Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Silent voices and everyday critics: problems in political theory, solutions from Third World feminist social criticism
- 2 A Third World feminist theory of social criticism
- 3 Method: skeptical scrutiny, guiding criteria, and deliberative inquiry in concert
- 4 Roles: social criticism and self-criticism
- 5 Qualifications: everyday critics, multi-sited critics, and multiple critics
- 6 Third World feminist social criticism as feminism
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - A Third World feminist theory of social criticism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Silent voices and everyday critics: problems in political theory, solutions from Third World feminist social criticism
- 2 A Third World feminist theory of social criticism
- 3 Method: skeptical scrutiny, guiding criteria, and deliberative inquiry in concert
- 4 Roles: social criticism and self-criticism
- 5 Qualifications: everyday critics, multi-sited critics, and multiple critics
- 6 Third World feminist social criticism as feminism
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Introduction: quality of and equality in participation
Although deliberative theorists do not always apply their work to the political questions of contemporary world or US politics, deliberative democratic theory is relevant to contemporary politics. In places like El Salvador and South Africa political societies have revised their basic institutions to be more inclusive and democratic. In the process they have realized that, given their histories of violence, coercion, and exploitative inequalities, they also need to revise their institutions of everyday politics such that a population unaccustomed to inclusive democracy can participate in it. Likewise, though without the need for a new constitution, pluralist societies like the USA are wrestling with histories of inequality and exclusion based on sex, sexuality, ethnicity, class, caste, religion, country of origin, national identity, aboriginal status, immigration status, regional geography, language, cultural practices, forms of dress, beliefs, ability, health status, family history, age, and education such that they too need to consider how democratically their basic political institutions and institutions of everyday politics function. Deliberative democratic theorists are likewise broadening their attention from theorizing about the basic political institutions of society (Bessettee 1980, 1994; Sunstein 1988) to thinking about the institutions of everyday politics as well: school boards, legislative bodies, government administration, unions, trade groups, and interest groups – what Amy Gutmann and Dennis Thompson call “middle democracy” (1996). As they describe it, in middle democracy people respect each other and come to consensus on political decisions through free and reasoned deliberation among equal parties.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Political Theory and Feminist Social Criticism , pp. 33 - 72Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000