mile Durkheim and the Religion of Liberal Democracy – Tablet Magazine
The end of the 19th century, as the Dreyfus affair shook France and anti-Semitism surfaced as a political force, was not an obvious moment for a French Jew to rediscover optimism. mile Durkheim (1858-1917), the countrys foremost sociologist, was an especially unlikely candidate for hope. He had spent the last decade in a state of well-informed anxiety. His research seemed to show that economic tensions and cultural fragmentation were unraveling the conditions for collective existence in France and throughout the world.
The 1894 condemnation of Jewish army officer Alfred Dreyfus by a French military tribunal on false evidence, and the ensuing partisan, virulently anti-Semitic efforts to prevent a retrial, might have confirmed Durkheims despair. Instead it revitalized his faith in France and its liberal democracy. This faith was not metaphorical. Durkheim insisted, to the chagrin of allies and opponents ever since, that democracy was a religion, and the rights-bearing individual its god. A century later, as individual rights and popular sovereignty are increasingly embattled, Durkheims intellectual legacy challenges defenders of liberalism to embrace emotion, community, and faith.
A rabbis son, Durkheim left the religion of his childhood to study philosophy in Paris. At 29, he began to teach, offering courses on political philosophers such as Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. These forebears, he found, had made a fatal error. Basing their theories on the notion that individuals, naturally endowed with liberty, had been brought together in an artificial social contract, they saw society as something extrinsic to human nature, and philosophical speculation as something prior to empirical research. They devised ideal constitutions in which a general will, embodied by a monarch or a majority opinion, would dominate the selfish desires of individuals. Yet these philosophers seemed to know little about individuals, society, and the state as we find them in the world. If we want to know about the nature of things or the rules for living, Durkheim chided, we must go back to things themselves, and thus to science.
Durkheim became one of the founders of sociology, a budding discipline meant to provide scientific knowledge about topics that had long been the preserve of speculation and belief. In the following decade of the 1890s, he wrote a manifesto, The Rules of Sociological Method (1894), that called for empirical research into human behavior and the evolution of social structuresonly after this kind of study, he argued, could political and ethical theorizing proceed on a sound basis. However Durkheims research for The Division of Labor (1893) and Suicide (1897) brought him to a precipice of despair.
Inspired by biology, Durkheim tried to explain why people in capitalist societies, bound by complex networks of exchange, seemed to be drifting ever further apart. Think, he asked readers, of the finches Charles Darwin had studied in the Galapagos Islands. Under the pressure of competition for resources, the members of a single species separated into a variety of new ones, each with physical features adapted to different sources of food. In what seemed to be an impeccably scientific analogy, Durkheim argued that people and societies evolve in just the same way. Members of traditional, pre-modern societies, like the original finches, are more or less identical to each other. The pressure of capitalist competition introduces a principle of differentiation, as people divide themselves into increasingly specialized economic roles, with finely tailored lifestyles, identities, and values to match.
In its economic form, as the division of labor, this growing specialization permits a vast increase in societys productive powersbut with dire social and psychological consequences. Traditional bonds of religion and family collapse, and individuals, ironically isolated by the economic forces that overwhelm them all, take refuge in illusory communities, which are too frail to bear the weight of human fate. The anarchist, the aesthete, the mystic and the socialist revolutionary, he warned, all hasten societys demise.
Durkheim saw little remedy for this crisis. Modern capitalist societies like France were losing the shared sets of values and points of reference that make life bearable, breaking down into fleeting, fragmentary tribes whose members were aggressively narcissistic and desperately lonesome. Even if by some incomprehensible miracle there appeared a moral code to reunite society, the competitive logic of the capitalist system would drive its members again into self-centeredness and division.
***
While Durkheim was researching his way into hopelessness, the 1894 condemnation of Dreyfus was transforming French politics. By 1898, many of the countrys most eminent writers, artists and scholars had come to Dreyfus defense. The more politically savvy of Dreyfus defenders, the Dreyfusards, saw his unjust sentence as an opportunity to defend the principles of human rights and to weaken the army, a bastion of conservatives who seemed to be waiting for their own chance to sabotage the Third Republic, Frances liberal democratic regime. But the republics enemies also sensed an opportunity.
Founded in 1870 after decades of authoritarian rule and frequent coups, the republic appeared to many French observers as a creation of Jews, Protestants and nonbelievers. These minorities were accused of using the forms of liberal democracy, such as an emphasis on individual rights, to protect themselves fromand indeed to oppressFrances Catholic majority.
