<http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/11037-democracy-from-the-ground-up>

Democracy, From the Ground Up

Wednesday, 22 August 2012 00:00

By Gar Alperovitz, Democracy Collaborative Press | Serialized Book

This is part seven of an exclusive Truthout series from political 
economist and author Gar Alperovitz. We are publishing weekly 
installments of the new edition of "America Beyond Capitalism," a 
visionary book, first published in 2005, whose time has come. This 
installment comes from chapter 3 of the book. Donate to Truthout and 
receive a free copy.

What of the central question of democracy itself? Many have noted the 
trends of failing belief, the radical decline in voting, the massive 
role of money and corporate influence in lobbying, media, and 
elections- and in general, the large numbers who surveys show feel 
that "our national experiment in self-government is faltering." That 
millions of Americans believe "people like me have almost no say in 
the political system" has been a wake-up call for many on the left, 
right, and center.

Several lines of reassessment have become increasingly important as 
the crisis has deepened. The first, directed to foundational 
"grassroots" community issues, has come into ever more sharply 
defined focus in recent years.

The work of Harvard political scientist Robert Putnam kicked off a 
major debate on one aspect of the problem.

Putnam probed well beneath such surface-level issues as the fall-off 
in voting to focus instead on local citizen associations, networks, 
formal and informal clubs, neighborhood groups, unions, and the like. 
Large numbers of Americans, he suggested, were now both actually and 
metaphorically "bowling alone" rather than in association with 
others. Putnam suggested that a decline in associational activity, in 
turn, had produced a decline in trust and "social capital" 
foundational requirements of democracy in general. His response was 
straightforward: the nation should develop as many ways as possible 
to encourage local involvement the only way, he held, Americans could 
hope to renew the basis of democracy throughout the larger system.

Quite apart from Putnam's studies, general analysis, and 
recommendations (many of which were challenged by scholars), of 
particular interest was the explosive reaction to his argument) and 
the reorientation of strategic concern it represented. The outpouring 
of interest his first rather academic article on the subject produced 
revealed that Putnam had struck a powerful nerve. "Seldom has a 
thesis moved so quickly from scholarly obscurity to conventional 
wisdom," observed former White House aide and political scientist 
William Galston.

Especially important was what was not at the center of attention: 
Putnam and many who responded to him did not focus on national 
parties, national interest groups, national lobbying, national 
campaign finance laws, or national political phenomena in general. 
What he and they focused on was the "micro" level of citizen groups 
and citizen involvement. Here, at the very local level, was now the 
place to begin to look for democratic renewal.

The heart of the larger foundational argument (and this is a critical 
emphasis) might be put thus: Is it possible to have Democracy with a 
Big D in the system as a whole if you do not have real democracy with 
a small d at the level where people live, work, and raise families in 
their local communities? If the answer is no, then a necessary if not 
sufficient condition of rebuilding democracy in general is to get to 
work locally.

Putnam essentially put into modern form Tocqueville's contention that 
in "democratic countries knowledge of how to combine is the mother of 
all other forms of knowledge." There is also clearly a close 
connection between Nisbet-style "intermediate association" arguments 
for liberty and neo-Tocquevillian associational arguments for 
democracy.

But Tocqueville, in fact, had gone beyond "associations" to take up 
the deeper question of "how" and whether democratic practice is 
reflected not only in civil society, but in actual local government. 
"Municipal institutions," he stressed, "constitute the strength of 
free nations. Town meetings are to liberty what primary schools are 
to science; they bring it within the people's reach, they teach men 
how to use and enjoy it."

John Stuart Mill similarly held that direct experience with local 
governance was essential to "the peculiar training of a citizen, the 
practical part of the political education of a free people." Mill 
pointed out that "we do not learn to read or write, to ride or swim, 
by being merely told how to do it, but by doing it, so it is only by 
practicing popular government on a limited scale, that the people 
will ever learn how to exercise it on a larger."

