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Wikipedia

Republicanism

Republicanism is a political ideology centred on citizenship in a state organized as a republic. Historically, it emphasizes the idea of self-rule and ranges from the rule of a representative minority or oligarchy to popular sovereignty.[1] It has had different definitions and interpretations which vary significantly based on historical context and methodological approach.

Republicanism may also refer to the non-ideological scientific approach to politics and governance. As the republican thinker and second president of the United States John Adams stated in the introduction to his famous A Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America,[2] the "science of politics is the science of social happiness" and a republic is the form of government arrived at when the science of politics is appropriately applied to the creation of a rationally designed government. Rather than being ideological, this approach focuses on applying a scientific methodology to the problems of governance through the rigorous study and application of past experience and experimentation in governance. This is the approach that may best be described to apply to republican thinkers such as Niccolò Machiavelli (as evident in his Discourses on Livy), John Adams, and James Madison.

The word "republic" derives from the Latin noun-phrase res publica (public thing), which referred to the system of government that emerged in the 6th century BCE following the expulsion of the kings from Rome by Lucius Junius Brutus and Collatinus.[3]

This form of government in the Roman state collapsed in the latter part of the 1st century BCE, giving way to what was a monarchy in form, if not in name. Republics recurred subsequently, with, for example, Renaissance Florence or early modern Britain. The concept of a republic became a powerful force in Britain's North American colonies, where it contributed to the American Revolution. In Europe, it gained enormous influence through the French Revolution and through the First French Republic of 1792–1804.

Historical development of republicanism

Classical antecedents

Ancient Greece

 
Sculpture of Aristotle

In Ancient Greece, several philosophers and historians analysed and described elements we now recognize as classical republicanism. Traditionally, the Greek concept of "politeia" was rendered into Latin as res publica. Consequently, political theory until relatively recently often used republic in the general sense of "regime". There is no single written expression or definition from this era that exactly corresponds with a modern understanding of the term "republic" but most of the essential features of the modern definition are present in the works of Plato, Aristotle, and Polybius. These include theories of mixed government and of civic virtue. For example, in The Republic, Plato places great emphasis on the importance of civic virtue (aiming for the good) together with personal virtue ('just man') on the part of the ideal rulers. Indeed, in Book V, Plato asserts that until rulers have the nature of philosophers (Socrates) or philosophers become the rulers, there can be no civic peace or happiness.[4]

A number of Ancient Greek city-states such as Athens and Sparta have been classified as "classical republics", because they featured extensive participation by the citizens in legislation and political decision-making. Aristotle considered Carthage to have been a republic as it had a political system similar to that of some of the Greek cities, notably Sparta, but avoided some of the defects that affected them.

Ancient Rome

Both Livy, a Roman historian, and Plutarch, who is noted for his biographies and moral essays, described how Rome had developed its legislation, notably the transition from a kingdom to a republic, by following the example of the Greeks. Some of this history, composed more than 500 years after the events, with scant written sources to rely on, may be fictitious reconstruction.

The Greek historian Polybius, writing in the mid-2nd century BCE, emphasized (in Book 6) the role played by the Roman Republic as an institutional form in the dramatic rise of Rome's hegemony over the Mediterranean. In his writing on the constitution of the Roman Republic,[5] Polybius described the system as being a "mixed" form of government. Specifically, Polybius described the Roman system as a mixture of monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy with the Roman Republic constituted in such a manner that it applied the strengths of each system to offset the weaknesses of the others. In his view, the mixed system of the Roman Republic provided the Romans with a much greater level of domestic tranquillity than would have been experienced under another form of government. Furthermore, Polybius argued, the comparative level of domestic tranquillity the Romans enjoyed allowed them to conquer the Mediterranean. Polybius exerted a great influence on Cicero as he wrote his politico-philosophical works in the 1st century BCE. In one of these works, De re publica, Cicero linked the Roman concept of res publica to the Greek politeia.

The modern term "republic", despite its derivation, is not synonymous with the Roman res publica. Among the several meanings of the term res publica, it is most often translated "republic" where the Latin expression refers to the Roman state, and its form of government, between the era of the Kings and the era of the Emperors. This Roman Republic would, by a modern understanding of the word, still be defined as a true republic, even if not coinciding entirely. Thus, Enlightenment philosophers saw the Roman Republic as an ideal system because it included features like a systematic separation of powers.

Romans still called their state "Res Publica" in the era of the early emperors because, on the surface, the organization of the state had been preserved by the first emperors without significant alteration. Several offices from the Republican era, held by individuals, were combined under the control of a single person. These changes became permanent, and gradually conferred sovereignty on the Emperor.

Cicero's description of the ideal state, in De re Publica, does not equate to a modern-day "republic"; it is more like enlightened absolutism. His philosophical works were influential when Enlightenment philosophers such as Voltaire developed their political concepts.

In its classical meaning, a republic was any stable well-governed political community. Both Plato and Aristotle identified three forms of government: democracy, aristocracy, and monarchy. First Plato and Aristotle, and then Polybius and Cicero, held that the ideal republic is a mixture of these three forms of government. The writers of the Renaissance embraced this notion.

Cicero expressed reservations concerning the republican form of government. While in his theoretical works he defended monarchy, or at least a mixed monarchy/oligarchy, in his own political life, he generally opposed men, like Julius Caesar, Mark Antony, and Octavian, who were trying to realise such ideals. Eventually, that opposition led to his death and Cicero can be seen as a victim of his own Republican ideals.

Tacitus, a contemporary of Plutarch, was not concerned with whether a form of government could be analysed as a "republic" or a "monarchy".[6] He analysed how the powers accumulated by the early Julio-Claudian dynasty were all given by a State that was still notionally a republic. Nor was the Roman Republic "forced" to give away these powers: it did so freely and reasonably, certainly in Augustus' case, because of his many services to the state, freeing it from civil wars and disorder.

Tacitus was one of the first to ask whether such powers were given to the head of state because the citizens wanted to give them, or whether they were given for other reasons (for example, because one had a deified ancestor). The latter case led more easily to abuses of power. In Tacitus' opinion, the trend away from a true republic was irreversible only when Tiberius established power, shortly after Augustus' death in 14 CE (much later than most historians place the start of the Imperial form of government in Rome). By this time, too many principles defining some powers as "untouchable" had been implemented.[7]

Renaissance republicanism

 

In Europe, republicanism was revived in the late Middle Ages when a number of states, which arose from medieval communes, embraced a republican system of government.[8] These were generally small but wealthy trading states in which the merchant class had risen to prominence. Haakonssen notes that by the Renaissance, Europe was divided, such that those states controlled by a landed elite were monarchies, and those controlled by a commercial elite were republics. The latter included the Italian city-states of Florence, Genoa, and Venice and members of the Hanseatic League. One notable exception was Dithmarschen, a group of largely autonomous villages, which confederated in a peasants' republic. Building upon concepts of medieval feudalism, Renaissance scholars used the ideas of the ancient world to advance their view of an ideal government. Thus the republicanism developed during the Renaissance is known as 'classical republicanism' because it relied on classical models. This terminology was developed by Zera Fink in the 1940s,[9] but some modern scholars, such as Brugger, consider it confuses the "classical republic" with the system of government used in the ancient world.[10] 'Early modern republicanism' has been proposed as an alternative term. It is also sometimes called civic humanism. Beyond simply a non-monarchy, early modern thinkers conceived of an ideal republic, in which mixed government was an important element, and the notion that virtue and the common good were central to good government. Republicanism also developed its own distinct view of liberty. Renaissance authors who spoke highly of republics were rarely critical of monarchies. While Niccolò Machiavelli's Discourses on Livy is the period's key work on republics, he also wrote the treatise The Prince, which is better remembered and more widely read, on how best to run a monarchy. The early modern writers did not see the republican model as universally applicable; most thought that it could be successful only in very small and highly urbanized city-states. Jean Bodin in Six Books of the Commonwealth (1576) identified monarchy with republic.[11]

Classical writers like Tacitus, and Renaissance writers like Machiavelli tried to avoid an outspoken preference for one government system or another. Enlightenment philosophers, on the other hand, expressed a clear opinion. Thomas More, writing before the Age of Enlightenment, was too outspoken for the reigning king's taste, even though he coded his political preferences in a utopian allegory.

In England a type of republicanism evolved that was not wholly opposed to monarchy; thinkers such as Thomas More and Sir Thomas Smith saw a monarchy, firmly constrained by law, as compatible with republicanism.

Dutch Republic

Anti-monarchism became more strident in the Dutch Republic during and after the Eighty Years' War, which began in 1568. This anti-monarchism was more propaganda than a political philosophy; most of the anti-monarchist works appeared in the form of widely distributed pamphlets. This evolved into a systematic critique of monarchy, written by men such as the brothers Johan and Peter de la Court. They saw all monarchies as illegitimate tyrannies that were inherently corrupt. These authors were more concerned with preventing the position of Stadholder from evolving into a monarchy, than with attacking their former rulers. Dutch republicanism also influenced French Huguenots during the Wars of Religion. In the other states of early modern Europe republicanism was more moderate.[12]

Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth

In the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, republicanism was the influential ideology. After the establishment of the Commonwealth of Two Nations, republicans supported the status quo, of having a very weak monarch, and opposed those who thought a stronger monarchy was needed. These mostly Polish republicans, such as Łukasz Górnicki, Andrzej Wolan, and Stanisław Konarski, were well read in classical and Renaissance texts and firmly believed that their state was a republic on the Roman model, and started to call their state the Rzeczpospolita. Atypically, Polish–Lithuanian republicanism was not the ideology of the commercial class, but rather of the landed nobility, which would lose power if the monarchy were expanded. This resulted in an oligarchy of the great landed magnates.[13]

Enlightenment republicanism

Caribbean

Victor Hugues, Jean-Baptiste Raymond de Lacrosse and Nicolas Xavier de Ricard were prominent supporters of republicanism for various Caribbean islands. Edwin Sandys, William Sayle and George Tucker all supported the islands becoming republics, particularly Bermuda. Julien Fédon and Joachim Philip led the republican Fédon's rebellion between 2 March 1795 and 19 June 1796, an uprising against British rule in Grenada.

