This volume guides readers through the current constitutional systems in the Western world in an attempt to decipher the reasons and extent of the decline of the nexus between 'elections' and 'democracy'; it then turns its gaze to the past in search of some answers for the future, examining early and classical Athens and, finally, early republican Rome. In discussing Athens, it explores how an authentic 'power of the people' is more than voting and something rather different from representation, while the examples of Rome demonstrate - thanks to the paradigm of the so-called tribunician power - the importance of institutionalised mechanisms of dialogic conflict between competing powers.
This book will be of primary interest to scholars of legal history, both recent and ancient, and to classicists, but also to the more general reader with an interest in politics and history.
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- The Classical Review
"If one follows the author on the narrow but profound path of a search for conceptual and institutional arrangements that would reduce the weight of the elites in favor of greater effective participation of the people, one is rewarded with beautiful and concise analyses of Greek democracy and the tribunate of the people in Rome. "
-Hinnerk Bruhns, Anabases