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ID110552
Title ProperVoting with your feet
Other Title Informationexit-based empowerment in democratic theory
LanguageENG
AuthorWarren, Mark E
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Democracy is about including those who are potentially affected by collective decisions in making those decisions. For this reason, contemporary democratic theory primarily assumes membership combined with effective voice. An alternative to voice is exit: Dissatisfied members may choose to leave a group rather than voice their displeasure. Rights and capacities for exit can function as low-cost, effective empowerments, particularly for those without voice. But because contemporary democratic theory often dismisses exit as appropriate only for economic markets, the democratic potentials of exit have rarely been theorized. Exit-based empowerments should be as central to the design and integrity of democracy as distributions of votes and voice, long considered its key structural features. When they are integrated into other democratic devices, exit-based empowerments should generate and widely distribute usable powers for those who need them most, evoke responsiveness from elites, induce voice, discipline monopoly, and underwrite vibrant and pluralistic societies.
`In' analytical NoteAmerican Political Science Review Vol. 105, No. 4; Nov 2011: p.683-701
Journal SourceAmerican Political Science Review Vol. 105, No. 4; Nov 2011: p.683-701
Key WordsDemocratic Theory ;  Democracy ;  Collective Decisions ;  Contemporary Democratic Theory