Political Freedom in a Deliberative System

Subscibe in publisher´s online store Share via email
Political Freedom in a Deliberative System

A Republican Case Against Holistic Evaluations

Bello Hutt, Donald

From the journal ARSP Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie, Volume 107, June 2021, issue 2

Published by Franz Steiner Verlag

article, 8892 Words
Original language: English
ARSP 2021, pp 167-184
https://doi.org/10.25162/arsp-2021-0009

Abstract

Champions of systemic approaches to deliberative democratic theory consider that deliberative systems serve sundry functions. Whether guaranteeing political freedom should be one of those functions has not been explored in the scholarly literature. This article thus examines which conceptions of freedom underpin systemic approaches to deliberative democracy. I explore and circumscribe the analysis to two prominent options: freedom as absence of interference and freedom as non-domination. The answer to which of these alternatives best serves as a function of the deliberative system hinges on the previous question of whether holistic evaluations of systemic deliberative performance are to be endorsed. The article then argues that holistic evaluations are only compatible with freedom as non-interference. By contrast, freedom as non-domination is incompatible with holism. I then provide reasons for endorsing freedom as non-domination and, by implication, to reject holistic systemic evaluations.

Author information

Donald Bello Hutt