Relational Liberalism: Democratic Co-Authorship in a Pluralistic World

Cham: Springer Verlag (2023)
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Abstract

This book investigates the unresolved issue of democratic legitimacy in contexts of pervasive disagreement and contributes to this debate by defending a relational version of political liberalism that rests on the ideal of co-authorship. According to this proposal, democratic legitimacy depends upon establishing appropriate interactions among citizens who ought to ascribe to one another the status of putative practical and epistemic authorities. To support this relational reading of political liberalism, the book proposes a revised account of the civic virtue of reasonableness along with an investigation of the epistemic-specific dimension of political equality. By engaging with political epistemology and social theory, this book explores ways to address inherent tensions within the liberal paradigm, using the following strategies of addressing these tensions: first, it defends a twofold model of legitimacy that distinguishes the goals, methodologies, and justificatory tasks of both ideal and nonideal phases of the two-level justificatory framework; second, it contends that democratic legitimacy requires an engaged and contextual critical appraisal of the injustices that characterize our daily social lives, illustrating how structural forms of injustice represent a profound betrayal of the liberal ideal of democratic legitimacy.

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Chapters

Conclusion

In writing this book, I had two fundamental purposes: (i) to propose a revised account of liberal legitimacy within a general paradigm of relational liberalism and (ii) to adequately clarify the different goals, methodologies and justificatory tasks that characterize the ideal and nonideal phases of... see more

An Epistemic Reading of the Ideal of Co-authorship

The analysis I develop in this chapter aims at illustrating in a technical sense the epistemic nonideal circumstances that characterize our social life as agents embedded in intersubjective settings. I defend a version of political liberalism that is willing to clarify its epistemic tenets, instead ... see more

Justification Under Nonideal Circumstances: Reflective Agreement and Relational Liberalism

In this chapter I develop my own proposal for a workable form of political liberalism that can be intuitively referred to as relational liberalism and that I describe, a little provocatively, as laying out a path ‘beyond Rawls’. My goal is to argue that relational liberalism is compelled to establis... see more

The Ideal of Public Justification Revisited

The main goal of this chapter is investigating the role that public reason can play within the justificatory paradigm that I defend in this work. Public reason is the notion, within the Rawlsian paradigm, that connects the justificatory enterprise with the less defined and always changing deliberati... see more

Compromises for a Pluralistic World

In this chapter I focus on an analysis of ordinary practices for overcoming disagreement in nonidealized political settings. My goal is to show that compromises are the most common outcomes of public procedures of adjudication among disagreeing parties over political matters, rather than consensus-b... see more

Political Legitimacy Under Epistemic Constraints

This chapter introduces the Rawlsian paradigm of political legitimacy and pays special attention to the strictly political version of liberalism that Rawls defends in Political Liberalism. My goal is to highlight the ambiguities of his model and to propose a justificatory strategy for a strictly pol... see more

Introduction

In this introductory chapter I lay out the general outline of the book. I introduce the traditional notion of liberal legitimacy and observe that traditional approaches of liberal legitimacy tend to fall into a justificatory dilemma. Liberal theories ought to find a balance between two fundamental d... see more

A Case Study: Extending Marriage Rights to Same-Sex Couples

My goal in this chapter consists in testing the applicability of my general paradigm against a case study: the political and legal conflict over the extension of marriage rights to same-sex couples. This case constitutes a paradigmatic example of a public conflict arising around the attempt to revis... see more

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Federica Liveriero
Universita' degli Studi di Pavia

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