Corsica

The first of the Enlightenment republics established in Europe during the eighteenth century occurred in the small Mediterranean island of Corsica. Although perhaps an unlikely place to act as a laboratory for such political experiments, Corsica combined a number of factors that made it unique: a tradition of village democracy; varied cultural influences from the Italian city-states, Spanish empire and Kingdom of France which left it open to the ideas of the Italian Renaissance, Spanish humanism and French Enlightenment; and a geo-political position between these three competing powers which led to frequent power vacuums in which new regimes could be set up, testing out the fashionable new ideas of the age.

From the 1720s the island had been experiencing a series of short-lived but ongoing rebellions against its current sovereign, the Italian city-state of Genoa. During the initial period (1729–36) these merely sought to restore the control of the Spanish Empire; when this proved impossible, an independent Kingdom of Corsica (1736–40) was proclaimed, following the Enlightenment ideal of a written constitutional monarchy. But the perception grew that the monarchy had colluded with the invading power, a more radical group of reformers led by the Pasquale Paoli pushed for political overhaul, in the form of a constitutional and parliamentary republic inspired by the popular ideas of the Enlightenment.

Its governing philosophy was both inspired by the prominent thinkers of the day, notably the French philosophers Montesquieu and Voltaire and the Swiss theorist Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Not only did it include a permanent national parliament with fixed-term legislatures and regular elections, but, more radically for the time, it introduced universal male suffrage, and it is thought to be the first constitution in the world to grant women the right to vote female suffrage may also have existed.[14][15] It also extended Enlightened principles to other spheres, including administrative reform, the foundation of a national university at Corte, and the establishment of a popular standing army.

The Corsican Republic lasted for fifteen years, from 1755 to 1769, eventually falling to a combination of Genoese and French forces and was incorporated as a province of the Kingdom of France. But the episode resonated across Europe as an early example of Enlightened constitutional republicanism, with many of the most prominent political commentators of the day recognising it to be an experiment in a new type of popular and democratic government. Its influence was particularly notable among the French Enlightenment philosophers: Rousseau's famous work On the Social Contract (1762: chapter 10, book II) declared, in its discussion on the conditions necessary for a functional popular sovereignty, that "There is still one European country capable of making its own laws: the island of Corsica. valour and persistency with which that brave people has regained and defended its liberty well deserves that some wise man should teach it how to preserve what it has won. I have a feeling that some day that little island will astonish Europe."; indeed Rousseau volunteered to do precisely that, offering a draft constitution for Paoli'se use.[16] Similarly, Voltaire affirmed in his Précis du siècle de Louis XV (1769: chapter LX) that "Bravery may be found in many places, but such bravery only among free peoples". But the influence of the Corsican Republic as an example of a sovereign people fighting for liberty and enshrining this constitutionally in the form of an Enlightened republic was even greater among the Radicals of Great Britain and North America,[17] where it was popularised via An Account of Corsica, by the Scottish essayist James Boswell. The Corsican Republic went on to influence the American revolutionaries ten years later: the Sons of Liberty, initiators of the American Revolution, would declare Pascal Paoli to be a direct inspiration for their own struggle against the British; the son of Ebenezer Mackintosh was named Pascal Paoli Mackintosh in his honour, and no fewer than five American counties are named Paoli for the same reason.

England

Oliver Cromwell set up a Christian republic called the Commonwealth of England (1649–1660) which he ruled after the overthrow of King Charles I. James Harrington was then a leading philosopher of republicanism. John Milton was another important Republican thinker at this time, expressing his views in political tracts as well as through poetry and prose. In his epic poem Paradise Lost, for instance, Milton uses Satan's fall to suggest that unfit monarchs should be brought to justice, and that such issues extend beyond the constraints of one nation.[18] As Christopher N. Warren argues, Milton offers “a language to critique imperialism, to question the legitimacy of dictators, to defend free international discourse, to fight unjust property relations, and to forge new political bonds across national lines.”[19] This form of international Miltonic republicanism has been influential on later thinkers including 19th-century radicals Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, according to Warren and other historians.[20][21]

The collapse of the Commonwealth of England in 1660 and the restoration of the monarchy under Charles II discredited republicanism among England's ruling circles. Nevertheless, they welcomed the liberalism, and emphasis on rights, of John Locke, which played a major role in the Glorious Revolution of 1688. Even so, republicanism flourished in the "country" party of the early 18th century (commonwealthmen), which denounced the corruption of the "court" party, producing a political theory that heavily influenced the American colonists. In general, the English ruling classes of the 18th century vehemently opposed republicanism, typified by the attacks on John Wilkes, and especially on the American Revolution and the French Revolution.[22]

French and Swiss thought

 
Portrait of Montesquieu

French and Swiss Enlightenment thinkers, such as Voltaire, Baron Charles de Montesquieu and later Jean-Jacques Rousseau, expanded upon and altered the ideas of what an ideal republic should be: some of their new ideas were scarcely traceable to antiquity or the Renaissance thinkers. Concepts they contributed, or heavily elaborated, were social contract, positive law, and mixed government. They also borrowed from, and distinguished republicanism from, the ideas of liberalism that were developing at the same time.

Liberalism and republicanism were frequently conflated during this period, because they both opposed absolute monarchy. Modern scholars see them as two distinct streams that both contributed to the democratic ideals of the modern world. An important distinction is that, while republicanism stressed the importance of civic virtue and the common good, liberalism was based on economics and individualism. It is clearest in the matter of private property, which, according to some, can be maintained only under the protection of established positive law.

Jules Ferry, Prime Minister of France from 1880 to 1885, followed both these schools of thought. He eventually enacted the Ferry Laws, which he intended to overturn the Falloux Laws by embracing the anti-clerical thinking of the Philosophes. These laws ended the Catholic Church's involvement in many government institutions in late 19th-century France, including schools.

The Thirteen British Colonies in North America

In recent years a debate has developed over the role of republicanism in the American Revolution and in the British radicalism of the 18th century. For many decades the consensus was that liberalism, especially that of John Locke, was paramount and that republicanism had a distinctly secondary role.[23]

The new interpretations were pioneered by J.G.A. Pocock, who argued in The Machiavellian Moment (1975) that, at least in the early 18th century, republican ideas were just as important as liberal ones. Pocock's view is now widely accepted.[24] Bernard Bailyn and Gordon Wood pioneered the argument that the American founding fathers were more influenced by republicanism than they were by liberalism. Cornell University professor Isaac Kramnick, on the other hand, argues that Americans have always been highly individualistic and therefore Lockean.[25] Joyce Appleby has argued similarly for the Lockean influence on America.

In the decades before the American Revolution (1776), the intellectual and political leaders of the colonies studied history intently, looking for models of good government. They especially followed the development of republican ideas in England.[26] Pocock explained the intellectual sources in America:[27]

The Whig canon and the neo-Harringtonians, John Milton, James Harrington and Sidney, Trenchard, Gordon and Bolingbroke, together with the Greek, Roman, and Renaissance masters of the tradition as far as Montesquieu, formed the authoritative literature of this culture; and its values and concepts were those with which we have grown familiar: a civic and patriot ideal in which the personality was founded in property, perfected in citizenship but perpetually threatened by corruption; government figuring paradoxically as the principal source of corruption and operating through such means as patronage, faction, standing armies (opposed to the ideal of the militia), established churches (opposed to the Puritan and deist modes of American religion) and the promotion of a monied interest – though the formulation of this last concept was somewhat hindered by the keen desire for readily available paper credit common in colonies of settlement. A neoclassical politics provided both the ethos of the elites and the rhetoric of the upwardly mobile, and accounts for the singular cultural and intellectual homogeneity of the Founding Fathers and their generation.

The commitment of most Americans to these republican values made the American Revolution inevitable. Britain was increasingly seen as corrupt and hostile to republicanism, and as a threat to the established liberties the Americans enjoyed.[28]

Leopold von Ranke in 1848 claimed that American republicanism played a crucial role in the development of European liberalism:[29]

By abandoning English constitutionalism and creating a new republic based on the rights of the individual, the North Americans introduced a new force in the world. Ideas spread most rapidly when they have found adequate concrete expression. Thus republicanism entered our Romanic/Germanic world.... Up to this point, the conviction had prevailed in Europe that monarchy best served the interests of the nation. Now the idea spread that the nation should govern itself. But only after a state had actually been formed on the basis of the theory of representation did the full significance of this idea become clear. All later revolutionary movements have this same goal... This was the complete reversal of a principle. Until then, a king who ruled by the grace of God had been the center around which everything turned. Now the idea emerged that power should come from below.... These two principles are like two opposite poles, and it is the conflict between them that determines the course of the modern world. In Europe the conflict between them had not yet taken on concrete form; with the French Revolution it did.

Républicanisme

 

Republicanism, especially that of Rousseau, played a central role in the French Revolution and foreshadowed modern republicanism. The revolutionaries, after overthrowing the French monarchy in the 1790s, began by setting up a republic; Napoleon converted it into an Empire with a new aristocracy. In the 1830s Belgium adopted some of the innovations of the progressive political philosophers of the Enlightenment.

Républicanisme is a French version of modern republicanism. It is a form of social contract, deduced from Jean-Jacques Rousseau's idea of a general will. Each citizen is engaged in a direct relationship with the state, removing the need for identity politics based on local, religious, or racial identification.

Républicanisme, in theory, makes anti-discrimination laws unnecessary, though some critics may argue that in republics also, colour-blind laws serve to perpetuate discrimination.

Ireland

Inspired by the American and French Revolutions, the Society of United Irishmen was founded in 1791 in Belfast and Dublin. The inaugural meeting of the United Irishmen in Belfast on 18 October 1791 approved a declaration of the society's objectives. It identified the central grievance that Ireland had no national government: "...we are ruled by Englishmen, and the servants of Englishmen, whose object is the interest of another country, whose instrument is corruption, and whose strength is the weakness of Ireland..."[30] They adopted three central positions: (i) to seek out a cordial union among all the people of Ireland, to maintain that balance essential to preserve liberties and extend commerce; (ii) that the sole constitutional mode by which English influence can be opposed, is by a complete and radical reform of the representation of the people in Parliament; (iii) that no reform is practicable or efficacious, or just which shall not include Irishmen of every religious persuasion. The declaration, then, urged constitutional reform, union among Irish people and the removal of all religious disqualifications.

