8 found
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  1.  66
    Conspiracism and Delegitimation.Russell Muirhead, Nancy L. Rosenblum, Matthew Landauer, Stephen Macedo, Jeffrey K. Tulis & Nadia Urbinati - 2020 - Contemporary Political Theory 19 (1):142-174.
  2.  36
    The Idiōtēs and the Tyrant: Two Faces of Unaccountability in Democratic Athens.Matthew Landauer - 2014 - Political Theory 42 (2):139-166.
    Athenian democracy is rightly recognized for its extensive network of accountability institutions. This essay focuses instead on popular unaccountability in democratic Athens: ordinary citizens participating but not speaking in the Courts and the Assembly were unaccountable. I explore possible justifications of popular unaccountability, including arguments from democratic sovereignty and epistemic arguments, and stress the importance of a third strand: the identification of jurors and assemblymen with deservedly unaccountable, because comparatively weak and powerless, idiōtai (private citizens), whose political activity failed to (...)
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  3.  41
    Parrhesia and the demos tyrannos: Frank speech, flattery and accountability in democratic athens.Matthew Landauer - 2012 - History of Political Thought 33 (2):185-208.
    Parrhesia, or frank speech, is usually understood as a practice intimately connected to Athenian democracy. This paper begins by analysing parrhesia in non-democratic regimes. Building on that analysis, I suggest that most accounts of parrhesia overlook the degree to which its practice at Athens implied a comparison of the demos to an unaccountable ruler -- a tyrant. As a practice, parrhesia was paradigmatically undertaken by speakers addressing an audience with the power to sanction them in the event that their advice (...)
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  4.  43
    Democracy, Voter Ignorance, and the Limits of Foot Voting.Matthew Landauer - 2015 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 27 (3-4):338-349.
    ABSTRACTIn Democracy and Political Ignorance, Ilya Somin argues that the supposed informational advantages of “foot voting”—exercising exit options and making market-based choices—over voting at the ballot box tell in favor of decentralizing and limiting government. But the evidence Somin offers for the superiority of “foot voting,” based on an analysis of the politics of the Jim Crow-era South, is unpersuasive and internally inconsistent. Second, even if Somin is correct that foot voters have greater incentives to acquire information than ballot-box voters (...)
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  5.  7
    What is constitutional in Platonic ‘constitutional rule’? On Melissa Lane’s Of Rule and Office: Plato’s Ideas of the Political.Matthew Landauer - forthcoming - History of European Ideas.
    Of Rule and Office offers an account of Plato as a pre-eminent theorist of ‘constitutional rule’. In this comment I’ll pose some questions about the relationship between ‘constitution’ and ‘rule’ (...
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  6.  26
    Demos (a)kurios? Agenda power and democratic control in ancient Greece.Matthew Landauer - 2023 - European Journal of Political Theory 22 (3):375-398.
    Ancient Greek elite theorists and ordinary democratic practitioners shared a distinctive account of the institutional features of democracy: democracy requires both institutions that empower ordinary citizens to decide matters and the widespread diffusion of agenda-setting powers. In the Politics, Aristotle makes agenda control central to his understanding of what it is to be kurios in the city, to his distinction between oligarchy and democracy, and to his analysis of the preconditions for democratic control of the polis. For democratic citizens, isēgoria (...)
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  7.  7
    Dangerous counsel: accountability and advice in ancient Greece.Matthew Landauer - 2019 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    We often talk loosely of the “tyranny of the majority” as a threat to the workings of democracy. But, in ancient Greece, the analogy of demos and tyrant was no mere metaphor, nor a simple reflection of elite prejudice. Instead, it highlighted an important structural feature of Athenian democracy. Like the tyrant, the Athenian demos was an unaccountable political actor with the power to hold its subordinates to account. And like the tyrant, the demos could be dangerous to counsel since (...)
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  8.  32
    CAREY Democracy in Classical Athens. Second edition. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2017 . Pp. xvi + 181, ills, maps. Paper, £14.99. ISBN: 978-1-4742-8636-7. [REVIEW]Matthew Landauer - 2019 - The Classical Review 69 (1):334-334.