Radical Republicanism: democracy, property and rights

Guerrero, David
Laín, Bru
Popp-Madsen, Benjamin Ask
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Over the last two decades republican thought has attracted a growing interest from political, moral and legal scholars. These contemporary theoretical syntheses of 'neo-republican' thought have been closely related to intellectual history and the idea of recovering an overshadowed tradition of political thought. In this vein, a classical set of historical moments and places (e.g., ancient Rome, renaissance Italy, civil-war England or revolutionary America among others) and specific political practices within those contexts appear to be the main source of what republicanism meant - and what it could mean today ​
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