Is Democracy Doomed?

Austin Sarat
Emerald
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Hardback
9781806864461
13 May 2026
£80.00
eBook (PDF)
9781806864454
22 April 2026
£80.00
eBook (ePub)
9781806864478
22 April 2026
£80.00

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

In an era marked by political polarization, institutional strain, and global uncertainty, Is Democracy Doomed? confronts one of the most urgent questions of our time. This provocative volume gathers leading scholars from law, political science, and sociology to dissect the fragility and resilience of democratic systems in the 21st century.

From Beau Breslin and Ashley Wilkerson’s defense of republicanism as a safeguard against democratic collapse, to Paul Schiff Berman’s exploration of dialogue as democracy’s lifeblood, each chapter offers a distinct lens on the forces reshaping governance. Peter Levine applies systems theory to diagnose democracy’s ailments, while Laura Beth Nielsen reimagines democracy as a relational practice rooted in trust and reciprocity. The volume also probes the legal architecture of democracy: H. Chris Tecklenburg examines the constitutional implications of nationwide injunctions, Jamie Rowen highlights the civic role of lawyers and veterans, and Laura A. Dickinson warns of the democratic risks posed by privatized national security. David Mednicoff critiques the international rule of law’s paradoxes, and Jeremy Paul closes with a sobering reflection on the cultural drift toward expedience over principle.

Is Democracy Doomed? invites readers into a rigorous conversation about democracy’s future, and whether its foundations can withstand the pressures of our time.

Chapter 1. American Democracy May Be Doomed: It’s a Good Thing We Have a Republic; Beau Breslin and Ashley Wilkerson

  • Chapter 2. Do We Still Believe in Process? Democracy and the Fundamental Value of Dialogue Across Difference; Paul Schiff Berman
  • Chapter 3. A System-Analysis of Democracy’s Crisis; Peter Levine
  • Chapter 4. Relational Democracy; Laura Beth Nielsen
  • Chapter 5. Nationwide Injunctions: A Separation of Powers Analysis; H. Chris Tecklenburg
  • Chapter 6. Lawyers, Veterans, and the Durability of US Democracy; Jamie Rowen
  • Chapter 7. National Security Privatization and the Risk to Democracy; Laura A. Dickinson
  • Chapter 8. Do Tensions in the International Rule of Law Help Doom Democracy? An Essay in Constructive Criticism; David Mednicoff
  • Chapter 9. A Culture of Expedience; Jeremy Paul

Austin Sarat is William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College, USA. He has written, co-written, or edited more than one hundred books in the fields of law and political science.