The movement was influenced, at least in part, by the French Revolution. Public interest, already strongly aroused, was brought to a pitch by the publication in 1790 of Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France, and Thomas Paine's response, Rights of Man, in February 1791.[citation needed] Theobald Wolfe Tone wrote later that, "This controversy, and the gigantic event which gave rise to it, changed in an instant the politics of Ireland."[31] Paine himself was aware of this commenting on sales of Part I of Rights of Man in November 1791, only eight months after publication of the first edition, he informed a friend that in England "almost sixteen thousand has gone off – and in Ireland above forty thousand".[32] Paine may have been inclined to talk up sales of his works but what is striking in this context is that Paine believed that Irish sales were so far ahead of English ones before Part II had appeared. On 5 June 1792, Thomas Paine, author of the Rights of Man was proposed for honorary membership of the Dublin Society of the United Irishmen.[33]

The fall of the Bastille was to be celebrated in Belfast on 14 July 1791 by a Volunteer meeting. At the request of Thomas Russell, Tone drafted suitable resolutions for the occasion, including one favouring the inclusion of Catholics in any reforms. In a covering letter to Russell, Tone wrote, "I have not said one word that looks like a wish for separation, though I give it to you and your friends as my most decided opinion that such an event would be a regeneration of their country".[31] By 1795, Tone's republicanism and that of the society had openly crystallized when he tells us: "I remember particularly two days thae we passed on Cave Hill. On the first Russell, Neilson, Simms, McCracken and one or two more of us, on the summit of McArt's fort, took a solemn obligation...never to desist in our efforts until we had subverted the authority of England over our country and asserted her independence."[34]

The culmination was an uprising against British rule in Ireland lasting from May to September 1798 – the Irish Rebellion of 1798 – with military support from revolutionary France in August and again October 1798. After the failure of the rising of 1798 the United Irishman, John Daly Burk, an émigré in the United States in his The History of the Late War in Ireland written in 1799, was most emphatic in its identification of the Irish, French and American causes.[35]

Modern republicanism

 
As a liberal nationalist, Finnish president K. J. Ståhlberg (1865–1952) was a strong supporter of republicanism.[36][37]

During the Enlightenment, anti-monarchism extended beyond the civic humanism of the Renaissance. Classical republicanism, still supported by philosophers such as Rousseau and Montesquieu, was only one of several theories seeking to limit the power of monarchies rather than directly opposing them.

Liberalism and socialism departed from classical republicanism and fueled the development of the more modern republicanism.

Theory

Neo-republicanism

Neorepublicanism is the effort by current scholars to draw on a classical republican tradition in the development of an attractive public philosophy intended for contemporary purposes.[38] Neorepublicanism emerges as an alternative postsocialist critique of market society from the left.[39]

Prominent theorists in this movement are Philip Pettit and Cass Sunstein, who have each written several works defining republicanism and how it differs from liberalism. Michael Sandel, a late convert to republicanism from communitarianism, advocates replacing or supplementing liberalism with republicanism, as outlined in his Democracy's Discontent: America in Search of a Public Philosophy.

Contemporary work from a neorepublican include jurist K. Sabeel Rahman's book Democracy Against Domination, which seeks to create a neorepublican framework for economic regulation grounded in the thought of Louis Brandeis and John Dewey and popular control, in contrast to both New Deal-style managerialism and neoliberal deregulation.[40][41] Philosopher Elizabeth Anderson's Private Government traces the history of republican critiques of private power, arguing that the classical free market policies of the 18th and 19th centuries intended to help workers only lead to their domination by employers.[42][43] In From Slavery to the Cooperative Commonwealth, political scientist Alex Gourevitch examines a strain of late 19th century American republicanism known as labour republicanism that was the producerist labour union The Knights of Labor, and how republican concepts were used in service of workers rights, but also with a strong critique of the role of that union in supporting the Chinese Exclusion Act.[44][45]

Democracy

 
Portrait of Thomas Paine
 
A revolutionary republican hand-written bill from the Stockholm riots during the Revolutions of 1848, reading: "Dethrone Oscar he is not fit to be a king – rather the Republic! Reform! Down with the Royal house – long live Aftonbladet! Death to the king – Republic! Republic! – the people! Brunkeberg this evening." The writer's identity is unknown.

In the late 18th century there was convergence of democracy and republicanism. Republicanism is a system that replaces or accompanies inherited rule. There is an emphasis on liberty, and a rejection of corruption.[46] It strongly influenced the American Revolution and the French Revolution in the 1770s and 1790s, respectively.[22] Republicans, in these two examples, tended to reject inherited elites and aristocracies, but left open two questions: whether a republic, to restrain unchecked majority rule, should have an unelected upper chamber—perhaps with members appointed as meritorious experts—and whether it should have a constitutional monarch.[47]

Though conceptually separate from democracy, republicanism included the key principles of rule by consent of the governed and sovereignty of the people. In effect, republicanism held that kings and aristocracies were not the real rulers, but rather the whole people were. Exactly how the people were to rule was an issue of democracy: republicanism itself did not specify a means.[48] In the United States, the solution was the creation of political parties that reflected the votes of the people and controlled the government (see Republicanism in the United States). In Federalist No. 10, James Madison rejected democracy in favour of republicanism.[49] There were similar debates in many other democratizing nations.[50]

In contemporary usage, the term democracy refers to a government chosen by the people, whether it is direct or representative.[51] Today the term republic usually refers to representative democracy with an elected head of state, such as a president, who serves for a limited term; in contrast to states with a hereditary monarch as a head of state, even if these states also are representative democracies, with an elected or appointed head of government such as a prime minister.[52]

The Founding Fathers of the United States rarely praised and often criticized democracy, which they equated with mob rule; James Madison argued that what distinguished a democracy from a republic was that the former became weaker as it got larger and suffered more violently from the effects of faction, whereas a republic could get stronger as it got larger and combatted faction by its very structure.[53] What was critical to American values, John Adams insisted, was that the government should be "bound by fixed laws, which the people have a voice in making, and a right to defend."[54] Thomas Jefferson warned that "an elective despotism is not the government we fought for."[55] 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."[56]

Constitutional monarchs and upper chambers

Some countries (such as the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Scandinavian countries, and Japan) turned powerful monarchs into constitutional ones with limited, or eventually merely symbolic, powers. Often the monarchy was abolished along with the aristocratic system, whether or not they were replaced with democratic institutions (such as in France, China, Iran, Russia, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Italy, Greece, Turkey and Egypt). In Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Papua New Guinea, and some other countries the monarch, or its representative, is given supreme executive power, but by convention acts only on the advice of his or her ministers. Many nations had elite upper houses of legislatures, the members of which often had lifetime tenure, but eventually these houses lost much power (as the UK House of Lords), or else became elective and remained powerful.[57][58]

