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Hans Kelsen and the Case for Democracy

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Hans Kelsen and the Case for Democracy is a contextual analysis of this famous jurist's political thought.

Kelsen's works are usually reduced to his theory of law, and his reflections on democracy are often ignored.

The great strength of Kelsen's political thinking lies in the largely original arguments that it musters against the critics who condemn or debunk the institutions of parliamentary democracies.

This study assesses Kelsenian democratic theory by exploring three questions: first, how is Kelsen's political theory intertwined with his legal theory?

Second, how does Kelsen combine his reflections on the democratic ideal with his appreciation of a reality that more often than not quite distant from that ideal?

Third, how does Kelsen conceive of the sources of the state's cohesion in a democracy?

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Product Details
ECPR Press
1907301240 / 9781907301247
Paperback / softback
320.092
01/12/2012
United Kingdom
English
xviii, 72 pages
24 cm
Professional & Vocational Learn More
Translated from the French.