ABSTRACT

This book traces and conceptualises the changing notion of democracy and demonstrates how democracy promotion finds itself at the heart of contemporary international discourses and policies.

Democracy promotion is widely considered to constitute a hypocritical and failed ‘grand international narrative’ of the 1990s and has allegedly been replaced by other, more pressing and academically more captivating concerns, such as conflict management, statebuilding and climate change. This book challenges this position and argues that the core notions of democracy promotion, such as empowerment, inclusion and responsiveness, are a key concern of contemporary international policymakers. Drawing on the work of Michel Foucault, Hannah Arendt as well as John Dewey, it investigates the notion of democracy and modality of its promotions through the policy fields of conflict management, statebuilding and climate change. The central development, the book observes, is the reconceptualisation of democracy from the constituted sphere of the public to the lived relations of the social. The book argues that the novel rationality of democracy and its promotion offers a particular solution to governing impasses in a world perceived to be globalised and complex, which accounts for democracy’s current but neglected centrality.

This book will be of much interest to students of democracy, intervention, statebuilding, global governance and IR in general.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

The survival of democracy promotion

chapter 2|28 pages

Artifice and democracy promotion

From institution-building to civil society support

chapter 3|29 pages

The hollowness of liberal artifice

Conflict management and democratic empowerment

chapter 4|27 pages

Reform thyself

Statebuilding as the environment for responsive self-transformation

chapter 5|25 pages

Tearing down the walls

Climate change, resistance and the democratic government of the network

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion

The promise of democracy in a complex world