Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1307Hits:21499188Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID178990
Title ProperUniversal Suffrage as Decolonization
LanguageENG
AuthorDUONG, KEVIN
Summary / Abstract (Note)This essay reconstructs an important but forgotten dream of twentieth-century political thought: universal suffrage as decolonization. The dream emerged from efforts by Black Atlantic radicals to conscript universal suffrage into wider movements for racial self-expression and cultural revolution. Its proponents believed a mass franchise could enunciate the voice of colonial peoples inside imperial institutions and transform the global order. Recuperating this insurrectionary conception of the ballot reveals how radicals plotted universal suffrage and decolonization as a single historical process. It also places decolonization’s fate in a surprising light: it may have been the century’s greatest act of disenfranchisement. As dependent territories became nation-states, they lost their voice in metropolitan assemblies whose affairs affected them long after independence.
`In' analytical NoteAmerican Political Science Review Vol. 115, No.2; May 2021: p.412 - 428
Journal SourceAmerican Political Science Review 2021-06 115, 2
Key WordsDecolonization ;  Universal Suffrage