Lexington Books
Pages: 230
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0748-5 • Hardback • October 2004 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
Subjects: Political Science / General,
Political Science / American Government / Legislative Branch,
Political Science / Political Ideologies / Democracy,
Political Science / Political Process / Campaigns & Elections,
Political Science / History & Theory,
Political Science / Political Process / Political Parties,
Political Science / Political Process / General,
Political Science / Public Affairs & Administration,
Political Science / American Government / State,
Political Science / Constitutions,
Political Science / Public Policy / General,
Political Science / Public Policy / Social Policy,
Political Science / American Government / National,
Social Science / Research,
Social Science / Essays
Peter Bogason is Professor of Public Administration at the University of Roskilde. Sandra Kensen is Assistant Professor of Law at Tilburg University. Hugh T. Miller is Professor of Public Administration at Florida Atlantic University.
1 Introduction: Extra-Formal Democracy
2 Deliberative Governance: Renewing Public Service and Public Trust
3 Democratic Governance: Allocative, Integrative, or Deliberative?
4 Making Local Democracy Work: Neighborhood-Oriented Reform in Los Angeles and the Dutch Randstad
5 Democratic Consequences of Urban Governance: What has become of Representative Democracy?
6 Entrepreneurship in Community Development and Local Governance
7 Democratic Governance and the Role of Public Adminstrators
8 Mediated Negotiations, a Deliberative Approach to Democratic Governance: Theoretical Linkages and Practial Examples
9 Interaction Research: Joining Persons, Theories, and Practices
10 Democratic Epistemology
11 Extra-Formal Democracy: A Reflection
This book is remarkable both for its sophistication in bridging the gap between cutting edge theory and emerging practices of “extra-formal” democracy, and for the freshness of the ideas that follow from its multi-national perspective. I no sooner finished it than I began sharing its insights with my students.
— Frank E. Scott, California State University, Hayward
This is a timely book! On the domestic front, reactions to terrorism threaten democracy. Internationally, globalism conflates capitalism with democracy to the benefit of capitalism and to the detriment of democracy. Top-to-bottom approaches to democracy are fatally flawed. Horizontal or bottom-to-top, situational, relational, and pragmatic alternatives need to be revived. Together, the authors in Tampering with Tradition provide an intellectually sophisticated foundation for that revival.
— Larry S. Luton, Eastern Washington University