The grain of truth in the anti-republic perspective was that minorities did have good reason to see the republic as their best defense against intolerance. The Dreyfus affair offered anti-republicans a chance to exploit anti-Semitic prejudice, charging that Dreyfus defenders treacherously insisted on the rights of the accused in order to undermine Frances national defense. If Dreyfus name were cleared, conservatives warned, military morale would plummet, leaving the nation vulnerable to a rising Germany. The rights of a single individualespecially a Jewcould not be allowed to imperil the needs of the entire country. This argument, bruited by many anti-Dreyfusards, was delivered with particular flair by literary editor Ferdinand Brunetire in an 1898 article, After the Trial.
Brunetire argued that the affair had revealed a fundamental conflict within the Third Republic between responsible people who accepted that the needs of the community must overrun individual rights, and the anarchists, socialists and radical individualists who were willing to risk the very existence of France for the sake of a single persons freedom. This was an argument that Durkheim could understand, one that might have appealed to his own concern about the pernicious individualizing forces of modern society. But Durkheim had changed his mind. In a series of essays written in 1898 and 1899, he answered Brunetire, defended the Dreyfusards, and outlined a vision of society and politics that shattered his earlier pessimism.
Durkheims thinking was transformed by an empathetic and critical engagement with the anti-Dreyfusards. In an essay on anti-Semitism, he dismissed the idea that Dreyfus opponents were motivated by hatred and prejudice. Anti-Semitism, he insisted, was an expression of capitalist societies economic troubles and moral distress, phenomena he had documented himself. Ordinary people, no less than sociologists, seek explanations for the bewilderments of modernity and, too often, find scapegoats.
In Suicide, written only a few years earlier, Durkheim saw the ideologies that arose in response to contemporary capitalism as mere continuations of its atomizing tendencies. Now, reflecting on the French response to Dreyfus convinction in 1894, Durkheim recalled a surge of joy on the boulevards. The French crowds had been delighted, Durkheim suggested, not because they had an excuse to persecute a member of a despised minority, but because they had been relieved to find themselves gathered together before an explanation and an answer to their sufferings. The structure of anti-Semitism suggested a way out of the troubles and distress of modern society: a shared longing for a comprehensible world.
The anarchist, the aesthete, the mystic and the socialist revolutionary, mile Durkheim warned, all hasten societys demise.
In a companion essay on militarism, Durkheim deepened his analysis of the anti-Dreyfus camp. Like anti-Semitism, militarism now appeared to him as a distorted form of a vital social imperative. He argued that the French people, seeing the army as their defense against Germany, had made it the object of a cult something untouchable and sacred. By sacrificing the innocent Dreyfus, they were trying to appease their god.
Durkheim could have lingered on the cruelty and irrationality of this sacrifice. Instead, he suggested that the task of liberals was to find a better cult. The French needed other ideas in which they can commune with each other, other ends to pursue in common. The Dreyfusards would have to offer not only political principles, such as individual rights, but also a sense of belonging, a form of collectivity organized around transcendent values and directed toward the realization of concrete ends. Dreyfus would be saved not by mere appeals to due process, but by a cult of justice, a collective passion for individual rights.
Such a religion of individual rights could hardly be whipped together for the occasion, Durkheim noted. But in an 1898 essay, Individualism and the Intellectuals, he argued that this religion was in fact already the common faith of France.
In another paradoxical argument, a match for his claims that the anti-Dreyfusards were motivated by a misguided love of truth and community, Durkheim set out to prove that the Dreyfusards insistence on the rights of a single person was an act of worship that united the members of the French nation to their countrymen and to a shared past. In doing so, Durkheim confronted Brunetires critique of individualism, which so resembled his own earlier assessments of modern society. Brunetire had argued that liberal democracy weakened the nation by emphasizing individual rights over the needs of the group: Countering Brunetire, Durkheim paradoxically traced the history of these rights, beginning with the Enlightenment philosophers like Jean-Jacques Rousseau who first conceived of them.
***
The Dreyfus affair had given Durkheim a new, ironic perspective on the Enlightenment project. Years before, the theories of Rousseau and his colleagues had struck Durkheim as shallow and idealistic. They had suggested that society was only a kind of contract to protect the rights of the individuals who composed it, but, as Durkheim the sociologist had showed, it was society that created individuals, not the other way around. The philosophers had been wrong about human nature and the relationship between individuals and societyyet, however mistaken, their ideas had entered into the repertoire of beliefs and prejudices shared by most French people, and so in the process attained an unexpected kind of truth.
The key ideas of liberalismthat society is founded by and composed of originally isolated rights-bearing individuals, and that the legitimacy of the state is based on its offering protection to individuals rightsare false from a scientific or philosophic point of view, Durkheim argued, in that they are unable to stand up to critical scrutiny. But they have become, as it were, effectively true, or true enough. French people believe in the existence of the liberal individual and see their history as the story of his triumph.
