Western Europe citation needed According to Boaventura de Sousa Santos democracy is being so emptied of content that it can be instrumentally defended by those who use it in order to destroy it saying that individuals calling for increased democratization and protection from fascism are labeled as leftists 22 De Sousa Santos says that while the Western world displays its support for democracy its approval of governments being overthrown is a double standard 22 Elections give oligarchs too much power edit Manin edit Bernard Manin believes that both representative and direct democracy promote rule of the people but that elections lead to the rule of the aristocratic Manin explains that in direct democracies virtually every citizen has the chance to be selected sometimes at random to populate the government but in modern republics only elites have the chance of being elected Manin draws from James Harrington Montesquieu and Jean Jacques Rousseau to suggest that the dominant form of government representative as opposed to direct is effectively aristocratic 4 He says that modern representative governments exercise political power through aristocratic elections which in turn contradicts rule of the people As far as Montesquieu is concerned elections favor the best citizens who Manin notes tend to be wealthy and upper class As far as Rousseau is concerned elections favor the incumbent government officials or the citizens with the strongest personalities which results in hereditary aristocracy Manin further evinces the aristocratic nature of representative governments by contrasting them with the ancient style of selection by lot Manin notes that Montesquieu believed that lotteries prevent jealousy and distribute offices equally among citizens from different ranks while Rousseau believed that lotteries choose indifferently preventing self interest and partiality from polluting the citizen s choice and thus prevent hereditary aristocracy However Manin also provides criticism of the Athenians experiment with direct democracy or selection by lot 4 Manin reflects on Montesquieu s interrogation of the extent to which Athenian direct democracy was truly direct Montesquieu finds that citizens who had reason to believe they would be accused as unworthy of selection commonly withheld their names from the lottery thereby making selection by lot vulnerable to self selection bias and thus aristocratic Manin does not dwell on direct democracy s potentially aristocratic elements perhaps because he shares Montesquieu s belief that nothing is alarming about the exclusion of citizens who may be incompetent this exclusion may be inevitable in any method of selection Additionally Manin is interested in explaining the discrepancy between 18th century American and French revolutionaries declaration of the equality of all citizens and their enactment of aristocratic elections in their respective democratic experiments 4 Manin suggests that the discrepancy is explained by the revolutionaries contemporary preoccupation with one form of equality over another The revolutionaries prioritized gaining the equal right to consent to their choice of government even a potentially aristocratic democracy at the expense of seeking the equal right to be the face of that democracy And it is elections not lots that provide citizens with more opportunities to consent In elections citizens consent both to the procedure of elections and the product of the elections even if they produce the election of elites In lotteries citizens consent only to the procedure of lots but not to the product of the lots even if they produce the election of the average person That is if the revolutionaries prioritized consent to be governed over equal opportunity to serve as the government then their choice of elections over lotteries makes sense Michels edit A major scholarly attack based on democracy was made by German Italian political scientist Robert Michels who developed the mainstream political science theory of the iron law of oligarchy in 1911 23 Michels argued that oligarchy is inevitable as an iron law within any organization as part of the tactical and technical necessities of organization and on the topic of democracy Michels stated It is organization which gives birth to the dominion of the elected over the electors of the mandataries over the mandators of the delegates over the delegators Who says organization says oligarchy and went on to state Historical evolution mocks all the prophylactic measures that have been adopted for the prevention of oligarchy 23 Michels stated that the official goal of democracy of eliminating elite rule was impossible that democracy is a facade legitimizing the rule of a particular elite and that elite rule that he refers to as oligarchy is inevitable 23 Michels had formerly been a Marxist but became drawn to the syndicalism of Sorel Eduoard Berth Arturo Labriola and Enrico Leone and had become strongly opposed parliamentarian legalistic and bureaucratic socialism of social democracy and in contrast supported an activist voluntarist anti parliamentarian socialism 24 Michels would later become a supporter of fascism upon Mussolini s rise to power in 1922 viewing fascism s goal to destroy liberal democracy sympathetically 24 Lagardelle edit French revolutionary syndicalist Hubert Lagardelle claimed that French