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"In Downsizing Democracy, Matthew A. Crenson and Benjamin Ginsberg describe how the powerful idea of a collective citizenry has given way to a concept of personal, autonomous democracy, in which political change is effected through litigation, lobbying, and term limits, rather than active participation in the political process.
Mandatory taxes have replaced bonds as a means to fund military operations, career civil servants have replaced volunteers in the allocation of public services, and an elite, professional soldier has replaced the citizen-soldier. With citizens pushed to the periphery of political life, narrow special interest groups from across the political spectrum - largely composed of faceless members drawn from extended mailing lists - have come to dominate state and federal decision-making.
In the closing decade of the last century, this trend only intensified as the federal government, taking a cue from business management practices, rethought its relationship to its citizens as one of a provider of goods and services to individual "customers.""--BOOK JACKET.
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Downsizing Democracy: How America Sidelined Its Citizens and Privatized Its Public
January 15, 2004, The Johns Hopkins University Press
Paperback
in English
- New Ed edition
0801878861 9780801878862
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Downsizing Democracy: How America Sidelined Its Citizens and Privatized Its Public
August 26, 2002, The Johns Hopkins University Press
Hardcover
in English
0801871506 9780801871504
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Book Details
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"IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY, America was exceptional for the vitality of its democratic institutions-especially its political parties."
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