It was the religious fervor of the Dreyfusards that seems to have set Durkheim on this path of thought. After all, Durkheim observed, it should surprise us that thousands of people could be so committed to the defense of a single stranger. What mere individual can be worth risking the safety of a whole country? Something more than scientific or philosophical rationality must be at work. When we are horrified by violations of someones rights, Durkheim argued, we are experiencing the disgust and fear that religious believers feel when something sacred and inviolable is being transgressedthough we are not much concerned about the actual person whose rights are being violated, the particular being that constitutes himself and carries his name.
Thus it was not really Dreyfus whom the Dreyfusards wanted to defend, but an impersonal and anonymous individual, an abstract humanity in which all members of liberal democracies share. As Durkheim said: man has become a god to man each individual mind has within it something of the divine, marked by a characteristic which renders it sacred and inviolable.
Liberal democracy, Durkheim argued, is therefore best understood not as an accurate or even rational set of claims about the proper relationship between individuals and society, but rather as a religion that enshrines and celebrates the rights of the ideal, abstract individual, who is its god.
Against Brunetires charges that an exaggerated respect for individual rights was endangering the French nation, Durkheim countered that it was this religion that was its very soul. For this reason, Durkheim warned, the goal of a cosmopolitan order in which the nation-state might disappear was an illusionliberal norms can only be sustained by a community of believers rooted in shared patterns of life and circuits of feeling. Until the end of his life, despite the growing influence of international socialist movements, Durkheim hoped that French socialists would return to French traditions and abandon the dream of a global revolution; liberal democracy is a religion, but it is a national, not a universal belief system.
***
After the deceptions of his fathers Judaism, Enlightenment philosophy, and the scientific study of society, Durkheim had found what he recognized to be a new faith. For the next two decades, until his death in 1917, he would devote himself to proving that all societies have a religious basis (in his Elementary Forms of Religious Life, 1913) and to providing French teachers with the courage to embrace their role as priests of the republic. They must instill in children a democratic morality, built of respect for individual rights and love for the nation. History, for example, should be taught as the achievement of the former by the latter: the child, and later the adult, will learn that the rights that are granted to them, the freedom that they enjoy, the moral dignity that they believe themselves to possess, all of these are the creation of that personal but impersonal being we call France. Only by confronting rigidly enforced rules will children learn to respect something greater than themselvesthe basic attitude required for all religions, including that of liberal democracy.
While he did not argue that the state should limit religious freedom, Durkheim did not imagine that it could be possible to separate church and state in the sense usually understood by defenders of Frances particular form of secularism, lacit. Religion is the foundation of politics, he insisted. The Third Republic could only thrive if its defenders accepted it for what it was: the true church of the French, the institution through which they worshipped the rights-bearing individual.
Durkheims idiosyncratic calls for the state to shape individuals on societys behalf, and to manage their education as a religious enterprise, alienated potential allies, like liberal Jewish and Protestant intellectuals, who fought for a public sphere that could accommodate many forms of religious practice. Anti-Semites didnt care for Durkheim, either. In 1911, the nephew of Gabriel Tarde, a rival sociologist, co-authored a pamphlet suggesting that Durkheims conception of society was a Jewish God, a tyrannical entity ruling humanity through a caste of priests.
Later generations of French Jewish intellectuals, including Durkheims own nephew, Marcel Mauss, have not been much kinder. In the 1930s, as they watched the Nazi party take power in Germany through quasi-religious public rituals, it seemed to Mauss and Durkheims former colleague Lon Brunschvig that the sort of collective faith Durkheim celebrated was serving fascism, not democracy.
But the dangers posed by the Third Reichanti-Semitism, militarism, contempt for individual rightswere dangers Durkheim knew. It had been precisely by meditating on their social and psychological causes that he had found his controversial faith in liberal democracy. And indeed, the case of Germany, seen through Durkheims eyes, shows that what threatens democracy most is too little, rather than too much, faith in the individual.
In a 1915 pamphlet, The German Mentality and the War, Durkheim laid blame for the outbreak of World War I on German thinkers such as Heinrich von Treitschke who had doubted the capacity of individuals for moral collective action. Taking to heart the philosophical sketch of individuals offered by the Enlightenment tradition, and by social scientists like Durkheim, Treitschke saw them as essentially self-interested, isolated beings unable to form authentic social bonds that could transcend their egoism. He reasoned accordingly that instead of worshipping an ideal individual, who is never actually found anywhere, German thinkers rightly worshipped the statewhich had the advantage of actually existing. The German state, thus worshipped, was given free rein to oppress its subjects and invade its neighbors. Germanys authoritarianism and aggression were the consequences of its thinkers faith in a visible godthe state.