See also

References

  1. ^ Hammersley, Rachel (2020). Republicanism : an introduction. Cambridge, UK. ISBN 978-1-5095-1341-3. OCLC 1145090006.
  2. ^ "The Works of John Adams, 10 vols". oll.libertyfund.org – Online Library of Liberty. Retrieved 2019-01-10.
  3. ^ Mortimer N. S. Sellers. American Republicanism: Roman Ideology in the United States Constitution. (New York University Press, 1994. p. 71.)
  4. ^ Paul A. Rahe, Republics ancient and modern: Classical Republicanism and the American Revolution (1992).
  5. ^ Polybius; Shuckburgh, Evelyn S. (2009). The Histories of Polybius. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/cbo9781139333740. ISBN 978-1139333740.
  6. ^ see for example Ann. IV, 32–33
  7. ^ Ann. I–VI
  8. ^ J.G.A. Pocock, The Machiavellian Moment: Florentine political thought and the Atlantic republican tradition (1975)
  9. ^ Zera S. Fink, The classical republicans: an essay on the recovery of a pattern of thought in seventeenth-century England (2011).
  10. ^ Bill Brugger, Republican Theory in Political Thought: Virtuous or Virtual? (1999).
  11. ^ John M. Najemy, "Baron's Machiavelli and renaissance republicanism." American Historical Review 101.1 (1996): 119–29.
  12. ^ Eco Haitsma Mulier, "The language of seventeenth-century republicanism in the United Provinces: Dutch or European?." in Anthony Pagden, ed., The Languages of political theory in early-modern Europe (1987): 179–96.
  13. ^ Jerzy Lukowski, Disorderly Liberty: The political culture of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in the eighteenth century (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2010).[ISBN missing]
  14. ^ Lucien Felli, "La renaissance du Paolisme". M. Bartoli, Pasquale Paoli, père de la patrie corse, Albatros, 1974, p. 29. "There is one area where the pioneering nature of Paoli's institutions is particularly pronounced, and that is in the area of voting rights. Indeed they allowed for female suffrage at a time when French women could not vote."
  15. ^ Philippe-Jean Catinchi et Josyane Savigneau, "Les femmes : du droit de vote à la parité", Le Monde.fr, 31 janvier 2013 ISSN 1950-6244, consuled on 14 August 2017)
  16. ^ "Projet de constitution pour la Corse ", published in Œuvres et correspondance inédites de J.J. Rousseau, (M.G. Streckeinsen-Moultou, ed.). Paris, 1861
  17. ^ Michel Vergé-Franceschi, "Pascal Paoli, un Corse des Lumières", Cahiers de la Méditerranée, 72 | 2006, 97–112.
  18. ^ Warren, Christopher N (2016). “Big Leagues: Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx.” Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development, Vol. 7.
  19. ^ Warren, Christopher N (2016). “Big Leagues: Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx.” Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development, Vol. 7. Pg. 380.
  20. ^ Rose, Jonathan (2001). The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes. pp. 26, 36–37, 122–25, 187.
  21. ^ Taylor, Antony (2002). “Shakespeare and Radicalism: The Uses and Abuses of Shakespeare in Nineteenth-Century Popular Politics.” Historical Journal 45, no. 2. pp. 357–79.
  22. ^ a b Pocock, J.G.A. The Machiavellian Moment: Florentine Political Thought and the Atlantic Republican Tradition (1975; new ed. 2003)
  23. ^ See for example Parrington, Vernon L. (1927). "Main Currents in American Thought". Retrieved 2013-12-18.
  24. ^ Shalhope (1982)
  25. ^ Isaac Kramnick, Ideological Background, in Jack. P. Greene and J. R. Pole, The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the American Revolution (1994) ch. 9; Robert E. Shallhope, "Republicanism" ibid ch 70.
  26. ^ Trevor Colbourn, The Lamp of Experience: Whig History and the Intellectual Origins of the American Revolution (1965) online version
  27. ^ Pocock, The Machiavellian Moment p. 507
  28. ^ Bailyn, Bernard.The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (1967)[ISBN missing]
  29. ^ quoted in Becker 2002, p. 128
  30. ^ Denis Carroll, The Man from God knows Where, p. 42 (Gartan) 1995
  31. ^ a b Henry Boylan, Wolf Tone, p. 16 (Gill and Macmillan, Dublin) 1981
  32. ^ Paine to John Hall, 25 Nov. 1791 (Foner, Paine Writings, II, p. 1,322)
  33. ^ Dickson, Keogh and Whelan, The United Irishmen. Republicanism, Radicalism and Rebellion, pp. 135–37 (Lilliput, Dublin) 1993
  34. ^ Henry Boylan, Wolf Tone, pp. 51–52 (Gill and Macmillan, Dublin) 1981
  35. ^ Dickson, Keogh and Whelan, The United Irishmen. Republicanism, Radicalism and Rebellion, pp. 297–98 (Lilliput, Dublin) 1993
  36. ^ . Eduskunta. Archived from the original on 2012-02-12.
  37. ^ Mononen, Juha (2 February 2009). . University of Tampere. Archived from the original on 7 June 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  38. ^ Frank Lovett and Philip Pettit. "Neorepublicanism: a normative and institutional research program." Political Science 12.1 (2009): 11ff. (online).
  39. ^ Gerald F. Gaus, "Backwards into the future: Neorepublicanism as a postsocialist critique of market society." Social Philosophy and Policy 20/1 (2003): 59–91.
  40. ^ Rahman, K. Sabeel (2016). Democracy Against Domination. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190468538.
  41. ^ Shenk, Timothy. "Booked: The End of Managerial Liberalism, with K. Sabeel Rahman". Dissent Magazine. Dissent Magazine. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  42. ^ Anderson, Elizabeth (2017). Private Government: How Employers Rule Our Lives (and Why We Don't Talk about It). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1400887781.
  43. ^ Rothman, Joshua (12 September 2017). "Are Bosses Dictators?". The New Yorker. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  44. ^ Gourevitch, Alex (2014). From Slavery to the Cooperative Commonwealth: Labor and Republican Liberty in the Nineteenth Century. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1139519434.
  45. ^ Stanley, Amy Dru. "Republic of Labor". Dissent Magazine. Dissent Magazine. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  46. ^ "Republicanism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)". Plato.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2013-02-03.
  47. ^ Gordon S. Wood, The Creation of the American Republic 1776–1787 (1969)
  48. ^ R. R. Palmer, The Age of the Democratic Revolution: Political History of Europe and America, 1760–1800 (1959)
  49. ^ "The Federalist Papers : No. 10". Avalon Project. 29 December 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  50. ^ Robert E. Shalhope, "Republicanism and Early American Historiography," William and Mary Quarterly, 39 (Apr. 1982), pp. 334–56
  51. ^ "democracy – Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary". M-w.com. Retrieved 2013-02-03.
  52. ^ "republic – Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary". M-w.com. 2012-08-31. Retrieved 2013-02-03.
  53. ^ See, e.g., The Federalist No. 10
  54. ^ Novanglus, no. 7, 6 Mar. 1775
  55. ^ David Tucker, Enlightened republicanism: a study of Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia (2008) p. 109
  56. ^ Richard J. Ellis and Michael Nelson, Debating the presidency (2009) p. 211
  57. ^ Mark McKenna, The Traditions of Australian Republicanism (1996)
  58. ^ John W. Maynor, Republicanism in the Modern World. (2003).

Further reading

General

  • Becker, Peter, Jürgen Heideking and James A. Henretta, eds. Republicanism and Liberalism in America and the German States, 1750–1850. Cambridge University Press. 2002.
  • Deudney, Daniel. 2007. Bounding Power: Republican Security Theory from the Polis to the Global Village. Princeton University Press.
  • Everdell, William R., "From State to Free-State: The Meaning of the word Republic from Jean Bodin to John Adams" 7th International Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies conference, Budapest, 7/31/87; Valley Forge Journal (June 1991); http://dhm.pdp6.org/archives/wre-republics.html
  • Hammersley, Rachel, Republicanism an introduction (2020) Cambridge: Polity
  • Pocock, J. G. A. The Machiavellian Moment (1975).
  • Pocock, J. G. A. "The Machiavellian Moment Revisited: a Study in History and Ideology.: Journal of Modern History 1981 53(1): 49–72. ISSN 0022-2801 Fulltext: in Jstor. Summary of Pocock's influential ideas that traces the Machiavellian belief in and emphasis upon Greco-Roman ideals of unspecialized civic virtue and liberty from 15th century Florence through 17th century England and Scotland to 18th century America. Pocock argues that thinkers who shared these ideals tended to believe that the function of property was to maintain an individual's independence as a precondition of his virtue. Therefore they were disposed to attack the new commercial and financial regime that was beginning to develop.
  • Pettit, Philip. Republicanism: A Theory of Freedom and Government Oxford UP, 1997, ISBN 0198290837.
  • Robbins, Caroline, The Eighteenth-Century Commonwealthman Studies in the Transmission, Development, and Circumstance of English Liberal Thought from the Restoration of Charles II Until the War with the Thirteen Colonies (1959)
  • Snyder, R. Claire. Citizen-Soldiers and Manly Warriors: Military Service and Gender in the Civic Republican Tradition (1999) ISBN 978-0847694440 online review.
  • Viroli, Maurizio. Republicanism (2002), New York, Hill and Wang.[ISBN missing]

Europe

  • Berenson, Edward, et al. eds. The French Republic: History, Values, Debates (2011) essays by 38 scholars from France, Britain and US covering topics since the 1790s
  • Bock, Gisela; Skinner, Quentin; and Viroli, Maurizio, ed. Machiavelli and Republicanism. Cambridge U. Press, 1990. 316 pp.
  • Brugger, Bill. Republican Theory in Political Thought: Virtuous or Virtual? St. Martin's Press, 1999.
  • Castiglione, Dario. "Republicanism and its Legacy," European Journal of Political Theory (2005) v 4 #4 pp. 453–65. online version.
  • Everdell, William R., The End of Kings: A History of Republics and Republicans, NY: The Free Press, 1983; 2nd ed., Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000 (condensed at http://dhm.pdp6.org/archives/wre-republics.html).
  • Fink, Zera. The Classical Republicans: An Essay in the Recovery of a Pattern of Thought in Seventeenth-Century England. Northwestern University Press, 1962.
  • Foote, Geoffrey. The Republican Transformation of Modern British Politics Palgrave Macmillan, 2006.
  • Martin van Gelderen & Quentin Skinner, eds., Republicanism: A Shared European Heritage, v 1: Republicanism and Constitutionalism in Early Modern Europe; vol 2: The Value of Republicanism in Early Modern Europe Cambridge U.P., 2002.
  • Haakonssen, Knud. "Republicanism." A Companion to Contemporary Political Philosophy. Robert E. Goodin and Philip Pettit. eds. Blackwell, 1995.
  • Kramnick, Isaac. Republicanism and Bourgeois Radicalism: Political Ideology in Late Eighteenth-Century England and America. Cornell University Press, 1990.
  • Mark McKenna, The Traditions of Australian Republicanism (1996)
  • Maynor, John W. Republicanism in the Modern World. Cambridge: Polity, 2003.
  • Moggach, Douglas. "Republican Rigorism and Emancipation in Bruno Bauer", The New Hegelians, edited by Douglas Moggach, Cambridge University Press, 2006. (Looks at German Republicanism with contrasts and criticisms of Quentin Skinner and Philip Pettit).
  • Robbins, Caroline. The Eighteenth-Century Commonwealthman: Studies in the Transmission, Development, and Circumstance of English Liberal Thought from the Restoration of Charles II until the War with the Thirteen Colonies (1959, 2004). table of contents online.

United States

  • Appleby, Joyce Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination. 1992.
  • Bailyn, Bernard. The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution. Harvard University Press, 1967.
  • Banning, Lance. The Jeffersonian persuasion: evolution of a party ideology (1978) online
  • Colbourn, Trevor. The Lamp of Experience: Whig History and the Intellectual Origins of the American Revolution. 1965. online version
  • Everdell, William R., The End of Kings: A History of Republics and Republicans, NY: The Free Press, 1983; 2nd ed., Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000.
  • Gish, Dustin, and Daniel Klinghard. Thomas Jefferson and the Science of Republican Government: A Political Biography of Notes on the State of Virginia (Cambridge University Press, 2017) excerpt.
  • Kerber, Linda K. Intellectual History of Women: Essays by Linda K. Kerber. 1997.
  • Kerber, Linda K. Women of the Republic: Intellect and Ideology in Revolutionary America. 1997.
  • Klein, Milton, et al., eds., The Republican Synthesis Revisited. Essays in Honor of George A. Billias. 1992.
  • Kloppenberg, James T. The Virtues of Liberalism. 1998.
  • Norton, Mary Beth. Liberty's Daughters: The Revolutionary Experience of American Women, 1750–1800. 1996.
  • Greene, Jack, and J. R. Pole, eds. Companion to the American Revolution. 2004. (many articles look at republicanism, esp. Shalhope, Robert E. Republicanism pp. 668–73).
  • Rodgers, Daniel T. "Republicanism: the Career of a Concept", Journal of American History. 1992. in JSTOR.
  • Shalhope, Robert E. "Toward a Republican Synthesis: The Emergence of an Understanding of Republicanism in American Historiography", William and Mary Quarterly, 29 (Jan. 1972), 49–80 in JSTOR, (an influential article).
  • Shalhope, Robert E. "Republicanism and Early American Historiography", William and Mary Quarterly, 39 (Apr. 1982), 334–56 in JSTOR.
  • Vetterli, Richard and Bryner, Gary, "Public Virtue and the Roots of American Government", BYU Studies Quarterly, Vol. 27, No. 3, July 1987.
  • Volk, Kyle G. Moral Minorities and the Making of American Democracy. New York: Oxford University Press, 2014.
  • Wood, Gordon S. The Creation of the American Republic 1776–1787. 1969.
  • Wood, Gordon S. The Radicalism of the American Revolution. 1993.

