Product details
- Categories: Democracy
- Publisher: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780199296026
- Publication Date: 14/12/2006
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 304
- Language: English
Summary
* Looks at the stresses put upon Western liberal democracies by factors such as the increased threat of terrorism, and the accession of the post-communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe
* Examines the phenomenon of 'militant democracies' as a response to these pressures
* Analyses issues such as party closures, political rights of minorities, and democratization.
* Focuses on highly topical and contentious areas of current interest in the light of September 11th, and the London terrorist attacks
Europe has entered the 21st century in a state of growing uncertainty about the role and scope of traditional political rights. The scope of 'political rights' is a subject which has always provoked a degree of scholarly controversy, as indeed is reflected in the essays of this volume. Nonetheless, it has usually been taken as evident that the best cure for various threats to and defects of liberal democracy is more stringent rather than less stringent protection of rights such as freedom of speech, or freedom of political and other forms of association. But the global environment in which Europe finds itself has changed, and has gradually eroded these conventional wisdoms. The increased threat of terrorism on the one hand, epitomised by the events of September 11 2001, and the accession of the post-communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe with their specific political traditions on the other hand, has placed this liberal-democratic consensus under considerable stress.
The essays collected in this volume reflect this stress, and search for answers to the questions raised by the changing political environment. The contributions focus on the European experience but they are placed within a wider global context in reflecting on the appropriate scope and strength of protection of political rights. Under what circumstances is 'militant democracy' - democracy which is intolerant of the enemies of democracy - a cure to the real and imagined threats, and under what circumstances does it become part of the problem? Different chapters deal variously with the theory of political rights, the rights to freedom of expression and to freedom association (focusing particularly on the topical issue of party closures), the understanding of political rights in Central and Eastern Europe and its impact on the democratization of this region, the question of political rights of minorities in this region, and finally the effectiveness of the Council of Europe's monitoring mechanisms.
Readership: Academics and advanced scholars of political theory, democracy, political freedoms, human rights, anti-terrorism measures, jurisprudence, legal theory, and legal and political history.
Table of contents
1: Wojciech Sadurski: Introduction
2: Michel Rosenfeld: A Pluralist Theory of Political Rights in the Times of Stress
3: Victor Ferreres Comella: Freedom of Expression in Political Contexts: Some Reflections on the Case Law of the European Court of Justice
4: Eva Brems: Freedom of Political Association and the Question of Party Closures
5: Jiri Priban and Wojciech Sadurski: The Role of Political Rights in Democratization of Central and Eastern Europe
6: Gwendolyn Sasse: The Political Rights of National Minorities: Lessons from Central and Eastern Europe