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Cultural Prerequisites to a Successfully Functioning Democracy: A Symposium

Ernest S. Griffith, John Plamenatz and J. Roland Pennock

American Political Science Review, 1956, vol. 50, issue 1, 101-137

Abstract: The problem of sustaining and strengthening democratic institutions is of the first magnitude. The stakes are high.“Democracy,” whatever else may be included, implies free discussion and popular election of governors, with alternative choices available. Presumably the governors will include a representative element, normally in the form of a legislative or policy-adopting body.The term “cultural prerequisites” is less easily defined. The sociologists have an approach that sheds light upon that for which we are searching. They speak of the mores, those modes of thought as well as behavior by which men live and institutions are sustained. The mores are those elements of a culture which are regarded as essential for survival of the society itself. As regards democracy, our question is basically, “What is its cultural and psychological underpinning?” What cultural attitudes or mores will sustain democracy? In part they must do this by assuring its success in satisfying the psychological necessities of its citizens, in part by giving it and its institutions an emotional content which will make its survival a fighting matter for those who love it.

Date: 1956
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