External links

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Solon D G L P   Poplicola D G L   D G L

republicanism, other, uses, republican, political, ideology, centred, citizenship, state, organized, republic, historically, emphasizes, idea, self, rule, ranges, from, rule, representative, minority, oligarchy, popular, sovereignty, different, definitions, in. For other uses see Republican Republicanism is a political ideology centred on citizenship in a state organized as a republic Historically it emphasizes the idea of self rule and ranges from the rule of a representative minority or oligarchy to popular sovereignty 1 It has had different definitions and interpretations which vary significantly based on historical context and methodological approach Republicanism may also refer to the non ideological scientific approach to politics and governance As the republican thinker and second president of the United States John Adams stated in the introduction to his famous A Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America 2 the science of politics is the science of social happiness and a republic is the form of government arrived at when the science of politics is appropriately applied to the creation of a rationally designed government Rather than being ideological this approach focuses on applying a scientific methodology to the problems of governance through the rigorous study and application of past experience and experimentation in governance This is the approach that may best be described to apply to republican thinkers such as Niccolo Machiavelli as evident in his Discourses on Livy John Adams and James Madison The word republic derives from the Latin noun phrase res publica public thing which referred to the system of government that emerged in the 6th century BCE following the expulsion of the kings from Rome by Lucius Junius Brutus and Collatinus 3 This form of government in the Roman state collapsed in the latter part of the 1st century BCE giving way to what was a monarchy in form if not in name Republics recurred subsequently with for example Renaissance Florence or early modern Britain The concept of a republic became a powerful force in Britain s North American colonies where it contributed to the American Revolution In Europe it gained enormous influence through the French Revolution and through the First French Republic of 1792 1804 Contents 1 Historical development of republicanism 1 1 Classical antecedents 1 1 1 Ancient Greece 1 1 2 Ancient Rome 1 2 Renaissance republicanism 1 2 1 Dutch Republic 1 2 2 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1 3 Enlightenment republicanism 1 3 1 Caribbean 1 3 2 Corsica 1 3 3 England 1 3 4 French and Swiss thought 1 3 5 The Thirteen British Colonies in North America 1 3 6 Republicanisme 1 3 7 Ireland 1 4 Modern republicanism 2 Theory 2 1 Neo republicanism 2 2 Democracy 2 3 Constitutional monarchs and upper chambers 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 5 1 General 5 2 Europe 5 3 United States 6 External linksHistorical development of republicanism EditMain article Classical republicanism Classical antecedents Edit Ancient Greece Edit Sculpture of Aristotle In Ancient Greece several philosophers and historians analysed and described elements we now recognize as classical republicanism Traditionally the Greek concept of politeia was rendered into Latin as res publica Consequently political theory until relatively recently often used republic in the general sense of regime There is no single written expression or definition from this era that exactly corresponds with a modern understanding of the term republic but most of the essential features of the modern definition are present in the works of Plato Aristotle and Polybius These include theories of mixed government and of civic virtue For example in The Republic Plato places great emphasis on the importance of civic virtue aiming for the good together with personal virtue just man on the part of the ideal rulers Indeed in Book V Plato asserts that until rulers have the nature of philosophers Socrates or philosophers become the rulers there can be no civic peace or happiness 4 A number of Ancient Greek city states such as Athens and Sparta have been classified as classical republics because they featured extensive participation by the citizens in legislation and political decision making Aristotle considered Carthage to have been a republic as it had a political system similar to that of some of the Greek cities notably Sparta but avoided some of the defects that affected them Ancient Rome Edit Both Livy a Roman historian and Plutarch who is noted for his biographies and moral essays described how Rome had developed its legislation notably the transition from a kingdom to a republic by following the example of the Greeks Some of this history composed more than 500 years after the events with scant written sources to rely on may be fictitious reconstruction The Greek historian Polybius writing in the mid 2nd century BCE emphasized in Book 6 the role played by the Roman Republic as an institutional form in the dramatic rise of Rome s hegemony over the Mediterranean In his writing on the constitution of the Roman Republic 5 Polybius described the system as being a mixed form of government Specifically Polybius described the Roman system as a mixture of monarchy aristocracy and democracy with the Roman Republic constituted in such a manner that it applied the strengths of each system to offset the weaknesses of the others In his view the mixed system of the Roman Republic provided the Romans with a much greater level of domestic tranquillity than would have been experienced under another form of government Furthermore Polybius argued the comparative level of domestic tranquillity the Romans enjoyed allowed them to conquer the Mediterranean Polybius exerted a great influence on Cicero as he wrote his politico philosophical works in the 1st century BCE In one of these works De re publica Cicero linked the Roman concept of res publica to the Greek politeia The modern term republic despite its derivation is not synonymous with the Roman res publica Among the several meanings of the term res publica it is most often translated republic where the Latin expression refers to the Roman state and its form of government between the era of the Kings and the era of the Emperors This Roman Republic would by a modern understanding of the word still be defined as a true republic even if not coinciding entirely Thus Enlightenment philosophers saw the Roman Republic as an ideal system because it included features like a systematic separation of powers Romans still called their state Res Publica in the era of the early emperors because on the surface the organization of the state had been preserved by the first emperors without significant alteration Several offices from the Republican era held by individuals were combined under the control of a single person These changes became permanent and gradually conferred sovereignty on the Emperor Cicero s description of the ideal state in De re Publica does not equate to a modern day republic it is more like enlightened absolutism His philosophical works were influential when Enlightenment philosophers such as Voltaire developed their political concepts In its classical meaning a republic was any stable well governed political community Both Plato and Aristotle identified three forms of government democracy aristocracy and monarchy First Plato and Aristotle and then Polybius and Cicero held that the ideal republic is a mixture of these three forms of government The writers of the Renaissance embraced this notion Cicero expressed reservations concerning the republican form of government While in his theoretical works he defended monarchy or at least a mixed monarchy oligarchy in his own political life he generally opposed men like Julius Caesar Mark Antony and Octavian who were trying to realise such ideals Eventually that opposition led to his death and Cicero can be seen as a victim of his own Republican ideals Tacitus a contemporary of Plutarch was not concerned with whether a form of government could be analysed as a republic or a monarchy 6 He analysed how the powers accumulated by the early Julio Claudian dynasty were all given by a State that was still notionally a republic Nor was the Roman Republic forced to give away these powers it did so freely and reasonably certainly in Augustus case because of his many services to the state freeing it from civil wars and disorder Tacitus was one of the first to ask whether such powers were given to the head of state because the citizens wanted to give them or whether they were given for other reasons for example because one had a deified ancestor The latter case led more easily to abuses of power In Tacitus opinion the trend away from a true republic was irreversible only when Tiberius established power shortly after Augustus death in 14 CE much later than most historians place the start of the Imperial form of government in Rome By this time too many principles defining some powers as untouchable had been implemented 7 Renaissance republicanism Edit The Allegory of Good Government is part of a series of frescoes by Ambrogio Lorenzetti In Europe republicanism was revived in the late Middle Ages when a number of states which arose from medieval communes embraced a republican system of government 8 These were generally small but wealthy trading states in which the merchant class had risen to prominence Haakonssen notes that by the Renaissance Europe was divided such that those states controlled by a landed elite were monarchies and those controlled by a commercial elite were republics The latter included the Italian city states of Florence Genoa and Venice and members of the Hanseatic League One notable exception was Dithmarschen a group of largely autonomous villages which confederated in a peasants republic Building upon concepts of medieval feudalism Renaissance scholars used the ideas of the ancient world to advance their view of an ideal government Thus the republicanism developed during the Renaissance is known as classical republicanism because it relied on classical models This terminology was developed by Zera Fink in the 1940s 9 but some modern scholars such as Brugger consider it confuses the classical republic with the system of government used in the ancient world 10 Early modern republicanism has been proposed as an alternative term It is also sometimes called civic humanism Beyond simply a non monarchy early modern thinkers conceived of an ideal republic in which mixed government was an important element and the notion that virtue and the common good were central to good government Republicanism also developed its own distinct view of liberty Renaissance authors who spoke highly of republics were rarely critical of monarchies While Niccolo Machiavelli s Discourses on Livy is the period s key work on republics he also wrote the treatise The Prince which is better remembered and more widely read on how best to run a monarchy The early modern writers did not see the republican model as universally applicable most thought that it could be successful only in very small and highly urbanized city states Jean Bodin in Six Books of the Commonwealth 1576 identified monarchy with republic 11 Classical writers like Tacitus and Renaissance writers like Machiavelli tried to avoid an outspoken preference for one government system or another Enlightenment philosophers on the other hand expressed a clear opinion Thomas More writing before the Age of Enlightenment was too outspoken for the reigning king s taste even though he coded his political preferences in a utopian allegory In England a type of republicanism evolved that was not wholly opposed to monarchy thinkers such as Thomas More and Sir Thomas Smith saw a monarchy firmly constrained by law as compatible with republicanism Dutch Republic Edit Anti monarchism became more strident in the Dutch Republic during and after the Eighty Years War which began in 1568 This anti monarchism was more propaganda than a political philosophy most of the anti monarchist works appeared in the form of widely distributed pamphlets This evolved into a systematic critique of monarchy written by men such as the brothers Johan and Peter de la Court They saw all monarchies