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American Institutions and Their Influence

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About This Book

A wide-ranging analysis examines how democratic principles reshape political institutions, administrative practices, and the balance between local and central authority, arguing that equality of conditions alters lawmaking, judicial behavior, and the incentives of officeholders. It then considers social and cultural effects, including changes to tastes, manners, religion, the press, and associational life, and warns of individualism and the potential for a soft despotism arising from majority opinion and bureaucratic centralization. Throughout, comparative observation and practical examples illustrate both benefits and tensions of popular government, and the work interleaves political theory with empirical commentary.

About the Author

de Tocqueville, Alexis portrait

Alexis de Tocqueville

Alexis de Tocqueville was a French political thinker and historian, best known for his seminal work, "Democracy in America," which provides a profound analysis of American society and its political system in the early 19th century. Born in 1805, Tocqueville's observations on the effects of democracy and the nature of equality have had a lasting impact on political theory. His insights into the social and political dynamics of his time continue to resonate, making him a pivotal figure in the study of democracy and civil society. In addition to his major work, he wrote extensively on the state of society in France before the Revolution of 1789 and engaged in correspondence that further illuminated his thoughts on governance and liberty.

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