revolutionary syndicalism came to being as the result of the reaction of the proletariat against idiotic democracy which he claimed was the popular form of bourgeois dominance Lagardelle opposed democracy for its universalism and believed in the necessity of class separation of the proletariat from the bourgeoisie as democracy did not recognize the social differences between them Van Reybrouck edit David Van Reybrouck the author of Against Elections The Case for Democracy argues that allocating power through sortition such as in citizens assemblies fixes many of the shortcomings of representative democracy Democracy is not government by the best in our society because such a thing is called an aristocracy elected or not Democracy by contrast flourishes precisely by allowing a diversity of voices to be heard It s all about having an equal say an equal right to determine what political action is taken 25 Pareto and Mosca edit The 20th century Italian thinkers Vilfredo Pareto and Gaetano Mosca independently argued that democracy was illusory and served only to mask the reality of elite rule Indeed they argued that elite oligarchy is the unbendable law of human nature due largely to the apathy and division of the masses as opposed to the drive initiative and unity of the elites and that democratic institutions would do no more than shift the exercise of power from oppression to manipulation 26 Martin Gilens edit A 2014 study led by Princeton professor Martin Gilens of 1 779 U S government decisions concluded that elites and organized groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on U S government policy while average citizens and mass based interest groups have little or no independent influence 27 Arguments for full democratization edit Corruption edit See also Elite theory The inability of governments around the world to successfully deal with corruption is causing a global crisis of democracy 28 Whilst countries that have high levels of democracy tend to have low levels of different forms of corruption it is also clear that countries with moderate levels of democracy have high corruption as well as countries with no democracy having very little corruption 29 Varying types of democratic policies reduce corruption but only high levels of and multiple kinds of democratic institutions such as open and free elections combined with judicial and legislative constraints will effectively reduce corruption One important internal element of democracy is the electoral process which can be considered easily corruptible For example it is not inevitable in a democracy that elections will be free and fair The giving and receiving of bribes the threat or use of violence treatment and impersonation are common ways that the electoral process can be corrupted 30 meaning that democracy is not impenetrable from external problems and can be criticized for allowing it to take place M S Golwalkar in his book Bunch of Thoughts describes democracy as to a very large extent only a myth in practice The high sounding concept of individual freedom only meant the freedom of those talented few to exploit the rest citation needed Voter turnout edit Voter turnout being lower than desired in some democracies has been attributed to several causes with examples including reduced trust in democratic processes lack of compulsory voting political efficacy include wasted votes 31 gridlock and high barriers to entry for new political movements 32 Coase theorem edit Daron Acemoglu argues that the Coase theorem is only valid in politics while there are rules of the game so to speak that are being enforced by the government But when there is nobody there to enforce the rules for the government itself there is no way to guarantee that low transaction costs will lead to an efficient outcome in democracies 33 Anthony Downs argued that the political market works much the same way as the economic market and that there could potentially be an equilibrium in the system because of the democratic process 34 However he argued that imperfect knowledge in politicians and voters prevented the full realization of that equilibrium 34 Manipulation of the opposition edit Further information Suppression of dissent Various reasons can be found for eliminating or suppressing political opponents Methods such as false flags counterterrorism laws 35 planting or creating compromising material and perpetuation of public fear may be used to suppress dissent After a failed coup d etat over 110 000 people have been purged and nearly 40 000 have been imprisoned in Turkey which is or was considered to be a democratic nation during the 2016 Turkish purges 36 37 Fake parties phantom political rivals and scarecrow opponents may be used to undermine the opposition 38 Debated aspects of democracy editMajoritarianism edit Main article Tyranny of the majorityUnlike in a consensus democracy or majoritarian democracies that embrace political egalitarianism democratic theorists worried about conditions where a majority could become tyrannical Plato and James Madison for example were concerned about tyranny of the majority 39 40 Professors Richard Ellis of Willamette University and Michael Nelson of Rhodes College argue that much constitutional thought from Madison to Lincoln and beyond has focused on the problem of majority tyranny They conclude The principles