
Americans today are far less likely to trust their institutions, and each other, than in decades past. This collapse in social and political trust arguably fuels our increasingly ferocious ideological conflicts and hardened partisanship. Many believe that our previously high levels of trust and bipartisanship were a pleasant anomaly and that we now live under the historic norm. Seen this way, politics itself is nothing more than a power struggle between groups with irreconcilable aims: contemporary American politics is war because political life as such is war.Must Politics Be War? argues that our shared liberal democratic institutions have the unique capacity to sustain social and political trust between diverse persons. In succinct, convincing prose, Kevin Vallier argues that constitutional rights and democratic governance prevent any one ideology or faith from dominating all others, thereby protecting each person's freedom to live according to her values and principles. Illiberal arrangements, where one group's ideology or faith reigns, turn those who disagree into unwilling subversives, persons with little reason to trust their regime or to be trustworthy in obeying it. Liberal arrangements, in contrast, incentivize trust and trustworthiness because they allow people with diverse and divergent ends to act with conviction. Those with opposing viewpoints become trustworthy because they can obey the rules of their society without acting against their ideals. Therefore, as Vallier illuminates, a liberal society is one at moral peace with a politics that is not war.
Can liberal democratic institutions effectively mitigate the current crisis of social and political trust in the United States? Kevin Vallier, a political philosopher, examines the erosion of trust in contemporary American society and argues that the perception of politics as an inherent power struggle is a flawed premise. He posits that constitutional rights and democratic governance provide a framework that allows individuals with divergent values to coexist without resorting to ideological warfare.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in political philosophy recognize this work as a significant contribution to the discourse on liberal democratic stability. Readers frequently note the clarity of the prose and the author's ability to synthesize complex philosophical concepts into a coherent argument for institutional trust.
Page Count:
253
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190632852
ISBN-13:
9780190632854
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