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Gianna Englert, "Democracy Tamed: French Liberalism and the Politics of Suffrage" (Oxford UP, 2024)

Oct 15, 2025
In this engaging conversation, Gianna Englert, an associate professor specializing in political theory, opens up about her book, "Democracy Tamed." She discusses how historical tensions between liberalism and democracy emerged from 19th-century France, introducing concepts like 'political capacity' that limit voting rights to the capable. Englert explores influential thinkers like Benjamin Constant and Tocqueville, who debated suffrage and civic education, offering tantalizing insights into how these discussions remain relevant today in our democracy.
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INSIGHT

Liberalism Versus Electoral Democracy

  • Early liberalism in 19th-century France treated liberalism as an institutional philosophy and democracy as an electoral arrangement.
  • Liberals feared that unchecked mass voting might erode liberal freedoms and institutions.
INSIGHT

Capacity As A Precondition For Voting

  • Capacite politique framed voting as a conditioned privilege, not an automatic civil right.
  • Liberals argued political rights must be earned through visible signs like property, residency, or education.
INSIGHT

Constant: Direct Elections, Limited Franchise

  • Benjamin Constant combined pluralism with limits on suffrage to prevent tyranny.
  • He supported direct elections but argued for filtering mechanisms to block revolutionary passions.
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