It might seem that by endorsing a religion of the ideal individual, Durkheim was inviting readers to embrace a noble lie about individuals, who can be dreadful. Yet far from choosing to ignore the darker aspects of human nature, Durkheim in his post-Dreyfus perspective appears to have become a more sensitive observer of its paradoxes.
Days after his son was killed in action on the Balkan front of WWI, Durkheim wrote to his nephew Mauss, life triumphs over death. He told Mauss that his grandmother, after her son had died, spent a week mourning, but on the eighth day couldnt stop herself from asking about neighborhood gossip. She had not forgotten her griefbut to be alive is ever to be pulled away from reckoning ones own pains and pleasures and to be drawn into the lives of others. What seem like the hardest things religion can demandthe overcoming of self-interestedness and of the terror of deathare in fact sublimely ordinary.
Every feature of human nature that might inspire hope, Durkheim knew, can be put to evil use. Our desire to stand together in a comprehensible world, our longing for community, and our readiness to project idealized visions over unsatisfactory realities may lead us to commit horrible deeds. But it is these enduring emotional structures that also lead us to connection with other people and offer the only possible foundation for a decent political order.
***
You can help support Tablets unique brand of Jewish journalism. Click here to donate today.
Blake Smith is a Harper Schmidt Fellow at the University of Chicago, where he works on cultural ties between France and India.
Original post:
mile Durkheim and the Religion of Liberal Democracy - Tablet Magazine
- Melting Democracy' ice sculpture displayed on National Mall - NBC4 Washington - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- On the National Mall, Democracy drips in daylight - The Washington Post - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- U.S. Democracy Rankings Remain Stable But With a Red Flag - Dartmouth - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Is democracy melting? With an ice sculpture, these artists think so - Roll Call - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- TED Webinar Safeguarding Democracy and Elections in the Age of AI: Key Takeaways from the Webinar - International IDEA - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Democracy Melted in Front of the Capitol Yesterday - Washingtonian - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- UTC professor learns firsthand how democracy was defended in South Korea - University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC) - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Democracy in Action: When Teachers Run, Communities Thrive - Connecticut Education Association - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Winning Back the Future Preparing for a Comeback of Democracy - Intereconomics | Review of European Economic Policy - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- LIVE BLOG: Supreme Court Hears Case That Could Gut the Voting Rights Act - Democracy Docket - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- 'DEMOCRACY' etched in ice on National Mall is meant to send warning, nonprofit says - WUSA9 - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- SCOTUS Seems Ready to Scrap Fair Elections, Greenlight Racial Discrimination and Hand House Control to GOP - Democracy Docket - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Democracy and Dialogue Summit comes to Baldwin Wallace to inspire young voters - bwexponent.com - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- With AG Bondi Next To Him, Trump Says Deranged Jack Smith Must be Investigated - Democracy Docket - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Madagascar: After the protests is before the reform Democracy and society - ips-journal.eu - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Armonk Great-Grandmother Takes a Stand for Democracy, and Her Heritage - The Examiner News - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Democracy ice sculpture melts away in front of Capitol - DC News Now - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Is accuracy still the bedrock of democracy and good governance? - Open Access Government - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Democracy and Capitalism are Mutually Reinforcing - Marginal REVOLUTION - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- A large ice sculpture of the word Democracy was placed on the National Mall on Wednesday morning in direct view of the U.S. Capitol as a vanishing... - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Global democracy is more resilient than you may think - Brookings - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Democracy, Natural Resources, and the use of Tax Havens by Firms in Emerging Markets - Tax Justice Network - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- No suggestion of democracy in US plan for future governance of the Gaza Strip - France 24 - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Hudes 27: Browns democratic gesture falls flat when democracy itself is on the line - The Brown Daily Herald - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Robert Reichs The Last Class: A big hit with the home school on teaching and democracy - Local News Matters - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Florida Democratic Party and the Democratic Black Caucus of Florida Unite for Seen, Heard, And Free Day of Action Amid Threats to Democracy - Florida... - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Raila Odinga and the Unfinished Struggle for Kenyas Democracy - horn review - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Column: Federal intimidation of the press threatens the heart of democracy - The Huntington News - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Two ways to defend democracy - Wednesday Journal of Oak Park and River Forest - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Obama: Trumps troop deployment to American cities an effort to weaken how we have understood democracy - Politico - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Secretary General: Protection of health is vital for a healthy democracy - Council of Europe - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Opinion | The Rise of the Smartphone and the Fall of Western Democracy - The New York Times - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Sorry, but social media is real life and democracy is paying the price - Massachusetts Daily Collegian - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Albanias AI minister: 'avatar democracy' and the spectacle of accountability - European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Capitalism and Democracy Often