Politicians have failed us. But democracy doesn’t have to. Bought by special interests, detached from real life, obsessed with reelection. Politicians make big promises, deliver little to nothing, and keep the game rigged in their favor. But what can we do? In Politics Without Politicians, acclaimed political theorist Hélène Landemore asks and answers a radical question: What if we didn’t need politicians at all? What if everyday people—under the right conditions—could govern much better? With disarming clarity and a deep sense of urgency, Landemore argues that electoral politics is broken but…mehr
Politicians have failed us. But democracy doesn’t have to. Bought by special interests, detached from real life, obsessed with reelection. Politicians make big promises, deliver little to nothing, and keep the game rigged in their favor. But what can we do? In Politics Without Politicians, acclaimed political theorist Hélène Landemore asks and answers a radical question: What if we didn’t need politicians at all? What if everyday people—under the right conditions—could govern much better? With disarming clarity and a deep sense of urgency, Landemore argues that electoral politics is broken but democracy isn’t. We’ve just been doing it wrong. Drawing on ancient Athenian practices and contemporary citizens’ assemblies, Landemore champions an alternative approach that is alive, working, and growing around the world: civic lotteries that select everyday people to govern—not as career politicians but as temporary stewards of the common good. When regular citizens come together in this way, they make smarter, fairer, more forward-thinking decisions, often bringing out the best in one another. Witnessing this process firsthand, Landemore has learned that democracy should be like a good party where even the shyest guests feel welcome to speak, listen, and be heard. With sharp analysis and real-world examples, drawing from her experience with deliberative processes in France and elsewhere, Landemore shows us how to move beyond democracy as a spectator sport, embracing it as a shared practice—not just in the voting booth but in shaping the laws and policies that govern our lives. This is not a book about what’s wrong—it’s a manifesto for what’s possible. If you’ve ever felt powerless, Politics Without Politicians will show you how “We the People” take back democracy.
Hélène Landemore is a political theorist and professor of political science at Yale University. Her work explores the foundations and future of democracy, with a particular focus on participatory and deliberative innovations. She is the author of Open Democracy, a widely influential book that has shaped global debates about citizen participation and democratic legitimacy. A sought-after speaker and adviser, Landemore has worked with governments, NGOs, and reformers around the world—from France and Finland to Chile and Taiwan. Her research has been featured in The New Yorker, Financial Times, and The Nation, on The Ezra Klein Show, and at the Aspen Festival of Ideas as well as the Athens Democracy Forum. She has written for the Boston Review, Slate, The Washington Post, Project Syndicate, Foreign Policy, l’Humanité, Libération, and Le Monde. Originally from Normandy, France, she holds a PhD from Harvard University and degrees from the École Normale Supérieure and Sciences Po Paris. She lives in New Haven, Connecticut, with her husband and two daughters.
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