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Articles

Modernism's Legacy: Dialogue, Objectivity, and Justice in Mark Bevir's Democratic Governance

Pages 5-20 | Received 16 Feb 2011, Accepted 14 Mar 2011, Published online: 19 Dec 2011
 

Abstract

This article looks at Mark Bevir's ideas on the changing nature of the modern state, as expressed in his book, ‘Democratic Governance’. In the book, the author argues that recent developments in the theory and practice of politics have their intellectual roots in wider trends in the academic study of society and politics. In particular, he argues, the rise in what he and others have called ‘the new governance’ – that is, the shift in Britain and elsewhere away from centralised policy making and implementation by state institutions toward policy networks in which the state is merely one actor among many – has emerged as a direct consequence of the rise of ahistorical, universalist social science methodologies.

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