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PREFACE=xi

INTRODUCTION:How to Read This Book=1

CHAPTER 1. The Founding:Debating the Constitution=14

James Madison, Federalist No. 10=17

Brutus, Anti-federalist Paper, 18 October 1787=23

CHAPTER 2. Democracy:Overrated or Undervalued?=31

John Mueller, Democracy's Romantic Myths=34

Paul Rogat Loeb, The Active Citizen=41

CHAPTER 3. The New Federalism:Does It Create Laboratories of Democracy or a Race to the Bottom?=52

William D. Eggers;John O'Leary, Beyond the Beltway=55

John D. Donahue, The Devil in Devolution=60

CHAPTER 4. Civil Society:Does America Face a Crisis in Civic Engagement?=68

Robert D. Putnam, Bowling Alone:The Collapse and Revival of American Community=72

William A. Galston and Peter Levine, America's Civic Condition:A Glance at the Evidence=83

CHAPTER 5. Political Economy:How Democratic Is the Free Market Economy?=90

Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom=93

Samuel Bowles and Richard Edwards, The Market Erodes Democratic Government=103

CHAPTER 6. Civil Liberties:Does the First Amendment Permit Religious Expression in Public Institutions?=113

Stephen V. Monsma, Positive Neutrality:Letting Religious Freedom Ring=116

Marvin E. Frankel, Piety Versus "Secular Humanism":A Phony War=125

CHAPTER 7. Civil Rights:How Far Have We Progressed?=134

Stephan Thernstrom and Abigail Thernstrom, One Nation, Indivisible=136

David K. Shipler, A Country of Strangers=145

CHAPTER 8. Public Opinion:The American People After September 11=156

David Brooks, The Age of Conflict:Politics and Culture After September 11=159

Bill Moyers, Which America Will We Be Now?=166

CHAPTER 9. The New Media and the Internet:Corporate Wasteland or Democratic Frontier?=172

Cass R. Sunstein, The Daily We=174

Robert McChesney, The Power of the Producers=185

CHAPTER 10. Political Parties and Elections:The 2000 Presidential Election and U.S. Democracy=192

David Brooks, One Nation, Slightly Divisible=194

Lani Guinier, What We Must Overcome=205

CHAPTER 11. Campaigns and Elections:Organized Money Versus (Dis) Organized People?=215

Bradley A. Smith, Free Speech Requires Campaign Money=218

Dan Clawson, Alan Neustadtl, and Mark Weller, Dollars and Votes=224

CHAPTER 12. Local Democracy:Is Suburban sprawl the Realization or Violation of Democratic Values?=236

Gregg Easterbrook, Suburban Myth=240

Todd Swanstrom, The Case Against Sprawl=246

CHAPTER 13. Congress:Can It Serve the Public Good?=255

Morris P. Fiorina, The Rise of the Washington Establishment=258

Joseph M. Bessette, Congress and Deliberative Democracy=266

CHAPTER 14. The Presidency:How Much Difference Does the Individual Make?=275

Fred I. Greenstein, Lessons from the Modern Presidency=278

Stephen Skowronek, The Changing Political Structures of Presidential Leadership=285

CHAPTER 15. The Judiciary:What should Its Role Be in a Democracy?=298

Edwin Meese III, A Jurisprudence of Original Intention William J. Brennan, Jr., Reading the Constitution as Twentieth-Century Americans=306

CHAPTER 16. Economic Inequality:A Threat to Democracy?=316

W. Michael Cox and Richard Alm, Myths of Rich and Poor Paul Krugman, The Spiral of Inequality=326

CHAPTER 17. The United States and the Global Economy:Serving Citizens or Corporate Elites?=336

Thomas Friedman, Revolution Is U.S.=339

David C. Korten, When Corporations Rule the World=347

CHAPTER 18. U.S. Foreign Policy:What Should It Be After September 11?=356

Charles Krauthammer, The Real New World Order=359

Benjamin R. Barber, On Terrorism and the New Democratic Realism=367

CREDITS=377

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알라딘제공

This reader offers two readings per chapter organized in a debate-style format, representing opposing viewpoints. The straightforward, thought-provoking presentation facilitates classroom discussion.

  • Chapter 4, Civil Society, contains essays by Robert Putnam, "Bowling Alone: The Collapse of American Community," and William A. Galston and Peter Levine, "America's Civic Condition: A Glance at the Evidence."
  • Chapter 8, Public Opinion: The American People After September 11, includes two new essays: "Age of Conflict," by David Brooks and "Which America Will We Be Now?" by Bill Moyers.
  • Chapter 10, Political Parties and Elections: What Was the 2000 Presidential Contest About? includes articles by David Brooks, "One Nation, Slightly Divisible," and Lani Gunier, "What We Must Overcome."
  • Chapter 12, Local Democracy, contains essays for and against suburban sprawl and governance by Gregg Easterbrook and Todd Swanstrom.
  • Chapter 14, The Presidency: How Much Difference Does the Individual Make? features new essays by Fred Greenstein, "Lessons from the Modern Presidency," and Stephen Skowronek, "The Changing Political Structures of Presidential Leadership."
  • Chapter 18, U.S. Foreign Policy: What Should It Be After September 11? includes articles by Charles Krauthammer, "The Real New World Order," and Benjamin R. Barber, "On Terrorism and the New Democratic Realism."