ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2000:  Politics cannot be conceived of as just a subsystem of society, or as a network of particular interests. The concept of interests and their role within the normative political debate is given a new interpretation by this book, which examines how political interest, market mechanisms and rational choice theories exist in the light of democratic freedom and social justice. The book builds on different concepts of procedural justice, from Schumpeter, Buchanan and Habermas’s conceptions of democracy and the role of political compromise and coalition in the idea of consensus as a condition for political legitimation.

chapter 1|26 pages

State and society

chapter 2|28 pages

The idea of the common interest

chapter 3|20 pages

An analysis of the concept interest

chapter 4|32 pages

A society founded on individual interests

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion