This project offers an argument that isolates several major forces that it contends pose a critical threat to the endurance of modern American democracy. It evaluates modern and classic political philosophy to identify the prerequisites for a stable democracy, identifying and defining voter education and participation as necessary contributors to civic engagement. It provides a socio-legal framework for evaluating four phenomena that have shifted in their impact on politics over the past 20 years: the roles of money and media in politics, as well as disenfranchisement by gerrymandering and by felon voting restrictions. It demonstrates how each has a new and worsening impact on voter education and/or participation, thus threatening the continued existence of modern American democracy.
Details
- Modern Threats to American Democracy: A Study of 21st-Century Declines in Civic Engagement
- Mason, Maria (Co-author)
- Morote, Nicole (Co-author)
- Burnquist, Andrew (Co-author)
- Affolter, Jacob (Thesis director)
- Hoekstra, Valerie (Committee member)
- School of Politics and Global Studies (Contributor)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)