Lottocracy: Democracy Without Elections

Author:   Alexander Guerrero (Rutgers University-New Brunswick)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198856368


Pages:   464
Publication Date:   13 September 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Lottocracy: Democracy Without Elections


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Overview

Democracy is in trouble--there is disagreement about what is going wrong and what we should do about it. Lottocracy argues that, perhaps surprisingly, the problem is with the heart of modern democracy: the election. Elections are failing as accountability mechanisms. Elections provide powerful short-term incentives, leading elected politicians to downplay long-term catastrophic concerns. Elections create divisions where none need exist. The most powerful among us take advantage of this to control who is elected, what policies are enacted, and which problems are ignored. Policy complexity, citizen ignorance, elite capture and manipulation, algorithmically reinforced echo chambers, intensifying partisan division and distrust, and the dissolution of political community combine to render modern electoral democracies incapable of helping us solve the urgent problems we face. What should we do?Alexander Guerrero takes seriously the possibility that although electoral democracy has been better than all systems that have been tried, the basic mechanism at its core--the election--is broken, and unworkable under modern political conditions. However, Lottocracy moves past a Churchillian shrug (""the worst system, except for all the others""), introducing a new form of democracy: lottocracy. Lottocratic systems include many new elements, but the most striking is the shift from using elected representatives to using representatives selected through lottery. Guerrero introduces and discusses lottocratic systems, their potential advantages, and potential concerns. The argument engages with foundational philosophical questions, considering how rights of political participation, political equality, political power, considerations of accountability and legitimacy, and the nature of democracy itself are illuminated and reconfigured once we move past the electoral representative framework.

Full Product Details

Author:   Alexander Guerrero (Rutgers University-New Brunswick)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.20cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.866kg
ISBN:  

9780198856368


ISBN 10:   0198856369
Pages:   464
Publication Date:   13 September 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Part One: Problems with Electoral Democracy 1: How to Evaluate Political Institutions 2: Ignorance and The Voter Influence Dilemma 3: Bad Press 4: Vicious Partisanship 5: Short-term Bias 6: Unrepresentative Representatives 7: Modest Reponses and Their Limitations Part Two: Lottocracy: A New Kind of Democracy 8: Introduction to the Use of Random Selection in Politics 9: The Lottocratic Alternative 10: Experts 11: Deliberation and Discussion 12: Single-Issue Legislatures 13: Overcoming Ignorance, Improving Epistemic Performance 14: Lessening Distortion, Improving Agential Performance 15: Lottocracy, Democracy, Legitimacy, and Political Morality 16: Lottocracy and Political Minorities 17: Getting There from Here

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Author Information

Alexander Guerrero is Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers University - New Brunswick. He writes about topics in moral philosophy, political philosophy, legal philosophy, and issues in epistemology that intersect with those areas. He is the recipient of the Lebowitz Prize from the American Philosophical Association and Phi Beta Kappa. He regularly teaches courses in African Philosophy, Chinese Philosophy, Latin American Philosophy, and Native American and Indigenous Philosophy. He is Editor-in-Chief of Philosophy Compass and an Associate Editor of Ethics. He has a JD from NYU School of Law, a PhD from NYU, and an AB from Harvard College.

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