of republican government embedded in the Constitution represent an effort by the framers to ensure that the inalienable rights of life liberty and the pursuit of happiness would not be trampled by majorities 41 Thomas Jefferson warned that an elective despotism is not the government we fought for 42 A constitution 43 would limit the powers of what a simple majority can accomplish 44 Liberal democracy safeguards against the tyranny of majority through rights of the individual liberty consent of the governed political equality right to private property and equality before the law 45 46 Fierlbeck 1998 believes that a majority rule that may not be in the best interest of all its citizens is not necessarily due to a failure in the democratic process but rather because democracy is responsive to the desires of a large middle class increasingly willing to disregard the muted voices of economically marginalized groups within its own borders 47 Stability edit Majoritarian democracy has been criticized who for not offering enough political stability citation needed As governments are frequently elected on and off there tends to be frequent changes in the policies of democratic countries both domestically and internationally citation needed Reason Wafawarova argued in 2008 that rigid approaches to democracy may undermine that ability for a developing country to achieve long term stability and democracy 48 needs update Media has been accused who of causing political instability and undermining democracy 49 verification needed Winner take all elections edit See also Political polarization By the median voter theorem only a few people hold the balance of power in an two party system and many may be unhappy with their decisions In this way they argue Two party democracies are inefficient 50 Such a system could result in a wealth disparity or racial discrimination Arrow s impossibility theorem suggests that winner take all elections unlike multi winner voting such as proportional representation can be logically incoherent This is based on a certain set of criteria for democratic decision making being inherently conflicting i e these three fairness criteria 1 If every voter prefers alternative X over alternative Y then the group prefers X over Y 2 If every voter s preference between X and Y remains unchanged then the group s preference between X and Y will also remain unchanged even if voters preferences between other pairs like X and Z Y and Z or Z and W change 3 There is no dictator no single voter possesses the power to always determine the group s preference Kenneth Arrow summarised the implications of the theorem in a non mathematical form stating that no voting method is fair every ranked voting method is flawed and the only voting method that isn t flawed is a dictatorship 51 needs context verification needed However Arrow s formal premises can be considered overly strict and with their reasonable weakening the logical incoherence of democracy looks much less critical 52 This situation was metaphorically characterized by Charles Plott The subject began with what seemed to be a minor problem with majority rule It is just a mathematical curiosity said some But intrigued and curious about this little hole researchers not deterred by the possibly irrelevant began digging in the ground nearby What they now appear to have been uncovering is a gigantic cavern into which fall almost all of our ideas about social actions Almost anything we say and or anyone has ever said about what society wants or should get is threatened with internal inconsistency It is as though people have been talking for years about a thing that cannot in principle exist and a major effort now is needed to see what objectively remains from the conversations Charles Plott 1976 Axiomatic social choice theory p 511 53 Rule of law edit This section may lend undue weight to views of the Chinese Communist Party Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message February 2024 The Chinese Communist Party political concept of whole process people s democracy criticizes liberal democracy for excessively relying on procedural formalities or rule of law without in the party s view genuinely reflecting the interests of the people 54 60 64 According to Wang Zhongyuan of Fudan University this critique arises as part of a post 1990s trend in which various countries have sought to redefine democracy in ways that differ from Western multi party democratic systems 54 61 Under the framing of whole process people s democracy the most important criteria for democracy is whether it can solve the people s real problems while a system in which the people are awakened only for voting is deemed not truly democratic 54 60 64 The concept is thus both a way of criticizing liberal democracy and deflecting criticism of the Chinese system 54 64 Long term thinking edit This section may lend undue weight to views of the Chinese Communist Party Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message February 2024 Different voting systems lead to different levels of short termism in politics 55 Chinese policymakers argue that policy under democratic systems is largely restricted to ad hoc interventions which leaves social development vulnerable to market forces 56 144 According to this view policy making in democratic systems is limited to ad hoc