as illegitimate tyrannies that were inherently corrupt These authors were more concerned with preventing the position of Stadholder from evolving into a monarchy than with attacking their former rulers Dutch republicanism also influenced French Huguenots during the Wars of Religion In the other states of early modern Europe republicanism was more moderate 12 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Edit In the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth republicanism was the influential ideology After the establishment of the Commonwealth of Two Nations republicans supported the status quo of having a very weak monarch and opposed those who thought a stronger monarchy was needed These mostly Polish republicans such as Lukasz Gornicki Andrzej Wolan and Stanislaw Konarski were well read in classical and Renaissance texts and firmly believed that their state was a republic on the Roman model and started to call their state the Rzeczpospolita Atypically Polish Lithuanian republicanism was not the ideology of the commercial class but rather of the landed nobility which would lose power if the monarchy were expanded This resulted in an oligarchy of the great landed magnates 13 Enlightenment republicanism Edit Caribbean Edit Victor Hugues Jean Baptiste Raymond de Lacrosse and Nicolas Xavier de Ricard were prominent supporters of republicanism for various Caribbean islands Edwin Sandys William Sayle and George Tucker all supported the islands becoming republics particularly Bermuda Julien Fedon and Joachim Philip led the republican Fedon s rebellion between 2 March 1795 and 19 June 1796 an uprising against British rule in Grenada Corsica Edit The first of the Enlightenment republics established in Europe during the eighteenth century occurred in the small Mediterranean island of Corsica Although perhaps an unlikely place to act as a laboratory for such political experiments Corsica combined a number of factors that made it unique a tradition of village democracy varied cultural influences from the Italian city states Spanish empire and Kingdom of France which left it open to the ideas of the Italian Renaissance Spanish humanism and French Enlightenment and a geo political position between these three competing powers which led to frequent power vacuums in which new regimes could be set up testing out the fashionable new ideas of the age From the 1720s the island had been experiencing a series of short lived but ongoing rebellions against its current sovereign the Italian city state of Genoa During the initial period 1729 36 these merely sought to restore the control of the Spanish Empire when this proved impossible an independent Kingdom of Corsica 1736 40 was proclaimed following the Enlightenment ideal of a written constitutional monarchy But the perception grew that the monarchy had colluded with the invading power a more radical group of reformers led by the Pasquale Paoli pushed for political overhaul in the form of a constitutional and parliamentary republic inspired by the popular ideas of the Enlightenment Its governing philosophy was both inspired by the prominent thinkers of the day notably the French philosophers Montesquieu and Voltaire and the Swiss theorist Jean Jacques Rousseau Not only did it include a permanent national parliament with fixed term legislatures and regular elections but more radically for the time it introduced universal male suffrage and it is thought to be the first constitution in the world to grant women the right to vote female suffrage may also have existed 14 15 It also extended Enlightened principles to other spheres including administrative reform the foundation of a national university at Corte and the establishment of a popular standing army The Corsican Republic lasted for fifteen years from 1755 to 1769 eventually falling to a combination of Genoese and French forces and was incorporated as a province of the Kingdom of France But the episode resonated across Europe as an early example of Enlightened constitutional republicanism with many of the most prominent political commentators of the day recognising it to be an experiment in a new type of popular and democratic government Its influence was particularly notable among the French Enlightenment philosophers Rousseau s famous work On the Social Contract 1762 chapter 10 book II declared in its discussion on the conditions necessary for a functional popular sovereignty that There is still one European country capable of making its own laws the island of Corsica valour and persistency with which that brave people has regained and defended its liberty well deserves that some wise man should teach it how to preserve what it has won I have a feeling that some day that little island will astonish Europe indeed Rousseau volunteered to do precisely that offering a draft constitution for Paoli se use 16 Similarly Voltaire affirmed in his Precis du siecle de Louis XV 1769 chapter LX that Bravery may be found in many places but such bravery only among free peoples But the influence of the Corsican Republic as an example of a sovereign people fighting for liberty and enshrining this constitutionally in the form of an Enlightened republic was even greater among the Radicals of Great Britain and North America 17 where it was popularised via An Account of Corsica by the Scottish essayist James Boswell The Corsican Republic went on to influence the American revolutionaries ten years later the Sons of Liberty initiators of the American Revolution would declare Pascal Paoli to be a direct inspiration for their own struggle against the British the son of Ebenezer Mackintosh was named Pascal Paoli Mackintosh in his honour and no fewer than five American counties are named Paoli for the same reason England Edit Oliver Cromwell set up a Christian republic called the Commonwealth of England 1649 1660 which he ruled after the overthrow of King Charles I James Harrington was then a leading philosopher of republicanism John Milton was another important Republican thinker at this time expressing his views in political tracts as well as through poetry and prose In his epic poem Paradise Lost for instance Milton uses Satan s fall to suggest that unfit monarchs should be brought to justice and that such issues extend beyond the constraints of one nation 18 As Christopher N Warren argues Milton offers a language to critique imperialism to question the legitimacy of dictators to defend free international discourse to fight unjust property relations and to forge new political bonds across national lines 19 This form of international Miltonic republicanism has been influential on later thinkers including 19th century radicals Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels according to Warren and other historians 20 21 The collapse of the Commonwealth of England in 1660 and the restoration of the monarchy under Charles II discredited republicanism among England s ruling circles Nevertheless they welcomed the liberalism and emphasis on rights of John Locke which played a major role in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 Even so republicanism flourished in the country party of the early 18th century commonwealthmen which denounced the corruption of the court party producing a political theory that heavily influenced the American colonists In general the English ruling classes of the 18th century vehemently opposed republicanism typified by the attacks on John Wilkes and especially on the American Revolution and the French Revolution 22 French and Swiss thought Edit Portrait of Montesquieu French and Swiss Enlightenment thinkers such as Voltaire Baron Charles de Montesquieu and later Jean Jacques Rousseau expanded upon and altered the ideas of what an ideal republic should be some of their new ideas were scarcely traceable to antiquity or the Renaissance thinkers Concepts they contributed or heavily elaborated were social contract positive law and mixed government They also borrowed from and distinguished republicanism from the ideas of liberalism that were developing at the same time Liberalism and republicanism were frequently conflated during this period because they both opposed absolute monarchy Modern scholars see them as two distinct streams that both contributed to the democratic ideals of the modern world An important distinction is that while republicanism stressed the importance of civic virtue and the common good liberalism was based on economics and individualism It is clearest in the matter of private property which according to some can be maintained only under the protection of established positive law Jules Ferry Prime Minister of France from 1880 to 1885 followed both these schools of thought He eventually enacted the Ferry Laws which he intended to overturn the Falloux Laws by embracing the anti clerical thinking of the Philosophes These laws ended the Catholic Church s involvement in many government institutions in late 19th century France including schools The Thirteen British Colonies in North America Edit Main article Republicanism in the United States In recent years a debate has developed over the role of republicanism in the American Revolution and in the British radicalism of the 18th century For many decades the consensus was that liberalism especially that of John Locke was paramount and that republicanism had a distinctly secondary role 23 The new interpretations were pioneered by J G A Pocock who argued in The Machiavellian Moment 1975 that at least in the early 18th century republican ideas were just as important as liberal ones Pocock s view is now widely accepted 24 Bernard Bailyn and Gordon Wood pioneered the argument that the American founding fathers were more influenced by republicanism than they were by liberalism Cornell University professor Isaac Kramnick on the other hand argues that Americans have always been highly individualistic and therefore Lockean 25 Joyce Appleby has argued similarly for the Lockean influence on America In the decades before the American Revolution 1776 the intellectual and political leaders of the colonies studied history intently looking for models of good government They especially followed the development of republican ideas in England 26 Pocock explained the intellectual sources in America 27 The Whig canon and the neo Harringtonians John Milton James Harrington and Sidney Trenchard Gordon and Bolingbroke together with the Greek Roman and Renaissance masters of the tradition as far as Montesquieu formed the authoritative literature of this culture and its values and concepts were those with which we have grown familiar a civic and patriot ideal in which the personality was founded in property perfected in citizenship but perpetually threatened by corruption government figuring paradoxically as the principal source of corruption and operating through such means as patronage faction standing armies opposed to the ideal of the militia established churches opposed to the Puritan and deist modes of American religion and the promotion of a monied interest though the formulation of this last concept was somewhat hindered by the keen desire for readily available paper credit common in colonies of settlement A neoclassical politics provided both the ethos of the elites and the rhetoric of the upwardly mobile and accounts for the singular cultural and intellectual homogeneity of the Founding Fathers and their generation The commitment of most Americans to these republican values made the American Revolution inevitable Britain was increasingly seen as corrupt and hostile to republicanism and as a threat to the established liberties the Americans enjoyed 28 Leopold von Ranke in 1848 claimed that American republicanism played a crucial role in the development of European liberalism 29 By abandoning English constitutionalism and creating a new republic based on the rights of the individual the North Americans introduced a new force in the world Ideas spread most rapidly when they have found adequate concrete expression Thus republicanism entered our Romanic Germanic world Up to this point the conviction had prevailed in Europe that monarchy best served the interests of the nation Now the idea spread that the nation should govern itself But only after a state had actually been formed on the basis of the theory of representation did the full significance of