Clash in America. They Usually End Up Better for It. - The Wall Street Journal - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Barack Obama urges Californians to back Prop. 50: Democracy is on the ballot - Times of San Diego - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Juan Gonzlez at Delaware 250Latinos and Migration to the United States: The Untold Story - Democracy Now! - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Trumps Authoritarian Turn and the Limits of Liberal Democracy - Left Voice - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Australias Fake Democracy: The Two Party Scam Keeping You in Chains Whether you vote red or blue, the result never changes. Both serve the same global... - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Rome native forging path studying effects of climate change on democracy - The Rome News-Tribune - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- The fugitive who just cant quit the democracy habit (The Republican Editorials) - MassLive - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Retired Bowdoin history professor still fights for democracy - The Portland Press Herald - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Unchecked Power: The Threat to Democracy - Civic Media - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Obamas warnings about democracy fading sound increasingly directed toward the US - CNN - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- This reporter survived kidnapping and death threats. He says 'democracy is under attack' - KCUR - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Trumps Addiction to Watching Fox Is Killing American Democracy - Zeteo - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Anthony Scaramucci on Trump and the Threat to American Democracy (Transcript) - The Singju Post - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Simplistic Thinking (Both on the Left and the Right) Can Drives People to Turn Against Democracy - ZME Science - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Protest is democracy in motion, not a crime - Funding the Future - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Where the Legal Fight Over Trumps Military Deployments Stands - Democracy Docket - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Letter: Democracy on path to become conservative autocracy - The Quad-City Times - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Please participate in our democracy and prepare for Nov. 4 municipal election [editorial] - LancasterOnline - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Montclair Schools Crisis Not a Failure of Democracy (Letter to the Editor) - Montclair Local News - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Velshi: We are all the authors of democracy and must act in time to save it - MSNBC News - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Democracy Is Under Massive Threat From AI - Novara Media - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- English democracy relies on local councillors. So why are so many facing the axe? | Polly Toynbee - The Guardian - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- After Gaza Ceasefire, Massive Political Pressure Needed to Prevent Israel from Restarting the War - Democracy Now! - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Shaping democracy from the middle: Party grassroots and Ghanas democratic progress - Brookings - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Audit procedures, democracy and capitalism, use windshield wipers, headlights | Letters - Post and Courier - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- IFES Presents 2025 Democracy Award to Leaders in Technology and Democracy - The International Foundation for Electoral Systems: IFES - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Youth and experience, side by side, working towards democracy: the 10th Council of Europe Conference of Ministers responsible for Youth opened in... - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Academics continue hypocritical whining about freedom and democracy - The College Fix - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- A Ceasefire Deal, But Not a Peace Agreement: What Will Happen in Gaza After Hostages Are Released? - Democracy Now! - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- A democracy activist forced to live in hiding - Times of India - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Antifa Expert to Flee with Family to Spain Following Death Threats - Democracy Now! - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- @theatlantic is one of my favorite magazines, and its November issue focuses on the "Unfinished Revolution" a deep dive into the ways... - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Machado keeps the flame of democracy burning amid a growing darkness - The City Paper Bogot - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- All In Our Heads: On Losing Our Democracy and Life Beyond Our Imaginations - Liberal Currents - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- The UK stands in solidarity with the people of Venezuela and their right to democracy, freedom and human dignity: UK statement at the UN Security... - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- A pro-democracy Venezuelan politician wins this years Nobel Peace Prize. Is it a rebuke to Trump? - Yahoo News Canada - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Corina Machado hails Trump for restoring democracy and freedom in the Americas - New York Post - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Kyrgyzstan Snap Election: Democracy on Edge or Politics as Usual? - The Times Of Central Asia - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- Five Young Democracy Advocates Share What They Have Learned - The New York Times - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- Best Of BPR 10/8: Michael Sandel On Reinvigorating Self Governance To Save Democracy - WGBH - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- Athens Democracy Forum: Dialogue Is An Antidote for Security Threats - The New York Times - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- Democracy on Trial: Israels Judiciary and the Politics of Reform - The Times of Israel - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- The Race to Stop AIs Threats to Democracy - Mother Jones - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- Reimagining Democracy launches for its second year - The Stanford Daily - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- How Billionaires Are Rewriting History and Democracy - The Fulcrum - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- Port: In Minot, an example of how democracy is supposed to work - InForum - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]