policy interventions 56 144 145 Chinese planners argue that such interventions are incapable of coping with fundamental challenges such as environmental degradation dysfunction in capital markets and demographic change 56 145 Influence of the media edit This section may contain material not related to the topic of the article Please help improve this section or discuss this issue on the talk page January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message This section possibly contains original research looks like synthesis for many of the sources don t specifically look at democracy in the context of other systems just at this aspect of democracyPlease improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message See also Crowd manipulation Media manipulation and Post truth politics Malleability of public opinion is cited by Schumpeter as a reason to prefer technocracy to democracy while others concerned about the sway of the public argue for limiting the ability of money to play a role in democracy 57 58 Critics who claim that mass media actually shapes public opinion and can therefore be used to control democracy Dan Slater and Lucan Ahmad Way criticized the FBI for announcing that the agency would examine potentially incriminating evidence against Hillary Clinton s use of a private email server just 11 days before the election 59 The argue that misinformation such as fake news has become central to elections around the world 59 In December 2016 United States intelligence agencies made allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 United States Elections by working to undermine public faith in the U S democratic process denigrate Secretary Hillary Clinton and harm her electability and potential presidency including passing material against the Democrats to WikiLeaks to discredit the election and favor Donald Trump 59 improper synthesis Social bots and other forms of online propaganda as well as search engine result algorithms may be used to alter the perception and opinion of voters 60 61 In 2016 Andres Sepulveda disclosed that he manipulated public opinion to rig elections in Latin America According to him with a budget of 600 000 he led a team of hackers that stole campaign strategies manipulated social media to create false waves of enthusiasm and derision and installed spyware in opposition offices to help Enrique Pena Nieto a right of center candidate win the election 62 63 Televised debates 64 and according to George Bishop inaccurate opinion polls 65 may also be able to shift election outcomes improper synthesis Anti democratic thought editSee also Autocratization Dark Enlightenment and PlutocracyThese critiques largely see people as incapable of self rule preferring the empowerment of religious or secular elites Religion edit Main article Theocracy Theocracies view deities as supreme ruling authorities not the people 66 Theodemocracy combines authority by both deity and the people 67 Salafism Islam edit Main article Salafism The practice of orthodox Islam in the form of Salafism can clash with a democratic system The core precept of Islam that of tawheed the oneness of God can be interpreted by fundamentalists to mean among other things that democracy as a political system is incompatible with the purported notion that laws not handed down by God should not be recognized 68 Voter literacy tests edit See also Literacy test Democracy The God That Failed and Voter suppression Plato believed it s reckless to allow common men to vote The vote of an expert has equal value to the vote of an incompetent 69 Jason Brennan believes that the low information voters is a major problem in America and is the main objection to democracies in general because the system does not incentivize being informed 70 Brennan cites a study where less than 30 of Americans can name two or more of the rights listed in the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights 70 He believes an informed voter should have extensive knowledge of the candidate s current and previous political beliefs tendencies He proposes an epistocracy which would only give a vote to those with an elite political understanding 70 Charles Maurras a supporter of the Vichy regime and member of the far right FRS of the Action Francaise movement believed in biological inequality and natural hierarchies and claimed that the individual is naturally subordinated to social collectivities such as the family the society and the state which he claims are doomed to fail if based upon the myth of equality or abstract liberty Maurras criticized democracy as being a government by numbers in which quantity matters more over quality and prefers the worst over the best Maurras denounced the principles of liberalism as described in The Social Contract by Jean Jacques Rousseau and in Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen as based upon the false assumption of liberty and the false assumption of equality He claimed that the parliamentary system subordinates the national interest or common good to private interests of a parliament s representatives where only short sighted interests of individuals prevail citation needed See also editCollective problem solving Democracy in China Group decision making General will Criticisms Liberal democracy Issues and criticism Illiberal democracy Neo feudalism Political