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How to Read James Fitzjames Stephen: Technocracy and Pluralism in a Misunderstood Victorian
- Source :
- American Political Science Review. 115:1034-1047
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2021.
-
Abstract
- This paper offers a new reading of the political thought of the mid-Victorian jurist and intellectual James Fitzjames Stephen. Contrary to impressions of Stephen as a conservative or religious authoritarian, this article recognizes the liberal character of Stephen’s thought, and it argues that investigating Stephen’s liberalism holds lessons for us today about the structure of liberal theory. Stephen, the paper demonstrates, articulated robustly both technocratic and pluralistic visions of politics. Perhaps more stridently than any Victorian, he put forward an argument for the necessity and legitimacy of expert rule against claims for popular government. Yet he also insisted on the plurality of perspectives on public affairs and on the ineluctable conflict between them. Because both of these facets existed in his work, he fit within the liberal ranks, but he did not show how the two dimensions fit together. The tension that we discover from reading Stephen is, the article concludes, not peculiar to him, but a permanent feature of liberal theories, which always include both technocratic and pluralistic elements.
- Subjects :
- Vision
Sociology and Political Science
05 social sciences
Authoritarianism
Environmental ethics
06 humanities and the arts
Technocracy
0506 political science
060104 history
Politics
Liberalism
Pluralism (political theory)
Argument
Political Science and International Relations
050602 political science & public administration
0601 history and archaeology
Sociology
Legitimacy
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15375943 and 00030554
- Volume :
- 115
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- American Political Science Review
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........5d572f5c87d22cfab1d388328d4fc5cd