Understood in this broader framework, Putnam's thesis is only one of 
a group of arguments that focus primary attention on what goes on in 
local communities. Indeed, an important and expanding group of 
theorists have picked up on the more demanding "small d" 
Tocqueville-Mill argument that an authentic experience of 
participation in local government decision making is essential if 
democracy is to be meaningful. A forceful statement of the more 
fundamental judgment is that of political scientist Stephen Elkin, a 
theorist who stresses that citizens must experience the actual use of 
power: "Civic associations cannot do [this] job: The element of 
authority is missing." Again, "for citizens to have any concern for 
the public interest . . . they must have the experience of grappling 
with its elements. For any significant number of citizens this can 
happen only through local political life."

Other democratic theorists who urge reinvigorating democracy through 
a renewal of local governing institutions include Jane Mansbridge, 
Michael Sandel, and Benjamin Barber. Mansbridge argues that citizens 
are "most likely to come to understand their real interests in a 
small democracy, like a town or workplace, where members make a 
conscious effort to choose democratic procedures appropriate to the 
various issues that arise." In his study, Democracy's Discontent, 
Sandel holds that it is important to recover the meaning of the 
"republican tradition" in American political lifeâ¤"a tradition that 
"taught that to be free is to share in governing a political 
community that controls its own fate. Self-government . . . requires 
political communities that control their destinies, and citizens who 
identify sufficiently with those communities to think and act with a 
view to the common good."

Barber's treatise on Strong Democracy emphasizes the importance of 
different forms of knowledge to different degrees of democratic 
practice: "[K]nowing your rights and knowing the law are 
concomitants," he suggests, "of minimalist or weak democratic 
politics." Something far more powerful is neededâ¤"and this requires 
a very different understanding of how knowledge is acquired. "In the 
strong democratic perspective, knowledge and the quest for knowledge 
tend to follow rather than to precede political engagement: give 
people some significant power and they will quickly appreciate the 
need for knowledge, but foist knowledge on them without giving them 
responsibility and they will display only indifference." It follows 
that "only direct political participation activity that is explicitly 
public" can achieve real civic education in a democracy.

The necessity of an authentic experience of government has, of 
course, also been stressed over the years by numerous conservative 
theorists, and they, too, have consistently urged the importance of 
direct local involvement. Hayek speaks for many: "Nowhere has 
democracy ever worked well without a great measure of local 
self-government, providing a school of political training for the 
people at large . . . where responsibility can be learned and 
practiced in affairs with which most people are familiar, where it is 
the awareness of one's neighbor rather than some theoretical 
knowledge of the needs of other people which guides action."

The basic community-oriented emphasis can also be found in a line of 
arguments urging decentralization of government within large cities 
so as to increase opportunities for genuine participation. Early in 
the postwar era, philosopher Hannah Arendt (drawing on a Jeffersonian 
idea) suggested that "ward republics" be established at the 
neighborhood level. "It is futile," urban theorist Jane Jacobs 
similarly urges, "to expect that citizens will act with 
responsibility, verve and experience on big, city-wide issues when 
self-government has been rendered all but impossible on localized 
issues, which are often of the most direct importance to people." 
Jacobs, too, proposed transferring a number of municipal decisions to 
the level of neighborhood districts.

There are also converging themes of community self-determination in 
the work of important black theorists: political scientist Phillip 
Thompson, for instance, draws on the earlier work of W. E. B. Du Bois 
to argue, "Mass incarceration of black male youth, extensive state 
'therapeutic' management of poor African American 
communities . . . make it clear that African American communities are 
in need of strong independent civic institutions capable of providing 
their own civic voice and social order in the face of extensive 
external corporate and governmental control."

The argument that nurturing democracy with a small d is necessary if 
big-D Democracy in the system as a whole is ever to be renewed brings 
into sharp relief some of the real-world conditions required to make 
this meaningful. A central question concerns the economic 
underpinnings of local democracy. It is obvious, for instance, that 
active citizen participation in local community efforts is all but 
impossible if the economic rug is regularly pulled out from under 
them. What, precisely, is "the community" when citizens are forced to 
move in and out of specific geographic localities because of volatile 
local economic conditions? Who has any real stake in long-term 
decisions?