warfare The Myth of the Rational Voter 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Political Science 20 3 511 596 doi 10 2307 2110686 JSTOR 2110686 S2CID 143366620 a b c d Wang Zhongyuan 2022 Democracy with Chinese Adjectives Whole Process Democracy and China s Political Development In Pieke Frank N Hofman Bert eds CPC Futures The New Era of Socialism with Chinese Characteristics Singapore National University of Singapore Press doi 10 56159 eai 52060 ISBN 978 981 18 5206 0 OCLC 1354535847 Ferrin Monica Hernandez Enrique May 2021 Preferences for consensus and majoritarian democracy long and short term influences European Political Science Review 13 2 209 225 doi 10 1017 S1755773921000047 hdl 2183 27899 ISSN 1755 7739 a b c Heilmann Sebastian 2018 Red Swan How Unorthodox Policy Making Facilitated China s Rise The Chinese University of Hong Kong Press doi 10 2307 j ctv2n7q6b ISBN 978 962 996 827 4 JSTOR j ctv2n7q6b S2CID 158420253 Jacobs Lawrence R December 1 2001 Commentary Manipulators and Manipulation Public Opinion in a Representative Democracy Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law 26 6 1361 1374 doi 10 1215 03616878 26 6 1361 ISSN 1527 1927 PMID 11831584 S2CID 5716232 Retrieved January 22 2017 Gorton William A January 2 2016 Manipulating Citizens How Political Campaigns Use of Behavioral Social Science Harms Democracy New Political Science 38 61 80 doi 10 1080 07393148 2015 1125119 S2CID 147145163 a b c Slater Dan Way Lucan Ahmad January 12 2017 Was the 2016 U S election democratic Here are 7 serious shortfalls Washington Post Retrieved January 22 2017 Copley Caroline November 24 2016 Merkel fears social bots may manipulate German election Reuters Retrieved January 22 2017 Gaycken Sandro October 18 2016 The new power of manipulation Deutsche Welle Retrieved January 22 2017 Robertson Jordan Riley Michael Willis Andrew March 31 2016 How to Hack an Election Bloomberg com Bloomberg Retrieved January 22 2017 Staufenberg Jess April 2 2016 Man claims he rigged elections in most Latin American countries over 8 years The Independent Retrieved January 22 2017 Davis Colin J Bowers Jeffrey S Memon Amina March 30 2011 Social Influence in Televised Election Debates A Potential Distortion of Democracy PLOS ONE 6 3 e18154 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 618154D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0018154 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3068183 PMID 21479191 Bishop George November 30 2015 Polls Can Create an Illusion of Public Opinion The Opinion Pages The New York Times Retrieved January 23 2017 Theocracy n Oxford English Dictionary 2015 Archived from the original on July 21 2013 Retrieved June 28 2015 Times and Seasons 5 510 Salafism in the Netherlands Diversity and dynamics PDF General Intelligence and Security Service AIVD National Coordinator for Security and Counterterrorism NCTV 2015 p 12 Archived from the original PDF on January 5 2019 Retrieved January 5 2019 Plato Criticism of democracy the Gallerist The Gallerist January 23 2021 a b c Brennan 2016 Cited works edit Brennan Jason 2016 Against Democracy New Preface Princeton University Press doi 10 2307 j ctvc77mcz ISBN 978 1 4008 8839 9 OCLC 942707357 Reybrouck David Van 2016 Against Elections The Case for Democracy Translated by Waters Liz London The Bodley Head p 133 ISBN 978 1 84792 422 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Femia Joseph V 2001 Against the masses varieties of anti democratic thought since the French Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 828063 7 OCLC 46641885 Further reading editThis further reading section may need cleanup Please read the editing guide and help improve the section March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Benoist Alain de 2011 The Problem of Democracy London Arktos ISBN 978 1 907166 16 7 OCLC 713181908 importance Lukacs John March 8 2005 Democracy and Populism Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10773 9 Mann Michael 2004 The Dark Side of Democracy Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 53854 1 Graham Gordon 2002 The Case Against the Democratic State Thorverton Imprint Academic ISBN 978 0 907845 38 6 OCLC 50581619 importance Hoppe Hans Hermann 2001 Democracy the God That Failed New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 0 7658 0868 4 Schmitt Carl June 22 1988 The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy Cambridge Mass MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 69126 0 Briggs Asa April 15 1975 Robert Lowe and the Fear of Democracy in late 19th century British politics Victorian People Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 07488 7 Newcastle Lord Percy of The Heresy of Democracy Henry Regnery Co 1955 importance Kuehnelt Leddihn Erik von Liberty or Equality The Caxton Printers 1952 importance Mencken H L 1926 Notes on democracy New York Knopf OCLC 182664 Mackinder Sir Halford J Democratic Ideals and Reality Henry Holt amp Company New York 1919 Godkin Edwin L Problems of Modern Democracy Charles Scribner s Sons New York 1896 importance Maine Sir Henry Sumner Popular Government John Murray London 1886 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Criticism of democracy amp oldid 1223480433, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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