Abstract

In theory, the idea of democracy consists of several insoluble contradictions, aporias, and conflicts. In practice, democracy demands an effective balancing of its essentially opposing principles and values in order to preserve an authentic character as well as to avoid its inherent self-destructive tendencies. In this regard, the concept of value trade-offs promises a heuristic tool to grasp both the analytical and normative impact of a political theory which takes the complexity of democracy seriously. Proceeding from this, the contribution will demonstrate to what extent the conceptualisation of democratic antinomies and the notion of value trade-offs can be seen as a kind of communicating vessel. The article’s general argument is that democracy is defined by several antinomies that are irreducible in theory and therefore require trade-offs in political practice. Moreover, it will discuss three relevant issue areas to suggest the approach’s empirical relevance and to prove the existence of value trade-offs as an operating benchmark for the legitimacy and consolidation of democratic processes on the one hand but also for their shortcomings and risks on the other. Correspondingly, the article concerns the antinomic relationships between freedom and security, economic growth and sustainability, and finally, democracy and populism to underpin the general perception that the success of democratic institutions first and foremost depends on the balance of the necessarily conflicting principles of democracy.

Highlights

  • The intense consideration to the history of political thought reveals that the concept of democracy is generally associated with essentially opposing connotations and values: Liberty and equality, representative government and popular sovereignty, the principles of quality and quantity in respect of democratic decision-making, plurality and social unity, individual and collective claims, and last but not least universality and particularity—all of these evident contradictions inevitably belong to the idea of modern democracy and provoke a permanent struggle of conflicting opinions, interests, and actors within the democratic system

  • This article has applied the concept of value trade-offs in order to get a rather empirical benchmark for illustrating the political implications of democratic antinomies

  • The democratic antinomies approach is able to give the relevance of trade-offs in political realms a theoretical basis

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Summary

Introduction

The intense consideration to the history of political thought reveals that the concept of democracy is generally associated with essentially opposing connotations and values: Liberty and equality, representative government and popular sovereignty, the principles of quality and quantity in respect of democratic decision-making, plurality and social unity, individual and collective claims, and last but not least universality and particularity—all of these evident contradictions inevitably belong to the idea of modern democracy and provoke a permanent struggle of conflicting opinions, interests, and actors within the democratic system. One may say that an ‘authentic’ type of democracy is primarily characterised by a number of dynamic trade-offs between its inherent (and insoluble) antinomies. Proceeding from these preliminary assumptions, the following line of argument briefly outlines the theory of democratic antinomies (Section 2), before it clarifies the Politics and Governance, 2019, Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 264–274 interdependence of these antinomies in theory and the need of (value) trade-offs in democracy’s political practice (Section 3). The theoretical considerations should be illustrated by three substantiated examples, which will be reconstructed in terms of the relevant concepts in order to highlight both the structural benefits and problems of democratic discourse (Section 4)

The Theory of Democratic Antinomies
The Identification of Value Trade-Offs in Democratic Politics
Freedom and Security
Economic Growth and Sustainability
Populist Democracy
Conclusions
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