That a substantial degree of economic stability is one of the 
critical preconditions of local involvement is documented in several 
important studies. A recent analysis of the 2000 election by the U.S. 
Census Bureau demonstrates that "citizens who had lived in the same 
home for five or more years had a voting rate of 72 percent . . ." 
much higher than rates for individuals who had lived at their 
residences for a shorter time. Again, Sidney Verba, Kay Schlozman, 
and Henry Brady have shown that "years in community" is a positive 
predictor of both national and local-level civic involvement, with 
the effect nearly twice as strong for local involvement. Another 
detailed survey of nearly thirty thousand Americans undertaken in 
2000 similarly shows that years lived in one's community and the 
expectation of staying in one's community are correlated with 
increased civic participation.

A related issue involves the power relationships that set the terms 
of reference for municipal government. Numerous scholarly studies 
have demonstrated that local government decision making commonly is 
heavily dominated by the local business community. Commonly, too, the 
thrust of decisions favorable to business groups radically constrains 
all other choices. The use of scarce resources to develop downtown 
areas, and especially to attract or retain major corporations, 
inevitably absorbs funds that might alternatively be used to help 
low- and moderate-income neighborhood housing, schools, and community 
services.

The issue is not simply one of distribution. City Limits, an aptly 
titled study by Harvard political scientist Paul Peterson, 
demonstrates that as a result of the underlying relationships, policy 
choices are often "limited to those few which can plausibly be shown 
to be conducive to the community's economic prosperity." Partly this 
is because businessowners have more money, hence usually more 
political influence. But quite apart from such considerations, local 
political leaders feel they must promote economic development, and 
they accordingly feel they need the help of the business community.

The "democracy with a small d" question is whether there can be any 
meaningful democratic decision making when allocations to achieve 
business priorities implicitly preempt alternative choices. If most 
choices are radically hemmed in from the start by the need to be 
responsive to business, what is there to decide? And if there is 
little to decide, what is the meaning of democracy? And how, 
precisely, might the situation be altered, given the power of 
business interests in the system?

The conclusion, though not always brought into clear focus by 
theorists concerned with democracy and civil society, is inescapable: 
if the local foundations of democracy are to be meaningfully rebuilt, 
this also requires an approach to achieving greater local economic 
stability that does not rely so heavily on traditional 
business-oriented strategies. If municipalities are to be "delivered 
from their present economic bondage," political scientist David 
Imbroscio observes, they must find ways "to promote economic vitality 
in their jurisdictions via the implementation of 'alternative' 
economic development strategies based on something other than 
capturing footloose investment."

To the extent local economies can be made more stable, the economic 
environment in which local entrepreneurial businesses may flourish 
also obviously improves; hence, one of the foundational institutions 
of traditional conservative theories of liberty can also thereby be 
strengthened.

How to do this becomes the key question. One method is obvious: as 
many have noted, cities anchored by universities, state capitals, and 
other major public facilities commonly enjoy greater economic 
stability. Economist Ann Markusen also points to many 
community-stabilizing policies that have been used to deal with 
dislocations associated with the Department of Defense base closings 
and related experience. Many experts, for instance, city planning 
professor Arthur C. Nelson, and sociologists John R. Logan and Harvey 
L. Molotch, have proposed a range of "development-from-below" 
strategies. These include diverse education and training programs, 
and loan, tax, procurement, and other policies to encourage business 
retention, entrepreneurship, and neighborhood capital accumulation.

A more fundamental structural approach intersects with the 
asset-based strategies considered in Chapter 1. An important feature 
of worker-owned firms is that they not only change the ownership of 
wealth but also are far more anchored in local communities by virtue 
of the simple fact that worker-owners live in the community. "The 
only real way a community can regain control over its economic future 
is to rebuild from the ground up," urges Michael Shuman, the author 
of Going Local. Over the long haul, he adds, this can only be done by 
supporting the development of noncorporate "community-friendly" 
enterprises that have many integral links to the locality.

Real community democracy, in short, requires real community economic 
health, and the kinds of institutions that can sustain it.


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