The logic of legitimacy: Bootstrapping paradoxes of constitutional democracy

Legal Theory 16 (3):191-227 (2010)
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Abstract

Many have claimed that legitimate constitutional democracy is either conceptually or practically impossible, given infinite regress paradoxes deriving from the requirement of simultaneously democratic and constitutional origins for legitimate government. This paper first critically investigates prominent conceptual and practical bootstrapping objections advanced by Barnett and Michelman. It then argues that the real conceptual root of such bootstrapping objections is not any specific substantive account of legitimacy makers, such as consent or democratic endorsement, but a particular conception of the logic of normative standards—the determinate threshold conception—that the critic attributes to the putatively undermined account of legitimacy. The paper further claims that when we abandon threshold conceptions of the logic of legitimacy in favor of regulative-ideal conceptions, then the objections, from bootstrapping paradoxes to the very idea of constitutional democracy, disappear. It concludes with considerations in favor of adopting a more demanding conception of the regulative ideal of constitutional democracy, advanced by Habermas, focusing on potentials for developmental learning

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Author's Profile

Christopher Zurn
University of Massachusetts, Boston

Citations of this work

Constituent power and civil disobedience: Beyond the nation-state?William E. Scheuerman - 2018 - Journal of International Political Theory 15 (1):49-66.
The asymmetry between domestic and global legitimacy.Matthias Brinkmann - 2023 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy.
Meaning, Metalepsis, Time-Travel.Glenn Mackin - 2024 - Res Philosophica 101 (2):299-322.

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