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Democracy Realized: The Progressive Alternative

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Roberto Mangabeira Unger is widely regarded as one of the leading social thinkers of our time. In Democracy Realized Unger gives detailed content to a progressive and practical alternative to both neoliberalism and institutionally conservative social democracy. His efforts to inspire and develop this alternative have drawn increasing attention throughout the world as well as in his native Brazil.

320 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1998

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About the author

Roberto Mangabeira Unger

60 books102 followers
Roberto Mangabeira Unger (born 24 March 1947) is a philosopher and politician. He has written notable works including Politics: A Work In Constructive Social Theory and The Singular Universe and the Reality of Time. He has developed his views and positions across many fields, including social, and political, and economic theory. In legal theory, he is best known for his work in the 1970s-1990s while at Harvard Law School as part of the Critical Legal Studies movement, which is held to have helped disrupt the methodological consensus in American law schools and which led to the writing of What Should Legal Analysis Become? His political activity helped the transition to democracy in Brazil in the aftermath of the military regime, and culminated with his appointment as Brazil's Minister of Strategic Affairs in 2007 and again in 2015. His late work in economics culminates in his characterization and program toward The Knowledge Economy. His work is seen to offer a vision of humanity and a program to empower individuals and change institutions.

At the core of his philosophy is a view of humanity as greater than the contexts in which it is placed. He sees each individual possessed with the capability to rise to a greater life. At the root of his social thought is the conviction that the social world is made and imagined. His work begins from the premise that no natural or necessary social, political, or economic arrangements underlie individual or social activity. Property rights, liberal democracy, wage labor—for Unger, these are all historical artifacts that have no necessary relation to the goals of free and prosperous human activity. For Unger, the market, the state, and human social organization should not be set in predetermined institutional arrangements, but need to be left open to experimentation and revision according to what works for the project of individual and collective empowerment. Doing so, he holds, will enable human liberation.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Gavin Pielow.
2 reviews
December 12, 2024
Roberto Mangabeira Unger's "Democracy Realized" presents a radical reimagining of democratic possibility that challenges both traditional leftist and conservative approaches to institutional reform. Having engaged with these ideas both through careful study of the text and through direct discussions as with Professor Unger as a student enrolled in his Harvard Law School "American Democracy" class, I've found his framework for understanding institutional change both provocative and pragmatically valuable, even when one might disagree with specific proposals.

The foundational notion that readers should embrace in starting this book with is the dismantling of what Unger terms "false necessity" - the assumption that our current institutional arrangements are either natural or inevitable. Unger reveals how features we take for granted in American democracy - from our two-party system to our approach to federalism - are neither necessary nor optimal for achieving democratic goals. His critique of "structural fetishism" is particularly powerful, showing how both left and right have become imprisoned by a poverty of institutional imagination.

Unger's treatment of what he calls "proto-democratic liberalism" - arrangements designed to check popular and demagogic interests - offers crucial insights into contemporary political dysfunction. His analysis reveals how our current system manufactures a false dichotomy between ideological camps, compelling diverse interest groups into artificial coalitions that ultimately serve to obstruct meaningful reform. This observation proves especially relevant when examining how conservative forces have adopted what Unger identifies as an "anti-institutional but pro-structural" stance that systematically undermines government effectiveness while preserving existing power arrangements.

Particularly relevant to current and future debates is Unger's argument of how this false dichotomy of American politics prevents genuine institutional innovation. The binary choice between "big government" progressivism and "small government" conservatism obscures more fundamental questions about institutional design. Consider how this plays out in debates over automation and technological change: rather than imagining new institutional arrangements that could harness technological progress for democratic empowerment, we remain trapped in sterile arguments about regulation versus deregulation. Unger's vision of democratic experimentalism suggests a different approach - one that could combine universal basic income with new forms of worker empowerment and market organization.

Perhaps most provocatively, Unger's ideas about institutional reform have striking implications for judicial power. The increasing deference to courts as arbiters of structural conflicts reflects the failure of democratic imagination that Unger has identified. Our reliance on judicial precedent - literally allowing past decisions to overrule present circumstances - exemplifies the triumph of the dead over the living. Yet Unger's framework suggests an alternative: rather than accepting this judicial supremacy as necessary for democratic stability, we might reimagine courts' role while developing new institutions for resolving structural conflicts. This could involve new forms of popular constitutional participation or innovative mechanisms for mediating between different levels of government.

The book occasionally risks overwhelming readers with the scope of its ambition, but this actually serves to highlight one of Unger's central points: our political imagination has become unnecessarily constrained. His detailed exploration of alternative institutional arrangements - from proportional representation to new forms of property rights - demonstrates just how many options exist beyond our current binary of market capitalism versus state control.

While critics might dismiss Unger's vision as utopian, such criticism misses his careful attention to practical implementation. He explicitly acknowledges the need for gradual, piece-by-piece institutional reform rather than wholesale revolution. This pragmatic streak emerges clearly in his discussion of how transformative change must work within existing constitutional frameworks while gradually expanding the space for democratic experimentation.

The urgent and powerful insight from 'Democracy Realized' is its vision for a national productivist project in an age of automation. As AI overhauls human civilization as we’ve known it, and as contemporary/future debates increasingly devolve into a false choice between luddite resistance and unfettered technological disruption, Unger demonstrates how institutional reform could harness automation for democratic empowerment rather than oligarchic accumulation. His framework suggests that the real challenge isn't technological change itself, but our institutional inability to direct such change toward collective advancement. The path forward requires not just specific reforms but a fundamental reimagining of how democratic institutions might guide technological progress toward genuine social transformation.
Profile Image for Dhananjay Ashok.
16 reviews1 follower
May 18, 2022
I did not understand most paragraphs in this book because of how terse it. The ones I did understand seemed so abstract that they meant basically nothing but buzzwords. I'll give it 3 stars because looking at the authors credentials it's probably me being not smart enough for this book, but for me this book is unreadable.
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