Frontiers of Democracy: Domingo Sarmiento and Josiah Royce on the Geography of Self-Governing Communities

The Pluralist 6 (3):93-102 (2011)
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Abstract

It is sometimes claimed that democracy is a “Western” form of government that can only grow in certain places and under certain conditions. Indeed, in some of his works, Samuel Huntington claims that democracy and the rule of law are social ideals that are rooted in very specific European cultures and may not function well, or at all, outside of those settings. Jared Diamond, author of the popular Guns, Germs, and Steel, goes even further, suggesting that the rise of industrialized democracies had much to do with the geography and the environment in which these social ideals evolved, giving the West distinct advantages over other societies with different terrains and natural resources (see Diamond). Democracy ..

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The Urban Blind Spot in Environmental Ethics.Andrew Light - 2001 - Environmental Politics 10 (1):7-35.

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