Georgina Blakeley
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Democracy and democratisation
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This chapter focuses on democratisation, grounding this in an initial discussion of democratic theory. It begins by examining some key assumptions of democratic theory, albeit in a necessarily cursory fashion given the extensiveness of the field, and some of the now well-established feminist critiques of these assumptions. The chapter finds that although feminism has had some influence on democratic theory, this influence remains patchy and has not extended to the literature on democratisation. Despite the prolific nature of the democratisation literature, the dominant explanatory paradigms have virtually ignored the role of women in democratisation. The chapter redresses this balance by exploring what a feminist analysis of democratisation would entail. It argues that the voluntarist and positivist nature of the mainstream democratisation literature is not accidental but denotes a particular ontological foundation that tends at best to marginalise women's activism and, at worst, simply ignores it.

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