ABSTRACT

This collection of readings has been complied on the assumption that for an adequate explanation of the success and failure, the strengths and weaknesses, of democracy, it is necessary to resort to both class and elite theories and to strive for the future development of the extant beginnings of a synthesis between them. For this purpose, it presents the most central and intellectually outstanding readings that illustrate the manner in which the two theories have analyzed democracy, as well as democratization, in various parts of the world.

part II|49 pages

Elites in Democracy and Democratization—Classical Analyses

part III|57 pages

Classes in Democracy and Democratization—New Analyses

chapter |9 pages

Democracy and Capitalism

[Contradiction, Accommodation, and Instability]

chapter |8 pages

Economic Development and Democracy

[The Role of Subordinate Classes]

part IV|87 pages

Elites in Democracy and Democratization—New Analyses

chapter |5 pages

The Irony of Democracy

chapter |8 pages

Prospects for Pluralism

[Linkages Between Leaders and Followers in the American Democracy]

chapter |8 pages

Delegative Democracy

part V|92 pages

Classes and Elites in Democracy and Democratization

chapter |8 pages

The Ruling Class Does Not Rule

[State Managers, Capitalists, and the Working Class in Capitalist Democracies]

chapter |8 pages

The Dilemma of Pluralist Democracy

[Autonomy Versus Equality]

chapter |10 pages

The Top-down and Bottom-up Construction of Democracy

[Autonomy Versus Equality]

chapter |8 pages

The Third Wave

[Economic Development, Expansion of the Middle Class, Elite Compromises, and Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century]

chapter |16 pages

Elites and the Working Class

On Coupling, Uncoupling, Democracy, and (In) equalities in the West

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion