Democratic Respect and Compromise

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Democratic Respect and Compromise. / Rostbøll, Christian F.

Democracy and Diversity. ed. / Anna Elisabetta Galeotti; Enrico Biale; Federica Liveriero. London : Routledge, 2018. p. 91-107.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rostbøll, CF 2018, Democratic Respect and Compromise. in AE Galeotti, E Biale & F Liveriero (eds), Democracy and Diversity. Routledge, London, pp. 91-107.

APA

Rostbøll, C. F. (2018). Democratic Respect and Compromise. In A. E. Galeotti, E. Biale, & F. Liveriero (Eds.), Democracy and Diversity (pp. 91-107). Routledge.

Vancouver

Rostbøll CF. Democratic Respect and Compromise. In Galeotti AE, Biale E, Liveriero F, editors, Democracy and Diversity. London: Routledge. 2018. p. 91-107

Author

Rostbøll, Christian F. / Democratic Respect and Compromise. Democracy and Diversity. editor / Anna Elisabetta Galeotti ; Enrico Biale ; Federica Liveriero. London : Routledge, 2018. pp. 91-107

Bibtex

@inbook{83ebbb8788614cf496711b563c1c7a3b,
title = "Democratic Respect and Compromise",
abstract = "Compromise has attained renewed interest among political theorists writing on pluralism and disagreement. It is controversial, however, whether compromise is a mere pragmatic necessity or if it has non-instrumental value. This article argues that the reasons for compromise are inherent in the democratic ideal. Under some conditions, compromise can give greater legitimacy to public policy beyond what is achieved by a mere majority decision, and not merely because of the consequences but because of the very fact that the decision was a compromise. The reason for this is the democratic respect displayed by the act of compromise. Democratic respect goes beyond both the norm of treating one's fellow citizens as equals and of respecting them as members of the same community. It is a conception of respect, which requires that we treat fellow citizens as co-rulers. Only the latter conception of respect is both sufficient to explain the moral importance of democratic procedures, including compromise, and an inherently democratic ideal.",
author = "Rostb{\o}ll, {Christian F.}",
year = "2018",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780185371403",
pages = "91--107",
editor = "Galeotti, {Anna Elisabetta} and Enrico Biale and Federica Liveriero",
booktitle = "Democracy and Diversity",
publisher = "Routledge",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Democratic Respect and Compromise

AU - Rostbøll, Christian F.

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Compromise has attained renewed interest among political theorists writing on pluralism and disagreement. It is controversial, however, whether compromise is a mere pragmatic necessity or if it has non-instrumental value. This article argues that the reasons for compromise are inherent in the democratic ideal. Under some conditions, compromise can give greater legitimacy to public policy beyond what is achieved by a mere majority decision, and not merely because of the consequences but because of the very fact that the decision was a compromise. The reason for this is the democratic respect displayed by the act of compromise. Democratic respect goes beyond both the norm of treating one's fellow citizens as equals and of respecting them as members of the same community. It is a conception of respect, which requires that we treat fellow citizens as co-rulers. Only the latter conception of respect is both sufficient to explain the moral importance of democratic procedures, including compromise, and an inherently democratic ideal.

AB - Compromise has attained renewed interest among political theorists writing on pluralism and disagreement. It is controversial, however, whether compromise is a mere pragmatic necessity or if it has non-instrumental value. This article argues that the reasons for compromise are inherent in the democratic ideal. Under some conditions, compromise can give greater legitimacy to public policy beyond what is achieved by a mere majority decision, and not merely because of the consequences but because of the very fact that the decision was a compromise. The reason for this is the democratic respect displayed by the act of compromise. Democratic respect goes beyond both the norm of treating one's fellow citizens as equals and of respecting them as members of the same community. It is a conception of respect, which requires that we treat fellow citizens as co-rulers. Only the latter conception of respect is both sufficient to explain the moral importance of democratic procedures, including compromise, and an inherently democratic ideal.

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9780185371403

SP - 91

EP - 107

BT - Democracy and Diversity

A2 - Galeotti, Anna Elisabetta

A2 - Biale, Enrico

A2 - Liveriero, Federica

PB - Routledge

CY - London

ER -

ID: 198781182