this idea become clear All later revolutionary movements have this same goal This was the complete reversal of a principle Until then a king who ruled by the grace of God had been the center around which everything turned Now the idea emerged that power should come from below These two principles are like two opposite poles and it is the conflict between them that determines the course of the modern world In Europe the conflict between them had not yet taken on concrete form with the French Revolution it did Republicanisme Edit Portrait of Jean Jacques Rousseau Republicanism especially that of Rousseau played a central role in the French Revolution and foreshadowed modern republicanism The revolutionaries after overthrowing the French monarchy in the 1790s began by setting up a republic Napoleon converted it into an Empire with a new aristocracy In the 1830s Belgium adopted some of the innovations of the progressive political philosophers of the Enlightenment Republicanisme is a French version of modern republicanism It is a form of social contract deduced from Jean Jacques Rousseau s idea of a general will Each citizen is engaged in a direct relationship with the state removing the need for identity politics based on local religious or racial identification Republicanisme in theory makes anti discrimination laws unnecessary though some critics may argue that in republics also colour blind laws serve to perpetuate discrimination Ireland Edit Main article Irish republicanism Inspired by the American and French Revolutions the Society of United Irishmen was founded in 1791 in Belfast and Dublin The inaugural meeting of the United Irishmen in Belfast on 18 October 1791 approved a declaration of the society s objectives It identified the central grievance that Ireland had no national government we are ruled by Englishmen and the servants of Englishmen whose object is the interest of another country whose instrument is corruption and whose strength is the weakness of Ireland 30 They adopted three central positions i to seek out a cordial union among all the people of Ireland to maintain that balance essential to preserve liberties and extend commerce ii that the sole constitutional mode by which English influence can be opposed is by a complete and radical reform of the representation of the people in Parliament iii that no reform is practicable or efficacious or just which shall not include Irishmen of every religious persuasion The declaration then urged constitutional reform union among Irish people and the removal of all religious disqualifications The movement was influenced at least in part by the French Revolution Public interest already strongly aroused was brought to a pitch by the publication in 1790 of Edmund Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France and Thomas Paine s response Rights of Man in February 1791 citation needed Theobald Wolfe Tone wrote later that This controversy and the gigantic event which gave rise to it changed in an instant the politics of Ireland 31 Paine himself was aware of this commenting on sales of Part I of Rights of Man in November 1791 only eight months after publication of the first edition he informed a friend that in England almost sixteen thousand has gone off and in Ireland above forty thousand 32 Paine may have been inclined to talk up sales of his works but what is striking in this context is that Paine believed that Irish sales were so far ahead of English ones before Part II had appeared On 5 June 1792 Thomas Paine author of the Rights of Man was proposed for honorary membership of the Dublin Society of the United Irishmen 33 The fall of the Bastille was to be celebrated in Belfast on 14 July 1791 by a Volunteer meeting At the request of Thomas Russell Tone drafted suitable resolutions for the occasion including one favouring the inclusion of Catholics in any reforms In a covering letter to Russell Tone wrote I have not said one word that looks like a wish for separation though I give it to you and your friends as my most decided opinion that such an event would be a regeneration of their country 31 By 1795 Tone s republicanism and that of the society had openly crystallized when he tells us I remember particularly two days thae we passed on Cave Hill On the first Russell Neilson Simms McCracken and one or two more of us on the summit of McArt s fort took a solemn obligation never to desist in our efforts until we had subverted the authority of England over our country and asserted her independence 34 The culmination was an uprising against British rule in Ireland lasting from May to September 1798 the Irish Rebellion of 1798 with military support from revolutionary France in August and again October 1798 After the failure of the rising of 1798 the United Irishman John Daly Burk an emigre in the United States in his The History of the Late War in Ireland written in 1799 was most emphatic in its identification of the Irish French and American causes 35 Modern republicanism Edit Main article Modern republicanism As a liberal nationalist Finnish president K J Stahlberg 1865 1952 was a strong supporter of republicanism 36 37 During the Enlightenment anti monarchism extended beyond the civic humanism of the Renaissance Classical republicanism still supported by philosophers such as Rousseau and Montesquieu was only one of several theories seeking to limit the power of monarchies rather than directly opposing them Liberalism and socialism departed from classical republicanism and fueled the development of the more modern republicanism Theory EditNeo republicanism Edit Neorepublicanism is the effort by current scholars to draw on a classical republican tradition in the development of an attractive public philosophy intended for contemporary purposes 38 Neorepublicanism emerges as an alternative postsocialist critique of market society from the left 39 Prominent theorists in this movement are Philip Pettit and Cass Sunstein who have each written several works defining republicanism and how it differs from liberalism Michael Sandel a late convert to republicanism from communitarianism advocates replacing or supplementing liberalism with republicanism as outlined in his Democracy s Discontent America in Search of a Public Philosophy Contemporary work from a neorepublican include jurist K Sabeel Rahman s book Democracy Against Domination which seeks to create a neorepublican framework for economic regulation grounded in the thought of Louis Brandeis and John Dewey and popular control in contrast to both New Deal style managerialism and neoliberal deregulation 40 41 Philosopher Elizabeth Anderson s Private Government traces the history of republican critiques of private power arguing that the classical free market policies of the 18th and 19th centuries intended to help workers only lead to their domination by employers 42 43 In From Slavery to the Cooperative Commonwealth political scientist Alex Gourevitch examines a strain of late 19th century American republicanism known as labour republicanism that was the producerist labour union The Knights of Labor and how republican concepts were used in service of workers rights but also with a strong critique of the role of that union in supporting the Chinese Exclusion Act 44 45 Democracy Edit Portrait of Thomas Paine A revolutionary republican hand written bill from the Stockholm riots during the Revolutions of 1848 reading Dethrone Oscar he is not fit to be a king rather the Republic Reform Down with the Royal house long live Aftonbladet Death to the king Republic Republic the people Brunkeberg this evening The writer s identity is unknown In the late 18th century there was convergence of democracy and republicanism Republicanism is a system that replaces or accompanies inherited rule There is an emphasis on liberty and a rejection of corruption 46 It strongly influenced the American Revolution and the French Revolution in the 1770s and 1790s respectively 22 Republicans in these two examples tended to reject inherited elites and aristocracies but left open two questions whether a republic to restrain unchecked majority rule should have an unelected upper chamber perhaps with members appointed as meritorious experts and whether it should have a constitutional monarch 47 Though conceptually separate from democracy republicanism included the key principles of rule by consent of the governed and sovereignty of the people In effect republicanism held that kings and aristocracies were not the real rulers but rather the whole people were Exactly how the people were to rule was an issue of democracy republicanism itself did not specify a means 48 In the United States the solution was the creation of political parties that reflected the votes of the people and controlled the government see Republicanism in the United States In Federalist No 10 James Madison rejected democracy in favour of republicanism 49 There were similar debates in many other democratizing nations 50 In contemporary usage the term democracy refers to a government chosen by the people whether it is direct or representative 51 Today the term republic usually refers to representative democracy with an elected head of state such as a president who serves for a limited term in contrast to states with a hereditary monarch as a head of state even if these states also are representative democracies with an elected or appointed head of government such as a prime minister 52 The Founding Fathers of the United States rarely praised and often criticized democracy which they equated with mob rule James Madison argued that what distinguished a democracy from a republic was that the former became weaker as it got larger and suffered more violently from the effects of faction whereas a republic could get stronger as it got larger and combatted faction by its very structure 53 What was critical to American values John Adams insisted was that the government should be bound by fixed laws which the people have a voice in making and a right to defend 54 Thomas Jefferson warned that an elective despotism is not the government we fought for 55 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 56 Constitutional monarchs and upper chambers Edit Some countries such as the United Kingdom the Netherlands Belgium Luxembourg the Scandinavian countries and Japan turned powerful monarchs into constitutional ones with limited or eventually merely symbolic powers Often the monarchy was abolished along with the aristocratic system whether or not they were replaced with democratic institutions such as in France China Iran Russia Germany Austria Hungary Italy Greece Turkey and Egypt In Australia New Zealand Canada Papua New Guinea and some other countries the monarch or its representative is given supreme executive power but by convention acts only on the advice of his or her ministers Many nations had elite upper houses of legislatures the members of which often had lifetime tenure but eventually these houses lost much power as the UK House of Lords or else became elective and remained powerful 57 58 See also EditAbolition of monarchy Christian republic Criticism of monarchy Democratic republic Federal Council Switzerland Islamic republic Kemalism People s republic Primus inter pares Republican Party GOP Grand Old Party Secular republic Tacitean studies differing interpretations whether Tacitus defended republicanism red Tacitists or the contrary black Tacitists Venizelism Category Republicanism by countryReferences Edit Hammersley Rachel 2020 Republicanism an introduction Cambridge UK ISBN 978 1 5095 1341 3 OCLC 1145090006 The Works of John Adams 10 vols oll libertyfund org Online Library of Liberty Retrieved 2019 01 10 Mortimer N S Sellers American Republicanism Roman Ideology in the United States Constitution New York University Press 1994 p 71 Paul A Rahe Republics ancient and modern Classical Republicanism and the American Revolution 1992 Polybius Shuckburgh Evelyn S 2009 The Histories of Polybius Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 cbo9781139333740 ISBN 978 1139333740 see for example Ann IV 32 33 Ann I VI J G A Pocock The Machiavellian Moment Florentine political thought and the Atlantic republican tradition 1975 Zera S Fink The classical republicans an essay on the recovery of a pattern of thought in seventeenth century England 2011 Bill Brugger Republican Theory