04234nam 22005775 450 991025532100332120230810143555.01-137-52364-610.1057/978-1-137-52364-8(CKB)3710000000734896(EBL)4716789(DE-He213)978-1-137-52364-8(MiAaPQ)EBC4716789(PPN)194381919(EXLCZ)99371000000073489620160625d2016 u| 0engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierChristodemocracy and the Alternative Democratic Theory of America’s Christian Right /by Gabriel S. Hudson1st ed. 2016.New York :Palgrave Macmillan US :Imprint: Palgrave Pivot,2016.1 online resource (186 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-349-70651-5 1-137-52363-8 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters.Preface -- 1. Christodemocracy is the Alternative Normative Framework assumed by America’s Christian Right -- 2. Christodemocracy is one of many normative frameworks used for understanding the behavior of democratic states -- 3. Christodemocratic Theory Is Based On Ten Core Assumptions -- 4. Discourse Analysis Provides a Qualitative Means for Recognizing Christodemocratic Assumptions Behind Political Activism -- 5. Christodemocracy Assumes That the Role of Any Government is to Enact Christian Morality -- 6. In Christodemocracy, Positive Religious Identity Supersedes Liberty of Conscience in a Competition of Rights -- 7. Christodemocracy Relies On a Provincial Historical Narrative to Justify Christian Primacy -- 8. Christodemocratic Rhetoric Equates Political Leveling with Persecution -- 9. Christodemocracy does not Recognize Rights that Contradict the Will of the Author of Rights -- 10. Christodemocracy Assumes a Fixed, Metaphysical Epistemology as the Measure of Agency and Expertise -- 11. Christodemocracy Paradoxically Embraces Populist Faith and Strict Hierarchical Authority -- 12. Christodemocracy is illiberal because it assumes collective consequences for individual behavior -- 13. Christodemocracy Rejects Political Outcomes Thought To Be The Product of an Illegitimate Identity -- Conclusion.This book evaluates the democratic theory of America’s Christian Right (CR). The CR has been examined extensively in academic literature. However, most analyses focus on its origins, policy preferences, or successful mobilization. Hudson instead examines the normative assumptions about governance that inform CR activism. The CR has its own answers to the core questions asked in democratic theory, such as “What legitimizes power?” and “What is the proper relationship between the state and the individual?” The author outlines ten normative assumptions of the CR and compares each to its counterpoint in liberal democratic theory. Much of what the CR believes about democracy comes from the same authors as modern and postmodern democratic theory but differs in its interpretation and application. The book describes in detail the theory of CR and demonstrates how the CR operates from a different view of governance than is usually associated with the United States.Political scienceAmericaPolitics and governmentReligion and sociologyPolitical SciencePolitical TheoryAmerican PoliticsSociology of ReligionPolitical science.AmericaPolitics and government.Religion and sociology.Political Science.Political Theory.American Politics.Sociology of Religion.322.10973Hudson Gabriel Sauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut786991BOOK9910255321003321Christodemocracy and the alternative democratic theory of America's christian right1752991UNINA