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Facing Authority: A Theory of Political Legitimacy

Autor Thomas Fossen
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 dec 2023
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license. It is free to read at Oxford Academic and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.Political protest is often at least partially about the question of legitimacy. How can we distinguish whether a regime is legitimate, or merely purports to be so? In Facing Authority, Thomas Fossen develops a new philosophical approach to political legitimacy, interweaving analyses of key concepts (including representation, identity, and temporality) with examples of real-life struggles for legitimacy, from the German Autumn to the Arab Spring. Instead of asking "what makes authorities legitimate?" in the abstract, Fossen investigates how the question of legitimacy manifests itself in practice. Facing Authority proposes that judging legitimacy is not simply a matter of applying moral principles, but of engaging in various forms of political contestation: over the representation of power (what is the nature of the regime?), collective selfhood (who am I, and who are we?), and the meaning of events (what happened here--a coup, or a revolution?). Fossen argues that these questions constitute the heart of the question of legitimacy, but thus far have been neglected by theorists of legitimacy. Compelling and original, Facing Authority is a pragmatist alternative to predominant moralist and realist approaches to legitimacy in political philosophy.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197645703
ISBN-10: 0197645704
Pagini: 222
Dimensiuni: 241 x 163 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Against the move to provide criteria that justify the legitimacy of a regime, Fossen unveils a theory of political judgment that approaches legitimacy as an ongoing, open-ended, and intersubjective practice in which political subjects take a concrete and embodied stance toward a regime and its claim to authority. This book is easily the most compelling and perspicuous contribution to a theory of political judgment I have come across.
Probably the first book I've read in years to offer a genuinely new way of looking at fundamental questions in politics. Leaving behind familiar debates between normative theory and realism, Fossen shifts the question from whether legitimacy claims are true to what making them allows political actors to do. Though sharing radical constructivism with Foucault or Arendt, Fossen's post-Hegelian pragmatism provides a framework they don't for sorting through the relationships at stake when struggles over collective political judgment play out in the streets.
What do we actually do when we judge the legitimacy of a political regime? In Facing Authority Thomas Fossen forcefully challenges the conventional view that judgment is a matter of justification. Drawing creatively on pragmatist philosophy, he shows that judgment is a practical predicament of everyday life. Rigorous, insightful, and timely, Fossen's book offers a powerful new contribution to the theory of political legitimacy. It speaks to anyone concerned with understanding the meaning of legitimacy in our bewildering times.
Wholly original and deeply insightful, Facing Authority aims to re-orient debates on political legitimacy away from the articulation of abstract moral criteria towards the investigation of the practical predicament of political agents engaged in judging legitimacy. Fossen's work both establishes a novel agenda for work on political legitimacy and models a valuable new approach to the practice of political philosophy.
In Facing Authority, Fossen (Leiden Univ., the Netherlands) seeks to develop a theory of political legitimacy. His argument focuses on how political legitimacy appears in practice in the world. Recommended.

Notă biografică

Thomas Fossen is Assistant Professor of Political Philosophy at Leiden University, the Netherlands. His research is in political philosophy (or political theory), at the intersection with political science and philosophy of language. His work addresses questions of political legitimacy, political obligation, and political representation. Fossen was previously a visiting scholar at the University of Chicago, KU Leuven, and the University of Essex. In 2015, he received a Veni grant from the Dutch Research Council (NWO). In 2020-2021, he was a member of the School of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and a Humboldt Fellow at Goethe University Frankfurt.