in Political Thought Virtuous or Virtual 1999 John M Najemy Baron s Machiavelli and renaissance republicanism American Historical Review 101 1 1996 119 29 Eco Haitsma Mulier The language of seventeenth century republicanism in the United Provinces Dutch or European in Anthony Pagden ed The Languages of political theory in early modern Europe 1987 179 96 Jerzy Lukowski Disorderly Liberty The political culture of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in the eighteenth century Bloomsbury Publishing 2010 ISBN missing Lucien Felli La renaissance du Paolisme M Bartoli Pasquale Paoli pere de la patrie corse Albatros 1974 p 29 There is one area where the pioneering nature of Paoli s institutions is particularly pronounced and that is in the area of voting rights Indeed they allowed for female suffrage at a time when French women could not vote Philippe Jean Catinchi et Josyane Savigneau Les femmes du droit de vote a la parite Le Monde fr 31 janvier 2013 ISSN 1950 6244 consuled on 14 August 2017 Projet de constitution pour la Corse published in Œuvres et correspondance inedites de J J Rousseau M G Streckeinsen Moultou ed Paris 1861 Michel Verge Franceschi Pascal Paoli un Corse des Lumieres Cahiers de la Mediterranee 72 2006 97 112 Warren Christopher N 2016 Big Leagues Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx Humanity An International Journal of Human Rights Humanitarianism and Development Vol 7 Warren Christopher N 2016 Big Leagues Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx Humanity An International Journal of Human Rights Humanitarianism and Development Vol 7 Pg 380 Rose Jonathan 2001 The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes pp 26 36 37 122 25 187 Taylor Antony 2002 Shakespeare and Radicalism The Uses and Abuses of Shakespeare in Nineteenth Century Popular Politics Historical Journal 45 no 2 pp 357 79 a b Pocock J G A The Machiavellian Moment Florentine Political Thought and the Atlantic Republican Tradition 1975 new ed 2003 See for example Parrington Vernon L 1927 Main Currents in American Thought Retrieved 2013 12 18 Shalhope 1982 Isaac Kramnick Ideological Background in Jack P Greene and J R Pole The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the American Revolution 1994 ch 9 Robert E Shallhope Republicanism ibid ch 70 Trevor Colbourn The Lamp of Experience Whig History and the Intellectual Origins of the American Revolution 1965 online version Pocock The Machiavellian Moment p 507 Bailyn Bernard The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution 1967 ISBN missing quoted in Becker 2002 p 128 Denis Carroll The Man from God knows Where p 42 Gartan 1995 a b Henry Boylan Wolf Tone p 16 Gill and Macmillan Dublin 1981 Paine to John Hall 25 Nov 1791 Foner Paine Writings II p 1 322 Dickson Keogh and Whelan The United Irishmen Republicanism Radicalism and Rebellion pp 135 37 Lilliput Dublin 1993 Henry Boylan Wolf Tone pp 51 52 Gill and Macmillan Dublin 1981 Dickson Keogh and Whelan The United Irishmen Republicanism Radicalism and Rebellion pp 297 98 Lilliput Dublin 1993 Edustajamatrikkeli Eduskunta Archived from the original on 2012 02 12 Mononen Juha 2 February 2009 War or Peace for Finland Neoclassical Realist Case Study of Finnish Foreign Policy in the Context of the Anti Bolshevik Intervention in Russia 1918 1920 University of Tampere Archived from the original on 7 June 2015 Retrieved 25 August 2020 Frank Lovett and Philip Pettit Neorepublicanism a normative and institutional research program Political Science 12 1 2009 11ff online Gerald F Gaus Backwards into the future Neorepublicanism as a postsocialist critique of market society Social Philosophy and Policy 20 1 2003 59 91 Rahman K Sabeel 2016 Democracy Against Domination Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0190468538 Shenk Timothy Booked The End of Managerial Liberalism with K Sabeel Rahman Dissent Magazine Dissent Magazine Retrieved 6 August 2018 Anderson Elizabeth 2017 Private Government How Employers Rule Our Lives and Why We Don t Talk about It Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1400887781 Rothman Joshua 12 September 2017 Are Bosses Dictators The New Yorker Retrieved 6 August 2018 Gourevitch Alex 2014 From Slavery to the Cooperative Commonwealth Labor and Republican Liberty in the Nineteenth Century Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1139519434 Stanley Amy Dru Republic of Labor Dissent Magazine Dissent Magazine Retrieved 6 August 2018 Republicanism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Plato stanford edu Retrieved 2013 02 03 Gordon S Wood The Creation of the American Republic 1776 1787 1969 R R Palmer The Age of the Democratic Revolution Political History of Europe and America 1760 1800 1959 The Federalist Papers No 10 Avalon Project 29 December 1998 Retrieved April 22 2022 Robert E Shalhope Republicanism and Early American Historiography William and Mary Quarterly 39 Apr 1982 pp 334 56 democracy Definition from the Merriam Webster Online Dictionary M w com Retrieved 2013 02 03 republic Definition from the Merriam Webster Online Dictionary M w com 2012 08 31 Retrieved 2013 02 03 See e g The Federalist No 10 Novanglus no 7 6 Mar 1775 David Tucker Enlightened republicanism a study of Jefferson s Notes on the State of Virginia 2008 p 109 Richard J Ellis and Michael Nelson Debating the presidency 2009 p 211 Mark McKenna The Traditions of Australian Republicanism 1996 online version John W Maynor Republicanism in the Modern World 2003 Further reading EditGeneral Edit Becker Peter Jurgen Heideking and James A Henretta eds Republicanism and Liberalism in America and the German States 1750 1850 Cambridge University Press 2002 Deudney Daniel 2007 Bounding Power Republican Security Theory from the Polis to the Global Village Princeton University Press Everdell William R From State to Free State The Meaning of the word Republic from Jean Bodin to John Adams 7th International Society for Eighteenth Century Studies conference Budapest 7 31 87 Valley Forge Journal June 1991 http dhm pdp6 org archives wre republics html Hammersley Rachel Republicanism an introduction 2020 Cambridge Polity Pocock J G A The Machiavellian Moment 1975 Pocock J G A The Machiavellian Moment Revisited a Study in History and Ideology Journal of Modern History 1981 53 1 49 72 ISSN 0022 2801 Fulltext in Jstor Summary of Pocock s influential ideas that traces the Machiavellian belief in and emphasis upon Greco Roman ideals of unspecialized civic virtue and liberty from 15th century Florence through 17th century England and Scotland to 18th century America Pocock argues that thinkers who shared these ideals tended to believe that the function of property was to maintain an individual s independence as a precondition of his virtue Therefore they were disposed to attack the new commercial and financial regime that was beginning to develop Pettit Philip Republicanism A Theory of Freedom and Government Oxford UP 1997 ISBN 0198290837 Robbins Caroline The Eighteenth Century Commonwealthman Studies in the Transmission Development and Circumstance of English Liberal Thought from the Restoration of Charles II Until the War with the Thirteen Colonies 1959 Snyder R Claire Citizen Soldiers and Manly Warriors Military Service and Gender in the Civic Republican Tradition 1999 ISBN 978 0847694440 online review Viroli Maurizio Republicanism 2002 New York Hill and Wang ISBN missing Europe Edit Berenson Edward et al eds The French Republic History Values Debates 2011 essays by 38 scholars from France Britain and US covering topics since the 1790s Bock Gisela Skinner Quentin and Viroli Maurizio ed Machiavelli and Republicanism Cambridge U Press 1990 316 pp Brugger Bill Republican Theory in Political Thought Virtuous or Virtual St Martin s Press 1999 Castiglione Dario Republicanism and its Legacy European Journal of Political Theory 2005 v 4 4 pp 453 65 online version Everdell William R The End of Kings A History of Republics and Republicans NY The Free Press 1983 2nd ed Chicago University of Chicago Press 2000 condensed at http dhm pdp6 org archives wre republics html Fink Zera The Classical Republicans An Essay in the Recovery of a Pattern of Thought in Seventeenth Century England Northwestern University Press 1962 Foote Geoffrey The Republican Transformation of Modern British Politics Palgrave Macmillan 2006 Martin van Gelderen amp Quentin Skinner eds Republicanism A Shared European Heritage v 1 Republicanism and Constitutionalism in Early Modern Europe vol 2 The Value of Republicanism in Early Modern Europe Cambridge U P 2002 Haakonssen Knud Republicanism A Companion to Contemporary Political Philosophy Robert E Goodin and Philip Pettit eds Blackwell 1995 Kramnick Isaac Republicanism and Bourgeois Radicalism Political Ideology in Late Eighteenth Century England and America Cornell University Press 1990 Mark McKenna The Traditions of Australian Republicanism 1996 Maynor John W Republicanism in the Modern World Cambridge Polity 2003 Moggach Douglas Republican Rigorism and Emancipation in Bruno Bauer The New Hegelians edited by Douglas Moggach Cambridge University Press 2006 Looks at German Republicanism with contrasts and criticisms of Quentin Skinner and Philip Pettit Robbins Caroline The Eighteenth Century Commonwealthman Studies in the Transmission Development and Circumstance of English Liberal Thought from the Restoration of Charles II until the War with the Thirteen Colonies 1959 2004 table of contents online United States Edit Main article Republicanism in the United States Further reading Appleby Joyce Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination 1992 Bailyn Bernard The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution Harvard University Press 1967 Banning Lance The Jeffersonian persuasion evolution of a party ideology 1978 online Colbourn Trevor The Lamp of Experience Whig History and the Intellectual Origins of the American Revolution 1965 online version Everdell William R The End of Kings A History of Republics and Republicans NY The Free Press 1983 2nd ed Chicago University of Chicago Press 2000 Gish Dustin and Daniel Klinghard Thomas Jefferson and the Science of Republican Government A Political Biography of Notes on the State of Virginia Cambridge University Press 2017 excerpt Kerber Linda K Intellectual History of Women Essays by Linda K Kerber 1997 Kerber Linda K Women of the Republic Intellect and Ideology in Revolutionary America 1997 Klein Milton et al eds The Republican Synthesis Revisited Essays in Honor of George A Billias 1992 Kloppenberg James T The Virtues of Liberalism 1998 Norton Mary Beth Liberty s Daughters The Revolutionary Experience of American Women 1750 1800 1996 Greene Jack and J R Pole eds Companion to the American Revolution 2004 many articles look at republicanism esp Shalhope Robert E Republicanism pp 668 73 Rodgers Daniel T Republicanism the Career of a Concept Journal of American History 1992 in JSTOR Shalhope Robert E Toward a Republican Synthesis The Emergence of an Understanding of Republicanism in American Historiography William and Mary Quarterly 29 Jan 1972 49 80 in JSTOR an influential article Shalhope Robert E Republicanism and Early American Historiography William and Mary Quarterly 39 Apr 1982 334 56 in JSTOR Vetterli Richard and Bryner Gary Public Virtue and the Roots of American Government BYU Studies Quarterly Vol 27 No 3 July 1987 Volk Kyle G Moral Minorities and the Making of American Democracy New York Oxford University Press 2014 Wood Gordon S The Creation of the American Republic 1776 1787 1969 Wood Gordon S The Radicalism of the American Revolution 1993 External links Edit Media related to Republicanism at Wikimedia Commons Republicanism on In Our Time at the BBC Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry Emergence of the Roman Republic Parallel Lives by Plutarch particularly From the translation in 4 volumes available at Project Gutenberg Plutarch s Lives Volume I of 4 More particularly following Lives and Comparisons D is Dryden translation G is Gutenberg P is Perseus Project L is LacusCurtius Greeks Romans ComparisonsLycurgus G L Numa Pompilius D G L D G LSolon D G L P Poplicola D G L D G L dd dd Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Republicanism amp oldid 1139470369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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