An Act is Worth a Thousand Words A Place For Public Action And Civic Engagement in Deliberative Democracy

Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 55 (117):81-103 (2008)
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Abstract

In this paper, we argue that deliberative democrats have too narrow a conception of the political, but that 'activism' as it is normally understood is not sufficiently broad, either. Politics is not reducible to coercion and contestation, but rather to the constitution of our shared world. We contend that active citizenship more often takes the form of working in a rape crisis center or a domestic violence clinic than participating in marches or town meetings

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Joshua Miller
Georgetown University

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