In this Book

summary

A central question in political science is who governs and how.

Typically political scientists attempt to answer this question by relying upon either empirical analysis, which explains existing political practices, or normative analysis, which prescribes ideal political practices.

Political scientist Paul Schumaker rejects this distinction between empirical and normative theory. Instead, he weds the two approaches to create the new analytical mode he calls critical pluralism. With it he can measure variances in government from pluralist/democratic ideals and still provide theoretical explanations of why the variances occurred.

Schumaker uses critical pluralism to describe, explain, and evaluate variations in three key measures of democratic performance: responsible representation, complex equality, and principle-policy congruence. To test his framework and methodology he analyzes 29 community issues that arose in Lawrence, Kansas, between 1977 and 1987. The results of his study—one of the most comprehensive databases ever in the study of community politics—will be of interest to those who study community power. The conceptual framework itself and methodology used in assessing democratic performance will have a lasting impact on the way community government is studied.

Open access edition funded by the National Endowment for Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Humanities Open Book Program.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title Page, Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

pp. i-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

List of Tables and Figures

pp. ix-xii

List of Acronyms

pp. xiii-xiv

Kansas Open Books Preface

pp. xv-xxii

Preface

pp. xxiii-xxvi

1. Evaluating Democratic Performance in Community Policymaking

pp. 1-17

2. Three Ideals of Pluralist Democracy

pp. 18-35

3. A Comparative Analysis of Twenty-nine Lawrence Issues

pp. 36-48

4. Competing Principles and Urban Ideologies

pp. 49-69

5. Challenging Existing Institutions and Leadership

pp. 70-78

6. Developing the Local Economy

pp. 79-88

7. Protecting the Neighborhoods

pp. 89-95

8. Restricting Individual Choices

pp. 96-103

9. Providing Public Services and Welfare

pp. 104-117

10. Saving the Downtown

pp. 118-127

11. Political Culture: Principles, Preferences, and Policies

pp. 128-140

12. Political Power: Participants, Citizens, and Democracy

pp. 141-173

13. Political Justice: Divisions, Standings, and Complex Equality

pp. 174-202

14. Critical Pluralism and the Rules of the Game

pp. 203-210

Appendix: Determining the Principles at Stake on Concrete Issues

pp. 211-218

Notes

pp. 219-246

References

pp. 247-252

Index

pp. 253-258

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